A few phrases are:
Pishyou na munch-munch di miaow-miaow
Please do not eat the cat
Hoody chuck-it-up un di jim-jams di pappa?
Who has been sick in my father's pajamas?
PARKA DI BOTTY, forsakes do Woden, or me do di girly boo-hoo.
SIT, for Woden's sake, before I burst into tears.
Mi wobblediguts bigtime.
I am very poisonous.
"Dragonese" is pronounced as "DRAG-uh-neez."
Dragonese font is typically not a standard font available on most computers. It is a fictional language used in the "How to Train Your Dragon" series, and any representation of Dragonese in written form may use a custom font created specifically for the franchise.
it means a lift that only goes up in dragonese
why would someone ask that question people think
She has written many books such as how to train your dragon, how to be a pirate,how to speak dragonese and how to steal a dragons sword.
The future tense of "speak" is "will speak" or "shall speak."
Some common phrases using the word speak are: on (or not on) speaking terms with someone; speak English, speak ill of someone; speak ill of the dead; speak in rhymes; speak no good of someone; speak of the dead; speak no evil; speak out; speak softly and carry a big stick; speak the truth; speak truth to power; speak to me; speak up; think before you speak
The present infinitive of "speak" is "to speak."
Sprechen: to speak I speak You speak He speaks We speak You all speak They speak Hope that helped :)
To conjugate "to speak" in English, you would use the base form "speak" for present tense (I speak, you speak, he/she speaks, we speak, they speak), the past tense "spoke" (I spoke, you spoke, he/she spoke, we spoke, they spoke), and the past participle "spoken" (I have spoken, you have spoken, he/she has spoken, we have spoken, they have spoken).
either... usually speak with I think that speak with is a more gentle approach eg. I will try to speak with her, Whereas speak to sounds more confrontational eg I will speak to her about the problem
The future tense is "will speak"