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êàê ïðàâèëüíî ñîêðàòèòü áþäæåò íà ðåêëàìó - Page 2


chileno June 10, 2009 12:12 PM

Maybe it was a plead for help:

"help, can anybody get me out of this bathroom that seems to be locked from the outside? :D

Tomisimo June 12, 2009 05:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by brute (Post 38413)
This could become a useful tool if all the repititions were removed, and they were organised alphabetically into a pull down menu. Most accented Roman characters of the European languages are included, but where is the crossed out "O", of Danish and Norwegian? This is essentional if you wish to write to elDanés.:rolleyes::worried::confused:

That already exists here for the diacriticals commonly used in Spanish.

CrOtALiTo June 12, 2009 07:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tomisimo (Post 38673)
That already exists here for the diacriticals commonly used in Spanish.

I have one question for you David.


What is diacriticals?


I don't understand very well the word.

I'm sorry:(

irmamar June 13, 2009 04:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrOtALiTo (Post 38678)
I have one question for you David.


What is diacriticals?


I don't understand very well the word.

I'm sorry:(

Diacriticals son los acentos diacríticos, los que se usan para distinguir unas palabras de otras, especialmente en monosílabos:

te - té
de - dé
mi - mí
tu - tú
solo - sólo
etc. :)

Rusty June 13, 2009 09:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irmamar (Post 38707)
Diacriticals son los acentos diacríticos, los que se usan para distinguir unas palabras de otras, especialmente en monosílabos:

te - té
de - dé
mi - mí
tu - tú
solo - sólo
etc. :)

In linguistics, a diacritic is any mark added to a letter to indicate a special pronunciation. So, every letter in the original post had a diacritic mark.

Tomisimo June 13, 2009 10:07 AM

diacriticals = signos diacríticos

Éstos pueden ser el acento grave o agudo, el diéresis, el circunflejo, la cedilla, la colita, etc.

irmamar June 13, 2009 10:49 AM

Yes, you're right, I was thinking you were talking about diacritical accents :)

brute June 25, 2009 04:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by WRDavid (Post 32354)
ïðèâåò.ß ðàáîòàþ ìàðêåòîëîãîì â ãîðîäå ðîñòîâ-íà-äîíó . èç-çà êðèçèñà íàì óðåçàëè ôèíàíñèðîâàíèå íà ðåêëàìó, è ïðè ýòîì íóæíî íå ïîòåðÿòü çàêàç÷èêîâ. ×òî äåëàòü - íå çíàþ. ïîñïðàøèâàëà çíàêîìûõ - ñêàçàëè, ÷òî èíòåðíåò ðåêëàìà ëó÷øå âñåãî. ïî íàøåé äåÿòåëüíîñòè â èíòåðíåòå íàøëà ìíîãî ñïðàâî÷íèêîâ. çàðåãèñòðèðîâàëàñü â îäíîì èç íèõ ðîñøèíà. áóäåò ëè îò ýòîãî òîëê? åñëè äà - òî ïîäåëèòåñü ñïèñêîì òàêèõ ñàéòîâ. ìîæåò áûòü êòî-òî åùå ÷åãî-íèáóäü ïîäñêàæåò?

Sorry folks. I think I´ve given the language detector/translater a stroke or a heart attack. I fed it with the above text and it has written absolutely nothing in the last hour:yuck::worried::sad::eek::thinking:

bobjenkins June 25, 2009 04:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by brute (Post 40124)
Sorry folks. I think I´ve given the language detector/translater a stroke or a heart attack. I fed it with the above text and it has written absolutely nothing in the last hour:yuck::worried::sad::eek::thinking:

:lol::lol::lol:

brute July 08, 2009 03:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bobjenkins (Post 40125)
:lol::lol::lol:

For once I'm being serious. I have been devoting some time to thinking about this strange document. I have enlarged the text to make it readable. The characters are all from a sequence of about 33 diacriticals (which also contain a division sign.) ( ascii nos. 223 - 255).
The _ . ? and , are there as real punctuation marks, I think, because they are all followed by a space ) and are not part of this sequence of symbols.
IF this is a REAL message, and each letter has been replaced by another symbol, it has several distinctive features.
1. All letters are lower case
2. There are very few single and double letter words.
3. There are no double letters.
4. All or (nearly all) of these characters are used. I still need to do a count.
What sort of language could it be? We are looking for a language which uses an alphabet of 30 + letters.
The Cyrillic alphabet springs to mind. I believe that some Slav tongues have a more letters than Russian.
Most languages have definite and indefinite article and pronouns, which are frequently repeated short words of one or two letters.
Russian (and possibly other Slavonic languages) do not often use them or the verb "to be".
How about double letters?
I don't think Russian uses them.
Here is an enlarged copy of the original text with highlights to show certain features.

So Bob, you are our Russian expert. Do you think we can crack this one? If we do a frequency count and find it tallies with Russian, we might find an answer. :crossfingers::crossfingers::thinking::thinking::t hinking:

êàê ïðàâèëüíî ñîêðàòèòü áþäæåòíà ðåêëàìó

ïðèâ
åò.ß ðàáîòàþ ìàðêåòîëîãîì â ãîðîäå ðîñòîâ-íà-äîíó . èç-çà êðèçèñà íàì óðåçàëè ôèíàíñèðîâàíèå íà ðåêëàìó, è ïðè ýòîì íóæíî íå ïîòåðÿòü çàêàç÷èêîâ. ×òî äåëàòü - íå çíàþ. ïîñïðàøèâàëà çíàêîìûõ - ñêàçàëè, ÷òî èíòåðíåò ðåêëàìà ëó÷øå âñåãî. ïî íàøåé äåÿòåëüíîñòè â èíòåðíåòå íàøëà ìíîãî ñïðàâî÷íèêîâ. çàðåãèñòðèðîâàëàñü â îäíîì èç íèõ ðîñøèíà. áóäåò ëè îò ýòîãî òîëê? åñëè äà - òî ïîäåëèòåñü ñïèñêîì òàêèõ ñàéòîâ. ìîæåò áûòü êòî-òî åùå ÷åãî-íèáóäü ïîäñêàæåò?

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Rusty July 08, 2009 05:57 PM

The mystery language is Russian, but it was copied directly from a PDF into the text box, and that's why the ASCII characters are appearing - those characters represent the Cyrillic alphabet in a PDF.

Here are the first two "sentences" of Russian (you'll soon understand why I put the word sentences in quotes), and a translation.

I'll let you figure out the rest!

как правильно сократить бюджетна рекламу привет.
Я работаю маркетологом в городе ростов-на-дону.

how to really reduce your advertising budget
hello.
I work in marketing in the city of Rostov-na-Donu.

CrOtALiTo July 08, 2009 10:33 PM

What is it?

brute July 09, 2009 02:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rusty (Post 41382)
The mystery language is Russian, but it was copied directly from a PDF into the text box, and that's why the ASCII characters are appearing - those characters represent the Cyrillic alphabet in a PDF.

Here are the first two "sentences" of Russian (you'll soon understand why I put the word sentences in quotes), and a translation.

I'll let you figure out the rest!

как правильно сократить бюджетна рекламу привет.
Я работаю маркетологом в городе ростов-на-дону.

how to really reduce your advertising budget
hello.
I work in marketing in the city of Rostov-na-Donu.

Thanks Rusty,you are brilliant! You have confirmed my suspicions. I think there may be a crisis in the next sentence.
It looks as if the diacriticals and Russian letters are direct transliterations following the same "alphabetical" sequence as their ASCII numbers, starting à = A etc. When I have the odd hour to spare I will try to decode and translate the rest !!

Mientros tanto, hay que estudiar unos verbos irregulares.
A sido un ejercicio muy interesante, pero no ha ayudado mi español.

brute July 10, 2009 02:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CrOtALiTo (Post 41391)
What is it?

Es un mensaje originaramante escrito en ruso. Por causa de incompatibilidad entre dos systemas electrónicas diferentes, la escritura se ha "traducido" sin querer en una forma totalmente incompensible. En realidad es un problema matemático y informatico.

Tomisimo November 29, 2009 06:48 PM

Thread closed since it seems to be attracting an inordinate number of spam posts. If anyone wants to continue this discussion, feel free to open a new thread.


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