This thing!
What is it called in your language?
Sofa, Diwan, Couch
sillón, or sofá
>>56763601
>Germany
>Diwan
jpeg
>>56763574
Дивaн
>>56763601
Kanapee
>>56763601
Das Sofa
Der Diwan
Die Couch
I love how they cover all genders.
>>56763574
trosjed
>>56763657
this too
America
Cuck-bed.
>>56763613
and 'diván' for this type od couch.
>>56763574
Sofá
>>56763657
this
>>56763668
>all genders
>only three
Racist
>>56763804
there's no way that thing is comfortable
>>56763869
That's what the Romans had back in their days.
If you use it the right way, you won't be disappointed.
>>56763869
It's more like a therapy thing, pretty rare in houses desu
>>56763574
bed
>>56763574
couch
>>56763574
"Casting Couch"
>>56763865
>his language has only two (2) genders
How does it feel to have a pre-release beta of a language?
Laiskanlinna
>>56764004
Me on the left
>>56763574
Divan or sofa
>>56763601
>>56763657
Judenmatratze
Pennerbett
Zigeunerlatrine
Folterbank
...
and the ist goes on, we really do have an awful lot of words for it
Koe-esiintymissohva
For Straya:
>>56763601
:s/Diwan/Lounge
>>56763869
You lie sideways on it, the hint is that pillow you use to wedge under you. We had our great-grandfather's one on the farm growing up, still in decent nick, they're reasonably comfy.
>>56764878
>>56764669
>>56763668
>>56763804
I'm always amused how Dywan in Polish is pic related
A couch is a sofa or kanapa
Chesterfield
>>56763574
Casting couch
>>56763865
>masters of art degree in women studies
>>56763574
canapea
gauč (=couch), pohovka, kanape, otoman, divan
>Canapé - from Latin cōnōpēum (“seat with a baldaquin”), from Ancient Greek kωνωπεών (kōnōpeṓn), from kώνωψ (kṓnōps, “mosquito”)
>Persian devan "bundle of written sheets, small book, collection of poems" (as in the "Divan i-Hafiz"), related to debir "writer." Sense evolved through "book of accounts," to "office of accounts," "custom house," "council chamber," then to "long, cushioned seat," such as are found along the walls in Middle Eastern council chambers
>From Old French couche, from the verb se couchier (“go to bed”), earlier colchier, from Latin collocō (“place, position, settle”), from con- + locus (“place”)
didn't know that
sofi-fu
>>56763574
Diwan, Дивaн
a foto
>>56763601
Stirb an Aids du bastard
>>56765071
Sklep in Polish is a shop or something as far as I remember, but in Russian it is a crypt. Languages are different, you know..
Bank
>>56763574
are we in 2011 again?
reported for posting stale meme
>>56763574
Sofali
>>56765974
For you
>>56763574
Sofa
kanapa
tapczan
Sofá
>>56763574
pornic=porn
>>56763574
El Coucho
t. Chile
slavettes tester