Once upon a time, I used a password derived from the first verse of a certain Polish poem, with characters derived according to a simple algorithm I could work out in my head. It looked remarkably like gibberish.
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@takao POLISH does look like gibberish already

"CKZEPYZAVKLKCKCSZ"

Oh My goooood!

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@hideki chrząszcz brzmi w trzcinie w Szczebrzeszynie
@takao @hideki chřąšč břmi w třcinie w Ščebřešynie

why the hell did you go with digraphs? it's not like you don't have letter marks at all, why not just add some more?
@grips @hideki not sure but those were in use even in 16th century so it's not one of the stupid compromises made during interbellum as part of reunification of the language after partitions.
@hideki @takao only because anglos try to read it like it's english

they see something like "sz" and their brain just assplodes
@hideki @dwaltiz it's really not difficult, «sz» is one of the few digraph in Polish and represents only one sound. I can understand getting an aneurysm if you try to pronounce it as two ww
@hideki @dwaltiz *digraphs
tfw my load is so high that keyboard in browser lags ehhhh
@dwaltiz @hideki it's not like it assplodes, they just ignore what they cannot put into their language frame and fall back to the pronunciation they know. Burgers are worse about it but that's pretty much only because their cuntry is so big^H^Hloated :rokalife: that they never really have to bother speaking anything else (I think they learn Spanish to communicate with illegal aliens though? Not sure if it's universal or limited to some areas)

There could be a brain development aspect to it though, I think perception of the spoken foreign tongue is different if you hear other languages as a child. Would explain why so many burger weeaboos struggle with pronouncing of simple nipponese names on jewtube :JahyGah:
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