Feel my pain. Oh, feel my pain.
Apr. 13th, 2006 04:52 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Oh, life is SO unfair. This morning I found out where the pic of Bela kneeling before Farin and offering him roses was taken. In Bozen. BOZEN. ITALIEN. And I wasn't there! *cries*
I love you! ♥

*HUMP*


Edit: Pics found @ http://www.tourdatenarchiv.de/
Of course they played in Italy just a couple of months before I became an Ärzte fan. My timing's perfect as usual. Someone shoot me, please.
Other than that, I finished reading that book about Germany (and promptly started another one, hehe, I'm on a roll.) I knew Bela was playing up some kind of stereotypical guy in the "Unrockbar" video, but I didn't know which one. According to this book, the jogging suit is kind of an East German cliché. Is it true? I'm very curious about cliché and stereotypes, like, there's a way of dressing that we in the North consider quite typical from the South (really flashy clothes for young people and total black with shawls and rosaries for older women.) For example, when I went to see a dialectal play last month, there was a character from the South and you could tell it straight away just from the way she was dressed. I don't know much about this kind of clichés in other countries, so enlighten me!
Also, since we're talking about stereotypes...
Europe & Italy
So, so true. X)
I love you! ♥
*HUMP*
Edit: Pics found @ http://www.tourdatenarchiv.de/
Of course they played in Italy just a couple of months before I became an Ärzte fan. My timing's perfect as usual. Someone shoot me, please.
Other than that, I finished reading that book about Germany (and promptly started another one, hehe, I'm on a roll.) I knew Bela was playing up some kind of stereotypical guy in the "Unrockbar" video, but I didn't know which one. According to this book, the jogging suit is kind of an East German cliché. Is it true? I'm very curious about cliché and stereotypes, like, there's a way of dressing that we in the North consider quite typical from the South (really flashy clothes for young people and total black with shawls and rosaries for older women.) For example, when I went to see a dialectal play last month, there was a character from the South and you could tell it straight away just from the way she was dressed. I don't know much about this kind of clichés in other countries, so enlighten me!
Also, since we're talking about stereotypes...
Europe & Italy
So, so true. X)
no subject
Date: 2006-04-14 03:12 pm (UTC)Example:
male cat = gatto
male cats = gatti
female cat = gatta
female cats = gatte
And then there are the eeevil exceptions. Sooo interessant, oder? *rolls eyes*
no subject
Date: 2006-04-14 03:45 pm (UTC)Hum, I'll have to find some stuff with the forms...All I can say is that the feminine form ends with "e". But the "cat" example is... well, let's see...
masculin : "chat"
féminin : "chatte"
Pourquoi il y a deux "t", je ne sais pas, mais il y a des doublements de consonnes...Huh, I have to think more about it XD Damn language o_O