I don't know.onkko wrote:Why you think vikings succeeded in england and not in finland
They found better beer in England?
I don't know.onkko wrote:Why you think vikings succeeded in england and not in finland
Couples say "hakisitko". Parents say to children "haepas". It is "hae" that would be rude. "pas" at the end softens it.I have trouble imagining the people saying "hakisitko" to each other. Which do you think couples use more often?
I think the Swedes and Russians just couldn't handle 4 infinitives and 17-21 cases (nobody ever seems to REALLY know how many there are). Or maybe they could, but decided it was more trouble than it was worth.Bubba Elvis XIV wrote: See no one likes ya! The Russians couldn't stand you, neither the swedes...![]()
Or you need it right that instant, like a screwdriver when you're up in the cieling holding a lampEP wrote: It is "hae" that would be rude.
You have to remember that it wasn't 'England' as we know it today...different clans and all that. The vikings succeded in some areas and not others. sometimes through conflict and sometimes through a kind of ancient form of multiculturalism and intergration.AldenG wrote:I don't know.onkko wrote:Why you think vikings succeeded in england and not in finland
They found better beer in England?
Some stories suggest that one of your kings were finn descent, you probably have some finn/nordic blood tooBubba Elvis XIV wrote:You have to remember that it wasn't 'England' as we know it today...different clans and all that. The vikings succeded in some areas and not others. sometimes through conflict and sometimes through a kind of ancient form of multiculturalism and intergration.AldenG wrote:I don't know.onkko wrote:Why you think vikings succeeded in england and not in finland
They found better beer in England?![]()
I think they stuck around cos it was so easy to get visas, dole money and soggy chips.
(there was quite an interesting thing about the UK being influenced by invaders, vikings, romans, etc etc on BBC history, the 'invasion model' is out and integration and assimiliation in)
You really know history onto 1000s? great! Tell me about it!AldenG wrote:If I remember my history correctly, the modern Princess of Finland had a shot at becoming Queen of England. Or would it have been Crown Princess? But it's been a while since I saw King Ralph, so I could be misremembering. I do recall that her voice was authentically low.
RUBBISH!onkko wrote: Some stories suggest that one of your kings were finn descent, you probably have some finn/nordic blood tooWe had kings in russia too.
Same stories strongly suggest that being "from finn bloodline" was good in sweden, denmark and norway kings too.
Well those stories are good to me so dont dare to deny!
Obviously swedished name of Kalle Kallenpoika!Bubba Elvis XIV wrote:My real name is Gustav Gustavsson...
King Ralph was set around 1990 and featured the then-20-something Princess of Finland. That's about as far back as I know my history.onkko wrote: You really know history onto 1000s? great! Tell me about it!
Janten lakiPursuivant wrote:Don't think that you are special.Karhunkoski wrote: I love the Country, but I love it with enough maturity to realise that it does have an occasional fallacy (rather than the blind nationalistic defensiveness).
Don't think that you are of the same standing as us.
Don't think that you are smarter than us.
Don't fancy yourself as being better than us.
Don't think that you know more than us.
Don't think that you are more important than us.
Don't think that you are good at anything.
Don't laugh at us.
Don't think that anyone of us cares about you.
Don't think that you can teach us anything.
sinikala wrote:
That only works when the roads are empty enough for drivers to keep twice the safe distance.
Otherwise, slipping into the "safe distance" hole in the flow automatically means that the person joining the flow is now at half the safe distance, as is the driver following him. So in order for both drivers to restore their safe distances ... what must they do?
Show me what manners are universal and then you might have a point.Nope. Good manners and courtesy are not solely defined by the host society (although some are). General manners are an international phenomenon, and all countries in Europe can be judged on their awareness of these with equal congratulation or disdain.
Karhunkoski wrote:Europe