Translating whole game?
broo:
Well most of lithuanians come to UK to work. Some of them come here to learn... Anyway. I think the weather here is OK.. Summers aren't too warm but they don't get winters with -30 degrees Celsius here.
ZephyrZodiac:
I would certainly agree that most Lithuanians do come here to work or to learn, and also that our winters are warmer than yours - but there are always a few rotten apples in a barrel....
broo:
I don't mind cold and snowy winters myself because winter's my favorite season :D Snow on wintertime is probably the only thing I miss here (I'm in Scotland at the mo, if I didn't make it clear by now ;D) :( That's why I love Sims 2 Seasons so much :D
ZephyrZodiac:
Blame it on global warming! We used to have proper winters here too. Back in the early 19th century they even had fairs on the ice when the Thames froze over, with people ice-skating and hot-chestnut sellers etc. Then London got warmer because of the industrial pollution, a growing population etc., then next the country as a whole, and then the whole darned world! Just hope that in your lifetime you still get snow in Lithuania because when the day comes that the climate there is like the UK's now, those people still around will be looking for an unclaimed mountain top!
alia:
Quote from: broo on 2007 September 14, 09:16:30
I've never heard real estonian speaking so I don't know anything about Estonian language but Lithuanian and Latvian have some similarities.
Lithuanian and Latvian both stem from the Baltic branch of the Indo-European Language tree, so they are more closely related to each other than, for example, English and Latvian. Even though also English is a part of the Indo-European language family, it stems from the Germanic Branch of the family tree. Both languages have the same origins, but the similarities between Latvian and English can be seen only on the structural level of the languages, whereas Latvian and Lithuanian probably have similar grammatical forms and probably share similar vocabulary.
However, Estonian is not an Indo-European language, it belongs to the Finno-Ugric language tree, and is related to Finnish and Hungarian. As the origins of Lithuanian and Latvian when compared to Estonian are completely different, one can safely say that Estonian has very little in common with Lithuanian or Latvian.
If you cannot tell, I'm a linguist. ::)
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