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Someone there

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Everything posted by Someone there

  1. Thank you. For me too. Unfortunately, I do not speak French. Maybe we are just cross-talking. I am not native to English either.
  2. I respect you, @refazer, but now you are starting to sound like a person who is mostly negative unless everything is exactly as you want it to be. I said Norway is good. You reply that it is perhaps best, but not good enough. The entire world is on a journey here, to change old bad, to new good. I think we are on a good track where I live. Not perfect, but we are getting there. It is totally on the political agenda. And for the record: I am straight.
  3. Yes, I am lucky. I go to the only naturist beach in Oslo, and I see couples of both sexes. And I even see young men without penises, and young women without breasts. Nobody cares. I am so happy to live here, where people get to be what they feel like being.
  4. Not in Norway, where I live.
  5. I stand corrected. Thanks, @Kjeld Carlsen. I suggest you all move to Norway. Or Denmark.
  6. I think the homophobia exists only in what was called the "eastern bloc" countries, of which Russia is the country clinging most to the old regime. At least in my part of the world (northern Europe), people get to be whatever they want to be. Personally, I see every person as a friend until they prove not to be.
  7. Based on the look on his face, the male pig-teddy was a lousy replacement for the goddess. I hope they will figure it out. Was a nice couple. I know many of you love her, and hate him. But I like them both.
  8. I have never been to Russia, but I have been in Lviv, Ukraine. To me, that is one of the most beautiful cities in the world. And the people are lovely too. If you are into craft beer, you should visit Pravda Beer Palace right at the city square. They even make a beer called Путін Хуйло ("Putin [is a] dickhead"), which tastes much better than the name would suggest.
  9. Her face in this picture... It is just the most beautiful face. Classical Mediterranean beauty.
  10. Where did they go? All of them?
  11. Thanks, Jabbath. I didn't know there was a political section here.
  12. I didn't expect anyone to react to my rant at all, but am surprised to find a laughing icon. That was totally unexpected. Please elaborate.
  13. So... If Putin finally succeeds in killing Navalnyj this time, or invades more of Ukraine than he already did with Krym and Donbas, Mother Russia needs young people like you, beautiful Kira and Nina, to stand up against him and say that this is not how the world is supposed to be in 2021. You need to tell him that you do not want another Stalinist regime, even though you are moving in that direction at maximum speed at the moment. Tell him that the days om imperialism and suppression of the people (this time subtle through government-controlled fake media, and social-media-flooding trolls) is over. And for those who think Russia is the big thing... Ukraine existed as a state hundreds of years before there was any Russia. My viking ancestors from Norway went to "Gardarike", mostly nowadays Ukraine, centered around Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine. The founder of Oslo even married the daughter of the king in Kyiv back in around the year 1060. So when Russia these days want "their outbreak republics" back, they put all history that was before the Soviet Union under the carpet, and pretend it does not exist. I have friends in Ukraine. If I was younger, I would go there to pick up a gun and help driving the aggressors out. Sorry for being political. This has been a thing for me since I was in the Norwegian army back in the 1980-es. My country has a border with the same aggressor.
  14. Don't be a dork.
  15. Jeez! Like Norway in the 1950-ies. [redacted my own political rant.]
  16. What is wrong? Why does it need repair? Любов не працює?
  17. She's extremely beautiful.
  18. It would be nice if one of @Mira&Henry could tell us what is going on. But if they do not feel like talking to us, it is understandable, and OK. Wish you all the best! Обіймаю!
  19. Wow! Amazing!
  20. Вас люблю, @Mira&Henry! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TD4h9Fdn3-o
  21. I love this sentence, because it proves me wrong. As Mira and Henry perhaps remember, I have been trying to learn Ukrainian for some time. And I think it is almost completely impossible to learn all the cases of a slavic language. I have thought that it must be much more easy for them to learn a germanic language. But this sentence proves me wrong. This is what I realised: First of all, the "are"/"is" is normally implicit in slavic, and not mentioned. They say "you beautiful". In writing, they write "you - beautiful" with a dash where germanic speakers would write "are"/"is". They have a word for it, which in Ukrainian is "є", but they neither say it nor write it. So this one is kind of easy: Just add what you do not say, but keep in mind that it depends on the subject. So either "am" (1st person), "are" (2nd person or plural) or "is" (3rd person). Not so easy after all. The second is much harder. There are no particles in slavic languages. They have neither "a house", nor "the house". They just have "house". "Дім" or "будинок" in Ukrainian. And I can understand that it is difficult. What's the difference between "I live in a yellow house" and "I live in the yellow house"? "A" could be any. "The" signifies one in particular. So to say "I live in the yellow house" would only make sense if there are three houses of which only one was yellow. In that case you would know which one of the three houses I live in. If "I live in a yellow house", it could be any of the yellow houses in the city. In most cases you should specify "a" or "the" for nouns, or even "an" instead of "a" if the noun starts with a vowel sound (yes, that is sound, not letter). And this is just for English. The Norwegian (my language) version of germanic is even worse. So I stand corrected. Germanic languages are not easy. "Tomorrow we are planning a party". Thank you _so_much_ for being a part of the community, @Mira&Henry!
  22. I don't care how they do, as long as I get to see FFN-pics of Kira like the ones my hero @refazer posted on Feb 3rd. That's something! (OK, I'm pretending to be badass. But still... those pictures... Just wow.)
  23. Your French translation of my text (I don't know French): "deux romans". Interesting. The English "novel" is also "roman" in Norwegian (my mother tongue). And the Norwegian "novelle" is the English "short-story". Languages can be confusing sometimes. Sorry for being off-topic again.
  24. Fun fact: Both novels, written at about the same time (1860-ies) by two of the most famous (internationally) Russian authors, have plots that start in St. Petersburg.
  25. I think we'll see both crime and punishment.
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