Your lips don't touch when you say the word touch, but do touch when you say separate
My 8 year old son told me this randomly after getting out of the shower this morning.
My 8 year old son told me this randomly after getting out of the shower this morning.
This reminds me of an expression in Spanish
"Todo junto se escribe separado y separado se escribe todo junto"
Which I just discovered is the same on English lol :
"All together is written separately and separately is written all together"
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/grammar/british-grammar/altogether-or-all-together
Seems it depends on context.
In french, "ça touche pas ça touche, ça touche ça touche pas" is a common riddle. You ask the person to guess what "it" is in "'it doesn't touch' touches, 'it touches' doesn't" (of course this doesn't work in English but it does in french due to the usage of 'pas' for 'doesn't'). They may then ask you if various things touch or not. The game may go on for several hours as the guesser tries to guess objects, animals, concepts before they get that it is about whether or not your lips touch.
A common occurence is the guesser gives up, and whatever phrase they use to indicate that is just interpreted as another guess by the riddler: "I give up! -'I give up' touches."
There's a similar riddle in English: "I like coffee but I don't like T", so the person has to ask about various words and you say you don't like them if they contain the letter T.
Hey Vsauce, Michael here. What does it mean to be touched by something? In 1890, a poet named Rene Bomier said that to touch is to feel the world around you. But what if the world touched you back?
Because you should touch with your fingers first before your mouth and when we separate we shut our lips ..
Not like this in Persian! Seperate is jodaa in Persian (جدا), and touch can be translated to tamaas (تماس).