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- Granitehewer
- Captain
- Posts: 2237
- Joined: Sun Aug 05, 2007 12:03 pm
- Location: Teesside, England
- Contact:
dzien dobry, is one simple bit of polish,that bagged me a waitress, fact of the day
PTLLS (Tees Achieve), DipHE App Bio (Northumbria), BSc Psychology (Teesside), Comparative Planetology (LJMU), High Energy Astrophysics (LJMU), Mobile Robotics/Physics (Swinburne), Genetics (SAC), Quant Meths (SAC)
https://www.facebook.com/PeterBrayshay
https://www.facebook.com/PeterBrayshay
- Granitehewer
- Captain
- Posts: 2237
- Joined: Sun Aug 05, 2007 12:03 pm
- Location: Teesside, England
- Contact:
replace 'bagged' with meaningful cultural exchange..
PTLLS (Tees Achieve), DipHE App Bio (Northumbria), BSc Psychology (Teesside), Comparative Planetology (LJMU), High Energy Astrophysics (LJMU), Mobile Robotics/Physics (Swinburne), Genetics (SAC), Quant Meths (SAC)
https://www.facebook.com/PeterBrayshay
https://www.facebook.com/PeterBrayshay
Cool! I didn't expect to find someone who could speak Old Church Slavonic on a Star Trek forum. I believe one of the first parts of the Bible translated in the vernacular tongue in my country was actually an Old Church Slavonic translation of the prologue of the Gospel by John. Let me see if I could remember: Iskoni bě Slovo, i Slovo bě u Boga i Bog bě Slovo.Mikey wrote:In some form or another, it's Polish, Ukrainian, Russian, and Old Slavonic (the original ecclesiastical language of my wife's church.)
"How humane humans are is shown by their regard for the mother tongue."
Friedrich Schiller
"Navik on živi ki zgine pošteno."
Fran Krsto Frankapan
"Sors bona, nihil aliud."
Zrinski family motto
Friedrich Schiller
"Navik on živi ki zgine pošteno."
Fran Krsto Frankapan
"Sors bona, nihil aliud."
Zrinski family motto
Cool! I didn't expect to find someone who could speak Old Church Slavonic on a Star Trek forum. I believe one of the first parts of the Bible translated in the vernacular tongue in my country was actually an Old Church Slavonic translation of the prologue of the Gospel by John. Let me see if I could remember: Iskoni bě Slovo, i Slovo bě u Boga i Bog bě Slovo.Mikey wrote:In some form or another, it's Polish, Ukrainian, Russian, and Old Slavonic (the original ecclesiastical language of my wife's church.)
"How humane humans are is shown by their regard for the mother tongue."
Friedrich Schiller
"Navik on živi ki zgine pošteno."
Fran Krsto Frankapan
"Sors bona, nihil aliud."
Zrinski family motto
Friedrich Schiller
"Navik on živi ki zgine pošteno."
Fran Krsto Frankapan
"Sors bona, nihil aliud."
Zrinski family motto
- Granitehewer
- Captain
- Posts: 2237
- Joined: Sun Aug 05, 2007 12:03 pm
- Location: Teesside, England
- Contact:
thats like a scene from 'night of the living dead', you're either superhumanly cool, or terrifying lol
PTLLS (Tees Achieve), DipHE App Bio (Northumbria), BSc Psychology (Teesside), Comparative Planetology (LJMU), High Energy Astrophysics (LJMU), Mobile Robotics/Physics (Swinburne), Genetics (SAC), Quant Meths (SAC)
https://www.facebook.com/PeterBrayshay
https://www.facebook.com/PeterBrayshay
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- Fleet Admiral
- Posts: 35635
- Joined: Fri Jul 27, 2007 3:04 am
- Commendations: The Daystrom Award
- Location: down the shore, New Jersey, USA
- Contact:
Who's the guy who was going to use the bayonet against an old computer?
My sister-in-law, who used to be a nun, is quite fluent - their church didn't convert to vernaculars at Pope John Paul I's allowance - they didn't change until the early '80's.
We also still use some Ukrainian, etc., in the house - instead of getting a Christmas tree, we get a "yelenka," and my mother sometimes asks about what happened to the pierogies when my wife has said she made "varenyky." In addition, part of my mother's family is Galician, so her Yiddish is inflected with Slavic-derived vocabulary.
I can't say that I have any real fluency... my wife is Ukrainian-rite Byzantine Catholic, which sect originally came to America as the Ruthenian Byzantine church... they rarely even use Old Slavonic anymore, instead conducting liturgies in Ukrainian and English. I can translate some basic vocabulary that has analogs in modern languages, like "slovo"=word, and "Bog/Boga"=G-d (In fact, after bedtime prayers, my wife has taught my daughter to say goodnight to "Bozhe" - the modern Ukrainian equivalent.)Eosphoros wrote:Cool! I didn't expect to find someone who could speak Old Church Slavonic on a Star Trek forum.
My sister-in-law, who used to be a nun, is quite fluent - their church didn't convert to vernaculars at Pope John Paul I's allowance - they didn't change until the early '80's.
We also still use some Ukrainian, etc., in the house - instead of getting a Christmas tree, we get a "yelenka," and my mother sometimes asks about what happened to the pierogies when my wife has said she made "varenyky." In addition, part of my mother's family is Galician, so her Yiddish is inflected with Slavic-derived vocabulary.
I can't stand nothing dull
I got the high gloss luster
I'll massacre your ass as fast
as Bull offed Custer
I got the high gloss luster
I'll massacre your ass as fast
as Bull offed Custer
- Graham Kennedy
- Site Admin
- Posts: 11561
- Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2007 2:28 pm
- Location: Banbury, UK
- Contact:
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- 4 Star Admiral
- Posts: 26014
- Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2007 10:58 pm
- Location: Poblacht na hÉireann, Baile Átha Cliath
You could probably take on the Irish army with that force!
A pity guns are illegal over here, I'd have a collection myself, other wise...
I make up for that loss with a collection of ancient weapons.
A pity guns are illegal over here, I'd have a collection myself, other wise...
I make up for that loss with a collection of ancient weapons.
"You've all been selected for this mission because you each have a special skill. Professor Hawking, John Leslie, Phil Neville, the Wu-Tang Clan, Usher, the Sugar Puffs Monster and Daniel Day-Lewis! Welcome to Operation MindFuck!"
lol his name's steve, and we tried, but knife vs. metal computer case doesnt work so well.... that is a circa 1889 swiss schmidt rubin.... its a really cool rifle, has a straigt pull bolt. for 120 years old, its amazingly accurate and consistant.Mikey wrote:Who's the guy who was going to use the bayonet against an old computer?
Thats actually only some of themGrahamKennedy wrote:Good Lord, all those are yours? What are you planing to do, invade another country?
- Graham Kennedy
- Site Admin
- Posts: 11561
- Joined: Mon Jul 09, 2007 2:28 pm
- Location: Banbury, UK
- Contact:
I see you have another AK fan in your midst... it is probably a WASR-10, but nice none the less...DarkOmen wrote:me and the buddies doing the "noble hunter" pose after we went on a shooting fest. We shot up an old computer... it was shredded. All the guns are mine actually lol, its my little collection. Im the one crouched down on the left.... with the AK47.
Ugh... do not thump the Book of G'Quan...
Yay!! someone else who knows AK's!! it is a WASR10, but i modified it to take hi cap mags... its my beat up one.. .i have one of the 1952 series Soviet AK47s, the REAL AK47, but it stays at home... its too nice to go out and shoot. I have an SKS, an M44 carbine and full size mosin nagant so my dirty russian collection is well underway.Jim wrote: I see you have another AK fan in your midst... it is probably a WASR-10, but nice none the less...
I want to get a 74 and a venezuelan 103, but i doubt it will happen, it was hard enough getting the two AKs i alredy have.
I plan on getting a Dragunov (it will probably be a Romainian one also, so technically not a dragunov) next month. And i want to get or make an RPK..
and i want a PKM too... sigh.
EDIT: YAY!! i got promoted!! *dances*