Night.OK, then! That makes sense! 'Night, dear blunt!
This message board permanently closed on June 30th, 2020 at 4PM EDT and is no longer accepting new members.
Night.OK, then! That makes sense! 'Night, dear blunt!
...Stieg then, ya hater
And just because it's plural, does not mean that you add an apostrophe in spite of recent trends (not trend's)!!!!!! *twitch*
From Imgur.com - roadside produce stand in E. Texas
If you can't figure out the apostrophyzes, make up a new word.
Or just construct the sentence more better.
Oh I like that, that's a roadside sales keeper...but it does make me curious, I mean I gotta wonder about that one tater...hmm, ah, yeah probably justa typoFrom Imgur.com - roadside produce stand in E. Texas
That makes me wonder what the hell he's wonderin' about, I mean seems to me he's almost all at once decided, 'Deeeelicious!', and yet also wonders, why...hmmm, o' course considerin' the source, could beAsk this guy about Taters....mmmmmmmmmmmhhhhhhhhhmmmmmmm
And just because it's plural, does not mean that you add an apostrophe in spite of recent trends (not trend's)!!!!!! *twitch*
I almost suspect that this one was contrived to appear the way that it does.There are no words.
No, seriously. You might give an exception for "bail," except it's not the right one.
Yeah, but this stuff really matters in most Germanic languages. Consider, for example (from German):
Nicht schiessen, kamerad! - Don't shoot, comrade!
Nicht scheissen, kamerad! - means, er...something very different.
I've no idea what 'steig' might mean in Swedish, though, only that the pronunciation would change.
Kurben! Over to you.
Steig isn't a Swedish word, if I can trust Google Translate. Your example of schiessen/scheissen also applies to Dutch: schieten/scheiten, (although the latter should be spelled schijten, but in pronunciation there's no difference). For the ones not familiar with German and Dutch: scheissen (German)/schijten (Dutch) translates in English to a word that actually looks a bit like shoot. Only with an "i" instead of "oo".
How come you know (a bit of) German by the way, Mr Nobody? Most English people aren't that aware of foreign languages.