• Swedish documentary about furries (English subtitles)
    41 replies, posted
[QUOTE=Ziirxia;45019997]Swedish sounds like potatoes in your mouth[/QUOTE] Swedish sounds a lot more refined, in my opinion. It kinda sings, compared to Danish. I love Danish, though.
[QUOTE=Crash155;45019017]I remember seeing that belt loop tail stuff in middleschool, I wanted to think they were furries but decided it was just a fad, because you know middle school. Now I see a girl in my high school with sporting a belt loop tail every other day, never thought I'd actually see a furry who'd actually have one of those tail things[/QUOTE] Back in High School there was a kid who would wear [I]3[/I] tails at once. I nicknamed him "Reject Tails".
the danes I know don't even speak danish because they're scared of cursing me with their potato speak.
what would grandpa have to say
To a Swede, Danish sounds like speaking Swedish, but with pourage in your mouth attempting a conversation.
Out of interest. Does anyone know the music they used in the opening title and the buffers? I recognise it from somewhere else.
1 minute and I am already pausing every 5 seconds to just stare at the screen.
She's not a cat if she doesn't lick her asshole.
[QUOTE=Ziirxia;45019997]Swedish sounds like potatoes in your mouth[/QUOTE] Danish sounds like a Swedish person who's just been to the dentist, and thus most of their tongue and mouth in general is numb [editline]7th June 2014[/editline] To non-Swedish speakers; the difference between Danish, Norwegian and Swedish is practically the same amount of difference as there is between American English and Scottish English, apart from the fact that some words are spelled completely differently
[QUOTE=Ziirxia;45019997]Swedish sounds like potatoes in your mouth[/QUOTE] Said the dane? [video=youtube;s-mOy8VUEBk]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s-mOy8VUEBk[/video]
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