DDG
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A small subexample that directly comes up: Yes, B<anschnallen> and
B<festschnallen> are actually the same word in english: B<fasten>. B<fasten>
actually translates to L<12 different words in
german|http://dict.leo.org/ende?searchLoc=-1&searchLocRelinked=-1&lp=ende&search=fasten&lp=ende&lang=de&searchLoc=0&searchLocRelinked=1&search=>.
=head2 Right to left
Yes, really, there are languages in the world, which are written right to left.
Beside the mess this brings to your hand if you are right handed, this is also
a huge difference in the web interface. You can see how a right to left page
looks like L<here|http://www.i18nguy.com/unicode/shma.html>. This also changes
about most punctuations and of course the flow of the page itself, even if you
force a specific order, you must revert it from right to left.
=head2 Grammatical numbers
In most languages (like English), there are 2 so called grammatical
cases for numbers: B<singular> and B<plural>. In those languages B<plural> is used, if you
have none, or many. And B<singular> is only used if you have just one:
You have 1 message.
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