"Sweet meercifuul heevans." he swore to himself, before looking around and then craning his neck to look up at his Host's face. "Ees naught rocket scieence. Hand 'em t' me an aye'll carry'em inside. Ach, Fleecetail, haagen velt roighten f'taghn, naa?"
Is this a Scotch brogue, butchered German, or an attempt to summon Cthulhu?
7446297 I personally think it's more in the lines of the austrian variant of German (which is pretty archaic) or Silesian. German accent with partally slavic pronouncing. Not really scandinavian as I don't see much in terms of their letters counterparts in there.
7448523 You made a lot of mistakes speaking abaut the language groups. Nether Polish nor German are Scandinavian languages. Scandinavian means North Germanic and only Dutch is in this group. German itself is a West Germanic language and Polish is Slavic, what is a diffrent bucket entirely.
This breezie dialect however could be irish if I'm not mistaken. Which is beyond any of those groups. And if it's not, then it's propably something along the lines of Silesian and Sorbian - languages spoken by slavic people which langauge evolved extremely close to german.
7448850 I'm Australian, so I was making vague grabs at distant straws.
But Breezie language is not Gaelic, I can tell you that much. I'm over half Irish, and my mother and patriarchal grandmother both know Gaelic, so believe me when I say Breezie language is nothing like it.
Is this a Scotch brogue, butchered German, or an attempt to summon Cthulhu?
7443583 A Scotsman attempting to use German rocket science to summon Cthulu.
You gotta non-futa version for us straights?
7444204
I've had worse ideas for my Crack of Cthulhu games. The Narwhal Cannon stands out as a particularly egregious event.
7444241 Fuck you mean? Man up and take your cocking like a man!
7445168 GG. made my lols for the day!
7443583 It's definitely SOME sort of modern Scandinavian.
Dutch, German, Polish, I don't know, but one of them.
7446297 I personally think it's more in the lines of the austrian variant of German (which is pretty archaic) or Silesian. German accent with partally slavic pronouncing. Not really scandinavian as I don't see much in terms of their letters counterparts in there.
7447530 Yeah, but you knew what I was talking about. That's all that matters.
7448523 You made a lot of mistakes speaking abaut the language groups. Nether Polish nor German are Scandinavian languages. Scandinavian means North Germanic and only Dutch is in this group. German itself is a West Germanic language and Polish is Slavic, what is a diffrent bucket entirely.
This breezie dialect however could be irish if I'm not mistaken. Which is beyond any of those groups. And if it's not, then it's propably something along the lines of Silesian and Sorbian - languages spoken by slavic people which langauge evolved extremely close to german.
7448850 I'm Australian, so I was making vague grabs at distant straws.
But Breezie language is not Gaelic, I can tell you that much.
I'm over half Irish, and my mother and patriarchal grandmother both know Gaelic, so believe me when I say Breezie language is nothing like it.
7449011 I'm not that knowledgeable at the details but I know from what you're going at.
7449167
7449011
The times I'm not using complete gibberish, I've been using a stretched-vowel variation of Dutch.
7449567 So the gibberish parts got me lost.