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#11
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04-08-2009, 06:51 PM
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Re: Let Me Go, Boss! Inhumane Police Brutality!
I would have to disagree with that assesment, I spent a month in east Africa on safari and saw everything from desert to lush rainforest and everything inbetween. I'm pretty sure from looking into it that this happened in South Africa.
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#12
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04-12-2009, 09:38 PM
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Re: Let Me Go, Boss! Inhumane Police Brutality!
What to say about this....? I lived many years in SA - the terrain is familiar. So are the Police tactics. Needless to say I got the fuck out when I could. I had to divorce my husband but what the fuck - I can get another retarded, racist, dickhead, asshole anytime |
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#14
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04-14-2009, 01:04 PM
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Re: Let Me Go, Boss! Inhumane Police Brutality!
You hear Spanish? Hey Bruce, is that Spanish? Sounds like an African dialect to me, something like Afrikaans maybe. From Wiki: Afrikaans is an Indo-European language, derived from Dutch and thus classified as Low Franconian West Germanic. It is mainly spoken in South Africa and Namibia, with smaller numbers of speakers living in Botswana, Angola, Swaziland, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Zambia, Australia, New Zealand, United States of America, Taiwan and Argentina.[1] Due to emigration and migrant labour, there are possibly over 100 000 Afrikaans speakers in the United Kingdom,[2] with other substantial communities found in Brussels, Amsterdam, Perth, Mount Isa, Toronto and Auckland. It is the primary language used by two related ethnic groups in South Africa: the Afrikaners and the Coloureds or kleurlinge or bruinmense (including Basters, Cape Malays and Griqua). Geographically, the Afrikaans language is the majority language of the western one-third of South Africa (Northern and Western Cape, spoken at home by 69% and 58%, respectively). It is also the largest first language in the adjacent southern third of Namibia (Hardap and Karas, where it is the first language of 44% and 40%, respectively). Afrikaans and Dutch are largely mutually intelligible. Afrikaans and Flemish are also largely mutually intelligible, more so in writing than in speaking as the pronunciation is quite different between the two. Speaking slower than normal greatly increases the ability of different speakers to understand each other. |