Reminds me of “it doesn’t matter” in my second language English class. We all said together as a class “it’s not grave” when asked what we thought “ce n’est pas grave” was in English.
Man, language is wild. If I heard “It’s not grave”, after assuming English as a second language, I’d immediately jump to assuming something like “it’s not vital” complete with emphasis. Similar to saying “nobody will die if this isn’t done, but we’d all really rather it was done” as the subtext.
Sounds correct Im wondering if it instead comes from latin infact in italan witch is the most similar language we have the same word grave (with a different pronunciation ) to mean something important (not grave something not that important ) but grave its also an old word meaning something heavy like in old physics experiments … So maybe it became to be as something like it’s not a weight that heavy for me to carry if u don’t do this thing … more tied to the metaforical uncomfortableness given by a heavy weight … feel free to correct me I have never done latin at school … ( fun fact Yes more Italian than u think has done at least 5 years of latin )
Coming from French, grave means a low note all the way to the left on the piano, or a significant negative adjective. For example, an injury can be “grave” as in it can be significant, like losing a finger. Breaking a nail wouldn’t be “grave”.
I think your description of assigning weight to a matter is spot on.
Yeah we use it for the piano too … it would be cool to take into comparison the different pronunciation … its interesting how we have been able to pass between cultures a specific order of characters with an associated meaning but everyone chose it’s pronunciation… in italian is so different … (From the English one)
In German “it doesn’t matter” means “es ist egal” (literally something like “it is equal” but “egal” is only used in this sense). When I played a board game with a Spanish native speaker, I asked “how many points do you have?” And he said “es ist egal”, intending to say “we are equal” but I was like “it sure does matter” and he thought I didn’t believe him that he reached me.
Reminds me of “it doesn’t matter” in my second language English class. We all said together as a class “it’s not grave” when asked what we thought “ce n’est pas grave” was in English.
The worst part is that technically isn’t incorrect in English. Conversationally, most people might take a second, but grave does also mean serious
Absolutely if someone said “it’s not grave” to me I would understand it to mean “it’s not serious” or “it’s not very important”
Man, language is wild. If I heard “It’s not grave”, after assuming English as a second language, I’d immediately jump to assuming something like “it’s not vital” complete with emphasis. Similar to saying “nobody will die if this isn’t done, but we’d all really rather it was done” as the subtext.
Sounds correct Im wondering if it instead comes from latin infact in italan witch is the most similar language we have the same word grave (with a different pronunciation ) to mean something important (not grave something not that important ) but grave its also an old word meaning something heavy like in old physics experiments … So maybe it became to be as something like it’s not a weight that heavy for me to carry if u don’t do this thing … more tied to the metaforical uncomfortableness given by a heavy weight … feel free to correct me I have never done latin at school … ( fun fact Yes more Italian than u think has done at least 5 years of latin )
Coming from French, grave means a low note all the way to the left on the piano, or a significant negative adjective. For example, an injury can be “grave” as in it can be significant, like losing a finger. Breaking a nail wouldn’t be “grave”.
I think your description of assigning weight to a matter is spot on.
Yeah we use it for the piano too … it would be cool to take into comparison the different pronunciation … its interesting how we have been able to pass between cultures a specific order of characters with an associated meaning but everyone chose it’s pronunciation… in italian is so different … (From the English one)
It could be a grave misunderstanding
In German “it doesn’t matter” means “es ist egal” (literally something like “it is equal” but “egal” is only used in this sense). When I played a board game with a Spanish native speaker, I asked “how many points do you have?” And he said “es ist egal”, intending to say “we are equal” but I was like “it sure does matter” and he thought I didn’t believe him that he reached me.
Well don’t keep us hanging