Buer wrote: » Complete tangent but are your kids fully bi-lingual at this point?
swiwi_ wrote: » Me: Kiwi, French, half-arsed German and understand a good bit of Swiss German Wife: Swinglish, Swiss German (Zürich dialect), proper German Kids 1 & 2: English with a sort of Irish lilt, Swiss German (Zürich dialect and the Valais dialect when they want a bit of craic), proper German, oldest has started French (which she weirdly speaks with a German and not English accent) Kid 3: Swiss German, a good bit of proper German, English with lashings of German thrown in.
Buer wrote: » A yes would have sufficed. :pac: An impressive little list of language skills. I've always thought the lack of linguistic skills to be a massive weakness in this country compared to elsewhere in Europe.
pickarooney wrote: » What exactly have you become? (Bit slow on the uptake) Congrats, anyway!
errlloyd wrote: » I am also confused. But I presume it's something medical.
kuang1 wrote: » A CEO of a big pharma?
swiwi_ wrote: » (It's a new position Zzippy created to represent foreign minorities. Stop prejudice, that sort of thing)
Instead of being crowned reality TV celebrities and fought over by agents, the 10 who made it through the 12 months have learned that only four episodes have been shown – the last seven months ago. The remaining 13 contestants quit earlier in the show – with many saying they couldn’t handle the relentless Scottish midges. Eden, the ground-breaking Channel 4 project, saw 23 strangers cut off from the rest of the world and left to fend for themselves in a corner of the West Highlands. Intended as a combination of reality TV and sociology experiment, the participants were challenged to create a new model of society. But just as in the Biblical Eden, temptation proved too strong on the Ardnamurchan Peninsula. With the group torn apart by sexual jealousy, hunger and feuds, more than half the cast quit. Struggling to live off the land, they resorted to smuggling in junk food and booze.
Erik Shin wrote: » That was a horrific leg break for poor Seamus Coleman
swiwi_ wrote: » I know I shouldn't...but there is a Muslim kid in my daughter's class called Haamdi. Each time I hear his name, I can't help thinking "Haamdi daamdi sat on a wall". Childish I know. But still makes me chuckle to myself.
Dave_The_Sheep wrote: » They get paid to win games. They don't get paid to play entertaining games. Top level rugby is equally nervous. You play a game likes it's a massively tight game of chess. Teams are more afraid of losing than they are not winning. Look at the HC/ERC finals. It's not exactly an expansive game. It's percentage rugby. I don't like the inexorable march toward the same stage soccer is in but unless things change I'm not sure what is going to matter enough to change things.
wp_rathead wrote: » You can win things and be entertaining
Buer wrote: » Time for Katie Taylor to stop sandbagging. Utterly took apart her opponent tonight. She's ready for a test of some description. Opponent was gassed after 4 rounds and went into a clinch every opporunity.
mfceiling wrote: » Bought an aeropress yesterday. Very good coffee from it. Beats the hell out of her nespresso machine and it'll save me 2.50 every morning and 5 minutes making small talk with the Polish lad at the petrol station.
Synode wrote: » Coffee from a petrol station. You heathen
mfceiling wrote: » Worse than that...It's Tim Horton's coffee. Reason being that it's the only petrol station open at 5.50 in the morning on my way to work!!
irishbucsfan wrote: » Going to work at 5.50? Do you work at the 19th century?
mfceiling wrote: » Takes an hour to get there!! It's the best time of the day. No traffic, almost nobody to intract with (bar Jimmy Polish in the Texaco). Even at the weekend I like to be out of bed early. Nothing beats walking through dublin early on a Saturday morning with a coffee (3fe or Clement and Pekoe - no Tim Horton's) and watching the city come to life.
mfceiling wrote: » Nothing beats walking through dublin early on a Saturday morning with a coffee (3fe or Clement and Pekoe - no Tim Horton's) and watching the city come to life.