Guardian of Silence
W:O:A Metalmaster
I've been reading up on the area. Sounds fun!
Yeah, it's our Vegas.
Just - er, cheaper. And a LITTLE smaller...
I've been reading up on the area. Sounds fun!
Yeah, it's our Vegas.
Just - er, cheaper. And a LITTLE smaller...
With lots of sex theaters
Damn I hate liquor and loose women!
Damn I hate liquor and loose women!
The two nights before Wacken we are staying at a hotel on the Reaperbahn. Should be interesting!
Someone who doesn't understand that propably couldn't switch to English even if you told him to do so in perfect GermanIt might be enough, just to say "i don't speak anything else than english". Most Germans should understand that. And yes, our English is not the best one, but most of us Do speak understandable English.
Very important thing to know! "Ein grosses Bier, bitte!" (pronounced like "ine grohsaz beer, bitteh" or something like that).Thanks for all the info. I'm going to learn some basic phrases like "Please give me a large beer"
Someone who doesn't understand that propably couldn't switch to English even if you told him to do so in perfect German
I guess there's nothing in the English language that sounds like an ü. The only time I ever heard the sound from an English speaker, it was a guy with a heavy scottish accent pronouncing oo.
You'd propably have to use those special signs that language books use.
I knew it. I knew it. Crap.
How do I make that funny little unicorns - er, unicodes?
I guess there's nothing in the English language that sounds like an ü. The only time I ever heard the sound from an English speaker, it was a guy with a heavy scottish accent pronouncing oo.
You'd propably have to use those special signs that language books use.
Sure there is!
"I knew you'd do a poo"
If you pronounced the underlined as "ü" in the above sentence (as stupid as it is ), and said it to pretty much any native English speaker, they'd be pretty impressed with your pronunciation. I don't know where this idea that the "ü" sound doesn't exist in the English language, but as you can see there too many ways to spell it. Fuck I hate the English language
Maybe in Aussie English, but I reckon a US speaker would pronounce it a slightly different than e.g. a UK speaker. (English of course)