NILON_WALLS Geschrieben 13. Juni 2015 Geschrieben 13. Juni 2015 "Madame Sir"or "Sir Madame" ? :willy_nilly: I was asking myself the same question for like 3 minutes Zitieren
NILON_WALLS Geschrieben 13. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 13. Oktober 2015 So after 4 months, it is time for another revival Zitieren
katze4000 Geschrieben 13. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 13. Oktober 2015 I can't believe that you killed this thread. Zitieren
Celinilein Geschrieben 13. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 13. Oktober 2015 I can't believe that he killed AND revived this thread :0 Zitieren
katze4000 Geschrieben 13. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 13. Oktober 2015 Even his girlfriend is disappointed. That MEANS something. Zitieren
NILON_WALLS Geschrieben 13. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 13. Oktober 2015 In Battlefield you call that unplanned Teamkill. But even then you can revive the person you've killed Zitieren
Belian Geschrieben 13. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 13. Oktober 2015 And some things never change. Like a Rewe Zitieren
katze4000 Geschrieben 14. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 14. Oktober 2015 Is this english or youthish? Zitieren
Gast Geschrieben 14. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 14. Oktober 2015 English is awesome but which accent do you guys prefer? Personally my favorite one is the Scottish accent and prefer the American English over the British English. Zitieren
NILON_WALLS Geschrieben 14. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 14. Oktober 2015 I do prefer the American style too. I've been talking to a couple of Americans over the last weeks since some US-people seem to like going shopping in Austria :'> And everyone of them said the typical things as "Oh I love that, it's soo fantastic" and all those well known phrases. I think there are no such emotional speaking people as the Americans are. Zitieren
Belian Geschrieben 14. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 14. Oktober 2015 I also prefer American English. There were a lot of them in the subway during the Oktoberfest It just sounds "cooler" whereas British English sounds somewhat sniffy Zitieren
Gast Geschrieben 14. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 14. Oktober 2015 I also prefer American English. There were a lot of them in the subway during the Oktoberfest It just sounds "cooler" whereas British English sounds somewhat sniffy I do prefer the American style too. I've been talking to a couple of Americans over the last weeks since some US-people seem to like going shopping in Austria :'> And everyone of them said the typical things as "Oh I love that, it's soo fantastic" and all those well known phrases. I think there are no such emotional speaking people as the Americans are. Yeah I also think the American English sounds cooler but some British accents sound cool too. Like the Liverpool accent or if your talk to younger British persons. As soon as you talk to adults or higher class people it tends too sound somekind of arrogant. It makes it really difficult in the UK though because people judge you on the way you talk. Zitieren
katze4000 Geschrieben 15. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 15. Oktober 2015 I prefer Austrian English. "I spreek a good's english." Zitieren
ICrown Geschrieben 21. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 21. Oktober 2015 I prefer the british accent. I worked in London a couple of months and I really really loved it and worked up a little british accent myself. It sounds so sophisticated. But depending on the accent, it can be bloody hard to understand. As I try to watch every TV show thats originates in an english speaking country in english so that the jokes and puns still work, I stumbled over the Knave of Hearts in Once upon a time with his Derbyshire accent. You really have to get used to it to understand him. *g* Zitieren
Liquid Ocelot Geschrieben 23. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 23. Oktober 2015 My english is under aller pig. Zitieren
katze4000 Geschrieben 23. Oktober 2015 Geschrieben 23. Oktober 2015 Yeah, your english is a bomb. Zitieren
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