P H A 7V T O M wrote: » The only word that really makes sense is "Hogar" which means homeless? Are you even speaking Spanish 0_o ?
Indiego wrote: » I hated using mine, i kept clicking on the wrong things and it was sooo slow :mad: Though, im getting used to it, so i might use it a bit more :L I my laptop Its all small and pretty hahaha
mixery wrote: » Sorry, saturday, a little busy. I understand your pojnt of view, I know what extremist means, and I regard some things America does as extremist. You're right saying that no teenager really cares about what happens until KGB/CIA/whoever switches off FB..(I know statements like that make make my post a little unworthy bad have to do it) Anyway, there is a whole load of sh!te that ordinary people don't know about, I just recently got interested in the topic of attempted murder on John Paul II, some scary things there as well. 57 or so attempted murders ;o .
Indiego wrote: » Hogar means home, sin hogar means without home, not homeless literally :L It should be 'era sin hogar' ^^
shadowninty wrote: » My laptop is so big and im scared of breaking it Its really fancy too
P H A 7V T O M wrote: » Sin+Hogar in that format (ie, when you put hogar directly after sin), means homeless. I am pretty much certain. Indie are you actually fluent or do you just learn from school?
P H A 7V T O M wrote: » If you mean "breaking" as in internal, not smashing it against the floor, you should be fine. If Windows as a disc came with your laptop it can just be installed again and again, making your laptop brand-new all over again. If anyone wishes to make their laptop 700% quicker, use CCleaner, you won't believe the difference!http://www.piriform.com/CCLEANER
mixery wrote: » Yes and "his tyranny has shed blood". Phantom are you Russian? :P
P H A 7V T O M wrote: » I can speak Russian and Spanish the way I speak English. Knowing Russian hopefully means I can live there when I'm older.
Indiego wrote: » Hahaha mines a yellow netbook ^^ Im so bad to it though, throw it halfway across the room and ive dropped it sooo many times I used to be really careful with it though, but that soon ended hahah ^^
Indiego wrote: » Woo for bilingual-ness ^^ Im fluent in turkish and serbian, and nearly in spanish ^^
shadowninty wrote: » I'd be be terrified of the hard drive or screen breaking :eek: Colourdy laptops of deadly, yellows a decent colour for small ones
P H A 7V T O M wrote: » You'd automatically know elements of Russian then? Why Turkish and Serbian? Just curious, maybe your parents are from there or something? Or are you joking?
shadowninty wrote: » No I mean physically. My Windows 7 got really sluggish so I installed Ubuntu which I fixed now
P H A 7V T O M wrote: » How does one break the internal hard drive of a laptop? Sounds complicated....
Indiego wrote: » Yeah, but i struggle with russian for some reason I'm part turkish and i lived in serbia when i was younger, and a lot of family live there ^^
shadowninty wrote: » That's so cool! Even more pressure on me now to improve my French
shadowninty wrote: » You drop it I guess... How does someone with that background end up in Wicklow?
Desire. wrote: » Are all you who are fluent in foreign languages, apart from the ones we learn in school, going to do them for the Leaving Cert? If your language is available it should be an easy 100 points.
mixery wrote: » Indiego, you're lucky to get out, with all the troubles between Serbia and Bosnia..
P H A 7V T O M wrote: » Ubuntu is quite good for DoS and stuff, right? The only time I hear of it is with hacking etc. .
robman60 wrote: » Damn, that's an impressive array of languages. At times I wish I were mixed-race, it would allow greater insight into different cultures.