It looks swampy.
In the coastal lands of Northwest Europe most people suffer during winter of an almost constant running nose when outside. It has to do with the wind chill effect caused by the combination of (often) strong wind, the high humidity of the air and the cold temperature.Brubar said:Sweden's urbanism was so awesome! And Denmark's wind... haha I remebered I caught a cold for one day only lol, the next day I was fine...
Brubar said:When I went to visit Scandinavian countries, I was astonished to see that Sweden had the closest landscape to ours, here in Québec. There is a lot of forests and lakes, and sometimes mountains.
But we have more snow during winter
though now, I'm looking outside and it's been melting during the last few days, the sun has unleashed his spring-power!!
Sweden's urbanism was so awesome! And Denmark's wind... haha I remebered I caught a cold for one day only lol, the next day I was fine...
Cèsar de Quart said:Ah, yes, Denmark. Usually, places have variety. We have the Pyrenees in the north, rolling hills in the southern shores, cliffs in the northern coast, plains in the inner country... and this weird-looking mountain, which happens to be holy and ovni-appealing:
But Denmark is the same everywhere. It's kind of funny.
Good thing is, you can go everywhere by bike.
So that crappy CGI film Beowulf (2007) didn't really do a good job with exploring Denmark's landscapes. In it, there are snowy mountains, rivers, forests...Cruger said:And then we have Denmark, the country holding the title of having the most boring landscape in the entire world. No rivers, no mountains, no real hills, no nothing. Just roads and extreme amounts of agriculture..
Don't tell me that the middle formation of rocks does not remind you of a pack of di*ks?Cèsar de Quart said:Ah, yes, Denmark. Usually, places have variety. We have the Pyrenees in the north, rolling hills in the southern shores, cliffs in the northern coast, plains in the inner country... and this weird-looking mountain, which happens to be holy and ovni-appealing:
I think it's more correct to say it another way, since these mountains probably formed earlier than humankind. Man's penis has the form of the holy and ovni-appealing mountain somewhere in western Europe.Don't tell me that the middle formation of rocks does not remind you of a pack of di*ks?
It is true. Mountains were formed on the 3rd day of Creation, I think, and humanking was created on 6th.Mykami said:I think it's more correct to say it another way, since these mountains probably formed earlier than humankind.Don't tell me that the middle formation of rocks does not remind you of a pack of di*ks?
We, in Serbia, also have ''penis-mountains''.Mykami said:Man's penis has the form of the holy and ovni-appealing mountain somewhere in western Europe.
objeto volador no identificadoWhat does ''ovni'' means?
it seems that you and De Quart both know that term,
but it is completely unknown to me.
Sorry, just noticed your question.FrisianDude said:Where is your picture from, Frisicus?
Or: objet volant non identifié. But it is obvious he meant the spanish one.Mykami said:objeto volador no identificadoWhat does ''ovni'' means?
it seems that you and De Quart both know that term,
but it is completely unknown to me.
Mykami said:objeto volador no identificado
Thank you. In Serbian, ''ovni'' is a plural of a word ''ram'' (a male sheep),bratfisch said:Or: objet volant non identifié. But it is obvious he meant the spanish one.
Looks very cool. Like it was man-made.bratfisch said:
Mykami said:objeto volador no identificadoWhat does ''ovni'' means?
it seems that you and De Quart both know that term,
but it is completely unknown to me.
I have no idea why Cèsar didn't just type UFO, but it's quite easy to find this word in online dictionary since it doesn't have special letters.
DrevniDabar said:Mykami said:objeto volador no identificadoThank you. In Serbian, ''ovni'' is a plural of a word ''ram'' (a male sheep),bratfisch said:Or: objet volant non identifié. But it is obvious he meant the spanish one.
so that got me confused.
Looks very cool. Like it was man-made.bratfisch said:
Isn't it a bit strange that this simple question-topic has reached 3 pages?
Cruger said:I'm not really a big fan of going off-topic in the Europe 1200 forum. So back to topic:
How long do you guys think Gaddafi will last?
funny 'cause I tend to do the same mistake, in french it's also called an OVNI (Objet Volant Non Identifié) I guess it's somewhat semi-international.Cèsar de Quart said:Mykami said:objeto volador no identificadoWhat does ''ovni'' means?
it seems that you and De Quart both know that term,
but it is completely unknown to me.
I have no idea why Cèsar didn't just type UFO, but it's quite easy to find this word in online dictionary since it doesn't have special letters.
Damn, I just forgot. I assumed OVNI was an international word, even though I know it's not.
As funny as it may sound, here most things get their own acronyms, and even English names are "Hispanified". Like Spiderman. We don't call him Hombre Araña. He's Spiderman.
But we say "Aes-pee-derr-mán". It's even the official dubbing of the movie.