this post was submitted on 24 Dec 2024
201 points (95.1% liked)
YUROP
1266 readers
28 users here now
A laid back community for good news, pictures and general discussions among people living in Europe.
Other European communities
Other casual communities:
Language communities
Cities
Countries
- !albania@lemmy.world
- !austria@feddit.org
- !belgique@jlai.lu
- !belgium@lemmy.world
- !croatia@lemmy.world
- https://feddit.dk/
- !deutschland@feddit.org / !germany@feddit.org
- !eesti@lemm.ee
- https://lemmy.eus/
- !finland@sopuli.xyz
- !france@jlai.lu
- https://foros.fediverso.gal/
- !greece@lemmy.world
- !hungary@lemmy.world
- Italy: !news@feddit.it
- !ireland@lemmy.world
- !northern_ireland@feddit.uk
- !norway@lemmy.world
- !thenetherlands@feddit.nl
- Poland: !wiadomosci@szmer.info
- !portugal@lemmy.pt
- !romania@feddit.ro
- !suisse@lemmy.world
- !sweden@lemmy.world
- !ukraine@sopuli.xyz
- !unitedkingdom@feddit.uk
- !wales@lemm.ee
founded 11 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Funny they say France is Father Christmas but Spain it's Daddy Christmas when they're the same words technically. Maybe they confused Papá with Papí?
Yeah that's an error, he's father Christmas here. On a side note, papi has no accent
Dang it, I corrected it to the wrong thing.
I never use Papi so I didn't remember if it had one
Papá has one to mark the intonation and to differentiate it from Papa, the pope.
Papi is said with the same intonation as Daddy so it doesn't have an accent.
Papa is also potato in America, but in Spain we use patata
Yup, but also means pope, so my dad would joke about the potato pope
In French, "papa" is the informal way to call your own father, while "père" describes the relationship.
I don't know enough about Spanish to compare, but the french translation feels right to me.
(Actually... Translating "Noël" into a word that talks about Christ and Masses feels weird to me!)
Padre = father Papa = dad Papi = daddy