Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Kneenibble
This conversation you are carrying on with Elemental makes me happy. What do the anti-budgies look like? :smallbiggrin:
Perhaps they have an inverted colour scheme to that of ordinary budgies, or perhaps you can't tell the difference, I don't know. Myself, I imagine them with a fully extradimensional colour array, intangible to lesser minds and capable of driving rational humans to an otherworldly madness. A Lovecraftian palette, if you so wish.
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Originally Posted by
Kneenibble
I'm browsing Youtube to help me hear the difference. Norwegian fits into this too?! How interesting. I know so little about the world. ;___;
Swedes, Danes and Norwegians are generally able to understand eachother perfectly well if we don't get all too excited and/or drunk (although Danes sound like they're drunk to start with, so perhaps we're easier for them to understand while slightly inebriated :smallwink:).
Icelanders can even be intelligible if it's a good day, but it's hard and requires a good knowledge of both aged vocabulary and an affinity with puzzles. Takes the Icelandic word "lögregla". At first it looks like complete nonsense, but when you take it apart, you get "lög", which isn't all too unlike "lag" ("law"), and "regla", which sounds like "reglera" ("regulator"). So, the gibberish "lögregla" is actually a law regulator, or a policeman (although I might have gotten my etymologies wrong, seeing how "regla" also sounds like "regel" ("rule")).
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Originally Posted by
Kneenibble
Hmm. And yet, how can you construct a positivist national mythology without a literary canon? [I'm only half-joking about that] Maybe I just take the idea of a canon for granted, being of English descent in a country whose official heritage is English and French, two of the biggest canonists around.
Our national mythos is mainly carried through tradition and children's tales, just like we've always done.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Kneenibble
Seriously though -- let me ask this instead. If I were an Arts student in Sweden, is there a Swedish Literature degree I could take? And is there a list of usual suspects that I would study? Is Strindberg in there somewhere? I really like Strindberg if you haven't noticed.
Probably. I've never looked, so I wouldn't know, but I find it highly unlikely that you'd be completely unable to find a Swedish Literature course in all of Sweden.
That said, I wouldn't be all too surprised if you found more Swedish Literature courses outside of Sweden than within its borders...
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Kneenibble
I am happy for you!
Here is a winter-coloured budgie to help you celebrate.
Yay!
*huggles all budgies around*
Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
Look apon me and despair, general populace, for I have once again entered the realm of the Job Havers!
Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
Quote:
Originally Posted by
LaZodiac
Look apon me and despair, general populace, for I have once again entered the realm of the Job Havers!
Agast! What does this doomed future hold? What does this terrible curse entail? :smalleek:
Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Teddy
Agast! What does this doomed future hold? What does this terrible curse entail? :smalleek:
I'm working at my Mom's place. I'll be working 10 to 3 every day except Sunday, and the next three Saturday's are all full day things.
Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
Anyone remember that exchange thingy? Started with an Alot of Time pic and continued from there? There was definitely a Space Bar.
Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
Quote:
Originally Posted by
LaZodiac
I'm working at my Mom's place. I'll be working 10 to 3 every day except Sunday, and the next three Saturday's are all full day things.
Ohh, then I suppose congratulations are in order! :smallsmile:
So, what sort of work does your new position involve?
Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Teddy
Ohh, then I suppose congratulations are in order! :smallsmile:
So, what sort of work does your new position involve?
Doing dishes, cleaning the kitchen, and helping witht he cooking. I made fries today!
Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
Quote:
Originally Posted by
LaZodiac
Doing dishes, cleaning the kitchen, and helping witht he cooking. I made fries today!
Nice, I guess. For as long as you're happy, I'm happy. *thumbs up*
Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Heliomance
I am confused. I thought the Demon Cat had passed away.
No? IIRC a while back Curly complained that while she'd been at uni the DemonCat had to go to the vet for something potentially life-threatening and she was annoyed her family hadn't told her? Maybe you were thinking of that?
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Originally Posted by
MoonCat
Can I just get hugs from you guys and make the Bad Things go away?
*Hugs*
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Originally Posted by
Mutant Sheep
Ele, I swear you just made that wall of post so only the truly devoted would bother responding. :smalltongue:
Pfft, you call that a wall of text requiring true devotion? In my day, Random Banter had at least 3 walls of text per page! And they were longer than that! And we had to multiquote by hand!
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Originally Posted by
AllIHaveIsCrunk
Not really. I just wanted to set up that "makes Romeo and Juliet look like Shakespeare" joke. And none of you laughed.
Yes really, that's the nonsensical phrasing I was referring to. It just wasn't a very good joke I'm afraid.
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Originally Posted by
The Succubus
Could be worse. I was once forced to read all of Pride and Prejudice for my English GCSE and all because of a scene involving Colin Firth and a wet shirt. Suddenly everyone* became obsessed with that damn book and the wretched scene isn't even in it.
As a fifteen year old kid, I wasn't interested in the slightest about the fact that Elizabeth Bennet thought Mr Darcy the most awful snob, or how scandalous it was that Jane ran off with the caddish Mr Wickham.
Why couldn't we have studied a story with meat to it like 1984 or Animal Farm?
Yeah, Ms Austen and I don't see eye to eye. :smallannoyed:
* Everyone, that is, that went warm and melty at the sight of Colin Firth in clingy wet period costume.
Hey, Pride and Prejudice is great! You shouldn't be put off good literature just because some of its fans are just as silly as its third main female character.
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Originally Posted by
AllIHaveIsCrunk
While I agree with you about Ms Austen I don't agree on your reasons. The internet has this juvenile belief that "higher stakes" equals "better content" and that is just nonsense. Just the mostly widely believed rubbish today, second only to "pop music is bad because it's pop music".
I'm confused as to what the higher stakes thing has to do with Succubus' cmplaints about P&P. And I'm certain there are more widely believed rubbishes, not least because if people widely believed pop music was bad it wouldn't be popular.
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Originally Posted by
Mutant Sheep
Because I find referingo friend as a 'ex' silly, as if he as never made out, then there can have been no makeouts, which is a necessity for a real 'relationship' to begin. Without the makeout, it is just "something MIGHTA happened"-ship.
I don't know a thing about the context of this but make-outs are not a necessity for a relationship to be considered 'real'. It's all about the emotions, man.
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Originally Posted by
Kneenibble
My nephew has been trying to get me to play League of Legends with him. I'm close to giving in. Is the learning curve as steep as I fear?
No, it is terrible and will destroy your life!
(Disclaimer: I have never played LoL and therefore have little basis for my opinion)
Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Teddy
Nice, I guess. For as long as you're happy, I'm happy. *thumbs up*
I'm happy. My throat is sore though, cough cough.
Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
Kneen, I found another glögg recipe you might want to try. This one is a bit more flashy:
Spoiler
Show
Quote:
- 0,75 l red wine
- 1 pc cinnamon stick
- 1 pc ginger
- 1 pc bitter orange
- 5 pc clove
- 2 tsp cardamom
- 400 g sugar lumps
- 0,35 l schnapps or vodka
- raisins (once again to serve with the drink)
- almonds (preferably scalded) (-||-)
Heat the wine and the seasoning in a pot. Put a lattice (for example the rack from an oven) halfway over the pot, and put the sugar lumps on top of it over the wine. Add the vodka, and heat (probably until it almost boils).
Take a match
and set fire to the drink. Then scoop up the burning liquid and pour it over the sugar so that it melts down into the pot. Finally, put a lid on the pot so that the fire is extinguished. Test if the drink is sweet enough, if not, put back the lattice with more sugar on it and set fire to the drink again, repeating this proceedure until you're satisfied.
You can store the finished glögg in the refrigerator to heat and serve with almonds and raisins at a later time.
Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
So... who beith new threading, guys? :smallconfused::smalltongue:
Re: Coid's Crowing Conundrum of a Canticle of Crookedly Random Banter #185
I suppose I ought to do it.
Please hold for new thread.
Here we go!
EditEdit: hehehe.... wrong URL.