If you call someone by the Kurdish word for "friend" while walking on the street, there is a chance that you could get in trouble with the law. The word is also a unisex name, so if you use it to address someone, you could end up spending the day in jail.
If you say "Hevalcan what's up" to your friend on the phone while you are getting into a taxi, the taxi driver, who is already calmly walking and listening to music, takes a quick look at you in the mirror. He then gets excited, starts driving really fast through the streets of Halkal, and pulls up to the bus station with a loud noise. Heval is such an interesting word, I heard it today.
heval
heval
it must mean friend in kurdish. (see: lying, wrong entry)
heval
(see: people get smaller as people get bigger)
heval
If you call someone by the Kurdish word for "friend" while walking on the street, there is a chance that you could get in trouble with the law. The word is also a unisex name, so if you use it to address someone, you could end up spending the day in jail.
heval
If you say "Hevalcan what's up" to your friend on the phone while you are getting into a taxi, the taxi driver, who is already calmly walking and listening to music, takes a quick look at you in the mirror. He then gets excited, starts driving really fast through the streets of Halkal, and pulls up to the bus station with a loud noise. Heval is such an interesting word, I heard it today.