When you think of piglatin, you think of ay right? Well you right in piglatin you don't end in ay you End in aq. With a q not a y. Piglatin for Mom is easy Take the first let of the sentence which is m. Then move it to the end of the word. Now you have omm. Now that you've done that, you add aq to omm. You now have ommaq which is piglatin for mom, but its pronounced ommay. Don't get it? Let's do another example, a harder one. Let's do humiliation Take the first letter in the word humiliation. H. Now put it on the end of the word so that you have umiliationh. Now take THAT and add aq to it. Now you have umiliationhaq which is piglatin for humiliation, and its pronounced umiliationhay.
Rules of piglatin:
1. The first letter ALWAYS goes to the end of the word UNLESS, it starts with a vowel. Meaning if you gave me a word like umbrella, the writing would be umbrellaaq. pronounced umbrellaay.
2. DO NOT BE FOOLED BY Y. Y is not really a vowel so when you get a word like you, it is written like ouyaq not youaq.
3. When it is a word made out of two words like guideline or notebook, you do it separately. You would write notebook like otenaq ookbaq not otebooknaq.
4. When you have a word like they or speak, you take the joining letters (th and sp) and put them both at the end. so speak would be eakspaq and they would be eythaq.
5. This last one will be in piglatin see if you can figure it out:
ifaq ouyaq antwaq otaq eakspaq inaq igpaq atinlaq enthaq ouyaq avehaq otaq ollowfaq allaq ofaq esethaq ulesraq!
In piglatin, "stupidity" would be said as "upiditystay."
Megan, in Pig Latin is Eganmay.
In Pig Latin, "roncon" would become "onconray." Each word needs to have the consonant(s) at the beginning moved to the end, followed by "ay."
Tiff in Pig Latin is spelled as "Ifftay".
In Pig Latin, "Katie" would be spelled as "Atiekay."
In piglatin, "stupidity" would be said as "upiditystay."
Megan, in Pig Latin is Eganmay.
Iffanitay
olphin-day
This can be piglatin for "clear". In piglatin, the word begins with the first vowel, and all the consonants are shifted to the back of the word with the letters "ay" attached to the end. So from clear, "earclay"!
In Pig Latin, "roncon" would become "onconray." Each word needs to have the consonant(s) at the beginning moved to the end, followed by "ay."
Rex its piglatin
"Earday" means "dear" in Piglatin.
Tiff in Pig Latin is spelled as "Ifftay".
Piglatin is where you take the first consonant from the word, put it on the end of the word and add -ay. If the word begins in a vowel, you add -way to the end. You'd say "I-way of-lay Aja-way"
You could try using piglatin its fun to use :D
In Pig Latin, "Katie" would be spelled as "Atiekay."