Its still me

Peashooter

Member
Apr 9, 2021
3,871
3,212
Denmark
Guys,,, and girls.
Just a little FYI.

I changed my silly plingpling username to peashooter, a more relevant name as i only shoot .177.
I also got a G mail called peashooter950, which Rick ( shooter1721 inspired me to make ) seeing as the year 950 was around then when Denmark was first mentioned in writing.
That be mentioned by someone else, at the time we was still busy splitting skulls and being all around nasty people, and though we did have our own writing the name Denmark was not used on any stone,,,, which we generally wrote on back in those days.
Also made a peashooter youtube channel but it have no content yet, and probably will not get a lot of that in a hurry, cuz i am not that big on aiming cameras at myself.

In 9 - 10 hours,,,,, lead will be flying,,,,, again :cool:
 
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I would never shoot Pee Wee Herman.

And true Ært is pea in Danish, and though use of rare or unique letters and numbers to form names are popular it is not something i would endorse.
A example could be the Røde microphones that use the "Danish" letter Ø ( which in itself all alone mean island )

The shortest Danish word you can use the letter Æ æ in is Æg, which mean Egg

And lastly we have the Å å letter, which in itself all alone mean river in Danish.

So writing " a river on a island " in Danish is " En å på en ø "

It is estimated about 600 words in the English language come from Danish or the old Norse language, you know those pesky Vikings.

Kniv = knife / Vindue = window / Æg = Egg among others.

Old regional dialects in Jutland Denmark would actually pronounce "vindue" just like a English person would say Window.
But the pronunciation of "vindue" in Danish are no way near when you say window in English, unless you speak the local dialect of northern or southern Jutland.
And i have had relatives speaking those dialects, and as i kid when they spoke i would just be like WTF ????? and i am pretty sure my mother and father also had a hard time understanding the person.
 
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Well in my book thats what the internet is for, having fun, and getting smarter, the stuff others use it for, well most of it leave me dumbfounded.

I do have to watch it though, i have learned that what is okay for a Dane to call fun, well dont necessary come off as fun for a American, so on another forum i have earned a few slaps over the wrist in my funny pictures thread.
And thats okay, i adapt and overcome.
 
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I would never shoot Pee Wee Herman.

And true Ært is pea in Danish, and though use of rare or unique letters and numbers to form names are popular it is not something i would endorse.
A example could be the Røde microphones that use the "Danish" letter Ø ( which in itself all alone mean island )

The shortest Danish word you can use the letter Æ æ in is Æg, which mean Egg

And lastly we have the Å å letter, which in itself all alone mean river in Danish.

So writing " a river on a island " in Danish is " En å på en ø "

It is estimated about 600 words in the English language come from Danish or the old Norse language, you know those pesky Vikings.

Kniv = knife / Vindue = window / Æg = Egg among others.

Old regional dialects in Jutland Denmark would actually pronounce "vindue" just like a English person would say Window.
But the pronunciation of "vindue" in Danish are no way near when you say window in English, unless you speak the local dialect of northern or southern Jutland.
And i have had relatives speaking those dialects, and as i kid when they spoke i would just be like WTF ????? and i am pretty sure my mother and father also had a hard time understanding the person.
C'mon admit it, you want to hop on a dragon ship and go raid England.:p