• @someguy3
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    18
    edit-2
    29 days ago

    Must know the German name. Brb.

    *Hai or haifisch. Early 17th century, from Dutch haai, from Middle Dutch haey (15th c.), from Old Norse hár, há- (“shark”).

    Nothing so interesting I guess.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      729 days ago

      If you wanna say “hello shark!” in Danish you’ll say “hej haj!”

      Good thing we don’t have sharks in Danish waters otherwise it’ll become pretty awkward when you greet someone at the beach.

    • @[email protected]
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      529 days ago

      I love these etymologies where it’s just “this word comes from a similar sounding word with the same meaning.” Who would have guessed.
      Me. I would have guessed.

    • @werefreeatlast
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      229 days ago

      Hey hey is a great name for a boat snack chicken.

    • @aoidenpa
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      229 days ago

      I knew that already because it is a Rammstein song.

  • @48954246
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    English
    829 days ago

    I posit this completely made up definition.

    Shark is an adjunction of two words

    Sharp; because, well look at them

    and Ark; because they are boats.

    Sharp-Ark > Shark

    Isn’t language funny sometimes

    • ivanafterall ☑️
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      English
      228 days ago

      Ship-Bark. Ship, because they are in water. Bark because they go RAWR before biting you. Ship-Bark. Shark.