yes, i love german, esp. for coining phrases,
alas, i'm not so much into memes -
but... when it comes to words?
look, the lost aspect of the german language
that still functions in English?
i can tell you where to find it...
shh... psst... don't tell anyone...
chemistry!
where else can you find the germanic
fudge packaging of a word?
esp. with the syllable count,
but... no ******* hyphen!
all the chemical names,
the hydrocarbons, the shampoo packaging
names...
they all stem from the anglo-saxon rooting...
and since...
i'm an anglo-slav...
the NPC affair... ha ha...
ha ha... i mean...
as the Jews would say: isn't that the, the point
making an emphasis of
the forced stut-stut-stutter?
welcome!
to the second tier of the metaphysics of
eugenics!
certain genes are not allowed,
certain thoughts and their subsequent
egos need to be sterilized...
so i thought...
oh forget George Orwell for the minute,
stop reading these people's bible...
you don't actually have a plan
reading that work,
it's already implemented,
you will not find an antithesis
to the agenda in that book,
you have to look elsewhere...
spotting the same recurrence...
it's no longer fun...
it's like train-spotting...
yes, and again something will come up,
and it will be predictable,
i hate predictability...
group think, double think,
wrong think, right think are obsolete
by now...
two new terms:
and it has to be in german...
mind you...
i'm not particularly versed in
this compound...
does a noun, or an adverb,
or a pronoun work best with a verb?
the three options:
(noun) neindenken
(adverb) nichtdenken
(pronoun) keindenken
maybe we can work on the interchange...
mind you, group "think"...
last time i checked... hives do not think,
thinking is not an exclusive "sentiment",
and in terms of inclusiveness:
you can't have thinking,
that's not how inclusiveness works...
hence?
bienenstocksprechen:
hive-talk....
yes, you can find remnants
of the Anglo-Saxons in the English
language, the down-trodden Germanic
tongue, enveloped in shrapnel kind
of spelling when... alternatively to memes,
kernwörter are formed...
the Anglo-Saxon imprint is still in use...
it's incubated in the language of
chemistry...
just read the label of
ingredients of a shampoo bottle...
the last of the Saxons rest within.