Yeah, you said that you like various (European) languages. For other readers: Kopf is head.
in Ukrainian, to kick = kopaty, with emphasis on 1st syllable.
if on the second syllable, to dig
So, in the first instance you see why I buttociate the word with kicking
and in the second, digging means also in English to understand "I dig, man"
Nice story :-)
ACK.
International Stuff 1847during the summer, in greater heights, to a cottage with stable and large mountainside fields. Such a location is an "Alm". In autumn, the cows come...
are they getting married or joining a convent?
O yeeaahh!
In winter there is frequently a lot of fog over the Bodensee. If you move up the PfSnder (mountain) you have blue sky & sun - and can look down to the "white clouds" underneath you (like in an airplane).
Good to do :-)
Great choices that you've got there! I saw a few of those food types at WAL (world's largest importer from China).
I won't know either.
combined it with "birth town".
I wondered because this reminds me that once upon a time, it was common for teenage boys to say Sweet! when agreeing something was nice.
It was commonly used on the show South Park.
It went out of coolness for a while and now, but had a slight resurgence, it is being used more as an adjective now, just as you did, as can be noted in the movie Napoleon Dynamite.
Germany in the past - under all chancellors - was the "motor" (the power engine) of the "political European idea" in the unifying process over many decades. Angie said at her first speech to the German Parliament recently that Germany shall be the "motor" of the EU also in future. It's sort of obligatory to state this. And within Europe, the close friendship (axis) with France has been and still is a "driver". But, in the future, she "believes Germany has worked too exclusively with France in the past, and this summit showed a sign of change."
International Stuff 1849i am still experimenting. the weird disconnects continue. it is requiring a great deal of my patience. I have a standing invite to go visit a former boss in Phoenix as well as...
Apparently I have prognosticative powers, I didn't even know (I posted this when I was still in Phila) that I would come home to such miserable reconstruction affecting our cable service.
mk5000
"The skinny" is defined as a slang term in the Third Edition of the American Heritage Dictionary, but no clue is offered as to its origin. Related slang uses of the word "skinny" aren't much help. As of 1934, according to Eric Partridge's Dictionary of the Underworld, "skinny" meant a ten-cent piece, probably related to the clbuttic "one thin