emperorpenguin
Mongoose
Hiromoon said:Incidentally, my last name is Zupan ( Zupanic if you want to go old school)...
:shock:
Is that Croatian?
Hiromoon said:Incidentally, my last name is Zupan ( Zupanic if you want to go old school)...
:shock:
Hiromoon said:Slavic. My father's family hails from Slovinia and Germany....
Hiromoon said:Don't tell them that. That region of Europe is fairly messed up!![]()
A line from an Australian movie, thought it was particularly appropriate. Hiroslavian sounds more too me like an updated version of Machiavellian.I'm half Serbian half croatian, sometimes I wake up in the morning and want to kill myself!
Hiromoon said:Don't tell them that. That region of Europe is fairly messed up!![]()
Hiromoon said:Wait... Hiroslavian?
mthomason said:And a bonus point to anyone who can work out the origins of "Zapasnova"
Poko said:zapas-stock,reserve. :
mthomason said:Hehe
Much as I'd love to give you the credit, it was down to bodging around with some word roots and translations....
And a bonus point to anyone who can work out the origins of "Zapasnova"
emperorpenguin said:on the subject of slavic words
did you know "Skoda" as in the car manufacturer, means "damage", "harm" or "injury"
talk about an off-putting name! :shock:
Mr Evil said:emperorpenguin said:on the subject of slavic words
did you know "Skoda" as in the car manufacturer, means "damage", "harm" or "injury"
talk about an off-putting name! :shock:
maybe they made tanks first ?
Mr Evil said:Several armaments firms in Czechoslovakia, prior to the occupation by Germany, were concerned with the design, development and production of tanks and other fighting vehicles -both for use by the Czech Army and for commercial sale to foreign armies. The two main tank models were the Skoda LT-35 and the CKD (Cesko-moravska Kolben Danek) TNHP, which the Germans took into service as the PzKpfw 35(t) and the PzKpfw38(t), respectively. The (t) was an abbreviation of tscheche, the German for Czech.
http://www.wargamer.com/Hosted/Panzer/czech.html
http://www.achtungpanzer.com/articles/skoda.htm
http://mailer.fsu.edu/~akirk/tanks/Czech/Czechoslovakia.html
seems plausable they made tanks ?
BuShips said:According to Wiki,
In Czech, the word 'škoda' means "damage, detriment, disadvantage", and occurs in the stock phrase "to je škoda", which roughly means, "It's a pity". It has the same meaning in several Slavic languages such as Slovene, Croatian, Ukrainian and Polish, though in the latter it is spelled 'szkoda'.