No problem, I felt the same about Blair and more recently Corbyn!

Your post has astonished me. I've always thought of Denmark as being really PC, environmentally aware, just cool and progressive.Kafkaesque wrote: ↑Wed Nov 04, 2020 3:12 pmIn Denmark the virus has traveled to minks, mutated, and traveled back to humans. Found in 10+ so far. Showing signs of not responding to antibodies. Best case, the mutation would need a seperate vaccine.
We're way behind Sweden in being PCgreenmark wrote: ↑Wed Nov 04, 2020 6:12 pmYour post has astonished me. I've always thought of Denmark as being really PC, environmentally aware, just cool and progressive.Kafkaesque wrote: ↑Wed Nov 04, 2020 3:12 pmIn Denmark the virus has traveled to minks, mutated, and traveled back to humans. Found in 10+ so far. Showing signs of not responding to antibodies. Best case, the mutation would need a seperate vaccine.
So to discover Denmark has an industry that provides adornments for the rich, at the expense of farmed animals, whose carcasses are wasted is quite shocking. Covid-wise this development may show this intensive farming is being exposed as a really bad idea.
Maybe the moment for the Minkburger. Sorry, that may appear to be making light of a massive knock to a significant Danish industry. No offence intended. In the UK we perhaps don't understand the concept of using your resources wisely. Our approach was imprerialstic invasion and exploitation of other countries (worldwide). And thats just the way it was. Not good, not bad, just c'est la vie.Kafkaesque wrote: ↑Wed Nov 04, 2020 6:22 pmWe're way behind Sweden in being PCgreenmark wrote: ↑Wed Nov 04, 2020 6:12 pmYour post has astonished me. I've always thought of Denmark as being really PC, environmentally aware, just cool and progressive.Kafkaesque wrote: ↑Wed Nov 04, 2020 3:12 pmIn Denmark the virus has traveled to minks, mutated, and traveled back to humans. Found in 10+ so far. Showing signs of not responding to antibodies. Best case, the mutation would need a seperate vaccine.
So to discover Denmark has an industry that provides adornments for the rich, at the expense of farmed animals, whose carcasses are wasted is quite shocking. Covid-wise this development may show this intensive farming is being exposed as a really bad idea.But yeah, and it's been hotly debated for a while before Covid. It's a huge industry by Danish standards though. In fact, our nation of just 5 million people is - or was! - the biggest mink furs in the world. There's absolutely no interest in being the new Wuhan. Every single of the 15 million minks are being put down and keeping any mink will be illegal through 2021.
If I remember my history correctly the Danes did their fair share of invading and pillaging.
superfrank wrote: ↑Wed Nov 04, 2020 9:15 pmIf I remember my history correctly the Danes did their fair share of invading and pillaging.
Well, quite. And perhaps that is one of the many places we drew our ability to wander and exploit (both in a good and a bad way). We are a mongrel nation and I'm chuffed with that fact.superfrank wrote: ↑Wed Nov 04, 2020 9:15 pmIf I remember my history correctly the Danes did their fair share of invading and pillaging.
i always thought it was just the natural order of the world. if your going to bother learn another language, surely you learn the only sensible one first.firlandsfarm wrote: ↑Thu Nov 05, 2020 11:27 amI always thought they learned English as being the most 'international' language because nobody other than they can speak their language!
I guess it's a sort of inverse curve in that the more your native tongue is spoken around the world the less you speak English ... I have been to many places where French, Spanish, Portuguese etc. (the other great explorers of the world) is the main or secondary language (Caribbean, South America and Africa) and the knowledge of English is very limited.
Because English is just one of the many Germanic languages and the vast majority of the most used words actually have Germanic origin. Same as Danish, Dutch, German etc that all belong to the same language family, so it's all obviously much easier to learn.firlandsfarm wrote: ↑Thu Nov 05, 2020 11:27 amI always thought they learned English as being the most 'international' language because nobody other than they can speak their language!
Interesting! Though as a well-travelled linguist, I can tell you that Portuguese, Italian and Spanish while Latin-based, are quite different and nothing like 'easy to learn from another of the same branch'.Kai wrote: ↑Thu Nov 05, 2020 3:46 pmBecause English is just one of the many Germanic languages and the vast majority of the most used words actually have Germanic origin. Same as Danish, Dutch, German etc that all belong to the same language family, so it's all obviously much easier to learn.firlandsfarm wrote: ↑Thu Nov 05, 2020 11:27 amI always thought they learned English as being the most 'international' language because nobody other than they can speak their language!
While on the other popular branch of Indo-European languages you have Italic languages, with the likes of Spanish, French, Portuguese and Italian. That's why they all sound very similar and use the same words, and if you become fluent in one of them it is extremely easy to learn another from that same branch.
But yeah, Scandinavians generally find English very natural to learn and speak, besides the likes of Finland whose language belongs to the Baltic branch and is vastly different. From personal experience Danes are the only people I've met so far that sometimes don't even have an accent when speaking English, I could barely tell despite having a good ear for these sorts of things.