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August 28, 2009 at 8:17 AM #450769August 28, 2009 at 8:23 AM #449992Allan from FallbrookParticipant
[quote=sdrealtor]Speaking of German Shephards, Vick sure looked good last nite.[/quote]
sdr: Duuuuuude. Wrong, wrong, wrong. Funny, but wrong.
August 28, 2009 at 8:23 AM #450183Allan from FallbrookParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]Speaking of German Shephards, Vick sure looked good last nite.[/quote]
sdr: Duuuuuude. Wrong, wrong, wrong. Funny, but wrong.
August 28, 2009 at 8:23 AM #450520Allan from FallbrookParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]Speaking of German Shephards, Vick sure looked good last nite.[/quote]
sdr: Duuuuuude. Wrong, wrong, wrong. Funny, but wrong.
August 28, 2009 at 8:23 AM #450593Allan from FallbrookParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]Speaking of German Shephards, Vick sure looked good last nite.[/quote]
sdr: Duuuuuude. Wrong, wrong, wrong. Funny, but wrong.
August 28, 2009 at 8:23 AM #450779Allan from FallbrookParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]Speaking of German Shephards, Vick sure looked good last nite.[/quote]
sdr: Duuuuuude. Wrong, wrong, wrong. Funny, but wrong.
August 28, 2009 at 8:39 AM #449999allParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=urbanrealtor][quote=captcha]The most popular Austrian?
Arnold Doubleblack[/quote]Okay.
I might be wrong about this but I have been told his name is not Schwarze/negger (black/black) but instead Schwarze/n/egger (black/conjugation/hollow).
This would be consistent with the Austrian and German habit of giving those without last names (peasants, Jews, Gypsies) surnames that were animistic or occupational in nature. Like why Jews have names like Gansler (good herder)or Einstein (one stone).Anyway, its what I have heard.[/quote]
Dan: Bingo. Translation of which would leave you with either “black plowman” or “harrower of dark (fertile/fecund) fields”, not “double black” (“schwarze” in German meaning black, combined with an obvious play on “negger” sounding like an American colloquialism for a black person).
Depending on which part of Germany you hail from, surnames can be tied to geography, profession or trade or lineage.
Also, don’t forget we will someday rule the world and all of you will… Shit! I said that out loud, didn’t I?[/quote]
Ah… the next you will tell me that Negerkuss has nothing to do with its color.
August 28, 2009 at 8:39 AM #450190allParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=urbanrealtor][quote=captcha]The most popular Austrian?
Arnold Doubleblack[/quote]Okay.
I might be wrong about this but I have been told his name is not Schwarze/negger (black/black) but instead Schwarze/n/egger (black/conjugation/hollow).
This would be consistent with the Austrian and German habit of giving those without last names (peasants, Jews, Gypsies) surnames that were animistic or occupational in nature. Like why Jews have names like Gansler (good herder)or Einstein (one stone).Anyway, its what I have heard.[/quote]
Dan: Bingo. Translation of which would leave you with either “black plowman” or “harrower of dark (fertile/fecund) fields”, not “double black” (“schwarze” in German meaning black, combined with an obvious play on “negger” sounding like an American colloquialism for a black person).
Depending on which part of Germany you hail from, surnames can be tied to geography, profession or trade or lineage.
Also, don’t forget we will someday rule the world and all of you will… Shit! I said that out loud, didn’t I?[/quote]
Ah… the next you will tell me that Negerkuss has nothing to do with its color.
August 28, 2009 at 8:39 AM #450526allParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=urbanrealtor][quote=captcha]The most popular Austrian?
Arnold Doubleblack[/quote]Okay.
I might be wrong about this but I have been told his name is not Schwarze/negger (black/black) but instead Schwarze/n/egger (black/conjugation/hollow).
This would be consistent with the Austrian and German habit of giving those without last names (peasants, Jews, Gypsies) surnames that were animistic or occupational in nature. Like why Jews have names like Gansler (good herder)or Einstein (one stone).Anyway, its what I have heard.[/quote]
Dan: Bingo. Translation of which would leave you with either “black plowman” or “harrower of dark (fertile/fecund) fields”, not “double black” (“schwarze” in German meaning black, combined with an obvious play on “negger” sounding like an American colloquialism for a black person).
Depending on which part of Germany you hail from, surnames can be tied to geography, profession or trade or lineage.
Also, don’t forget we will someday rule the world and all of you will… Shit! I said that out loud, didn’t I?[/quote]
Ah… the next you will tell me that Negerkuss has nothing to do with its color.
August 28, 2009 at 8:39 AM #450599allParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=urbanrealtor][quote=captcha]The most popular Austrian?
Arnold Doubleblack[/quote]Okay.
I might be wrong about this but I have been told his name is not Schwarze/negger (black/black) but instead Schwarze/n/egger (black/conjugation/hollow).
This would be consistent with the Austrian and German habit of giving those without last names (peasants, Jews, Gypsies) surnames that were animistic or occupational in nature. Like why Jews have names like Gansler (good herder)or Einstein (one stone).Anyway, its what I have heard.[/quote]
Dan: Bingo. Translation of which would leave you with either “black plowman” or “harrower of dark (fertile/fecund) fields”, not “double black” (“schwarze” in German meaning black, combined with an obvious play on “negger” sounding like an American colloquialism for a black person).
Depending on which part of Germany you hail from, surnames can be tied to geography, profession or trade or lineage.
Also, don’t forget we will someday rule the world and all of you will… Shit! I said that out loud, didn’t I?[/quote]
Ah… the next you will tell me that Negerkuss has nothing to do with its color.
August 28, 2009 at 8:39 AM #450785allParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=urbanrealtor][quote=captcha]The most popular Austrian?
Arnold Doubleblack[/quote]Okay.
I might be wrong about this but I have been told his name is not Schwarze/negger (black/black) but instead Schwarze/n/egger (black/conjugation/hollow).
This would be consistent with the Austrian and German habit of giving those without last names (peasants, Jews, Gypsies) surnames that were animistic or occupational in nature. Like why Jews have names like Gansler (good herder)or Einstein (one stone).Anyway, its what I have heard.[/quote]
Dan: Bingo. Translation of which would leave you with either “black plowman” or “harrower of dark (fertile/fecund) fields”, not “double black” (“schwarze” in German meaning black, combined with an obvious play on “negger” sounding like an American colloquialism for a black person).
Depending on which part of Germany you hail from, surnames can be tied to geography, profession or trade or lineage.
Also, don’t forget we will someday rule the world and all of you will… Shit! I said that out loud, didn’t I?[/quote]
Ah… the next you will tell me that Negerkuss has nothing to do with its color.
August 28, 2009 at 8:56 AM #450004Allan from FallbrookParticipant[quote=captcha]Ah… the next you will tell me that Negerkuss has nothing to do with its color.[/quote]
Captcha: Nope, because I’d be wrong. Negerkusse can definitely be rendered as “Negro’s kiss” (or worse). Unsurprisingly, Germans can be about as racist as it gets, but, in the case of Schwarzenegger, it doesn’t have anything to do with “double black”.
August 28, 2009 at 8:56 AM #450195Allan from FallbrookParticipant[quote=captcha]Ah… the next you will tell me that Negerkuss has nothing to do with its color.[/quote]
Captcha: Nope, because I’d be wrong. Negerkusse can definitely be rendered as “Negro’s kiss” (or worse). Unsurprisingly, Germans can be about as racist as it gets, but, in the case of Schwarzenegger, it doesn’t have anything to do with “double black”.
August 28, 2009 at 8:56 AM #450531Allan from FallbrookParticipant[quote=captcha]Ah… the next you will tell me that Negerkuss has nothing to do with its color.[/quote]
Captcha: Nope, because I’d be wrong. Negerkusse can definitely be rendered as “Negro’s kiss” (or worse). Unsurprisingly, Germans can be about as racist as it gets, but, in the case of Schwarzenegger, it doesn’t have anything to do with “double black”.
August 28, 2009 at 8:56 AM #450604Allan from FallbrookParticipant[quote=captcha]Ah… the next you will tell me that Negerkuss has nothing to do with its color.[/quote]
Captcha: Nope, because I’d be wrong. Negerkusse can definitely be rendered as “Negro’s kiss” (or worse). Unsurprisingly, Germans can be about as racist as it gets, but, in the case of Schwarzenegger, it doesn’t have anything to do with “double black”.
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