Hello from germany
Moderators: notoptoy, S Allen, Solex68
- Chris66
- Roadster Fanatic
- Posts: 463
- Joined: Tue Mar 04, 2008 3:44 pm
- Location: Behind the laptop in Denmark
Re: Hello from germany
Enrique, sexual intercourse does not excist in my English, never heard about it, PLEASE EXPLAIN
SPL311-05204 R16 22895 - 20% of Danish roadsters
1966½ - 1600
Not half year, half car
1966½ - 1600
Not half year, half car
- billkuma
- Roadster Fanatic-Site Supporter
- Posts: 94
- Joined: Sun Jul 04, 2010 6:00 pm
- Location: Salisbury, Maryland, USA, Earth
- Model: 1500/1600
- Year: High Windshield-68-70
Re: Hello from germany
My German is no better than my French, but I think 'Leben und Schrauben mit Datsuns Fairlady' would tanslate closer to 'Live and revolve (circulate, navigate, et al) with Datsun's Fairlady,' similar to circulating at a party, but through life, hence, the association with 'screw,' as in rotate, where the German, 'drehen', may have been easier to translate. If it was in Japanese, I could be more sure of my translation, alas . . . Alex, is that translation von Deutsche closer?
ビル
(Bill)
ビル
(Bill)
1968 Datsun 1600
1967 Datsun 1600
1960 A-H Bugeye Sprite
2019 Hyundai Ioniq (56.0 mpg!
), 2014 Dodge Durango Citadel
19' Bayliner 1952, 21' Bayliner 2150
Fisher 101 Ultralight (somewhere in the garage
)
1967 Datsun 1600
1960 A-H Bugeye Sprite
2019 Hyundai Ioniq (56.0 mpg!

19' Bayliner 1952, 21' Bayliner 2150
Fisher 101 Ultralight (somewhere in the garage

Re: Hello from germany
Yes I think now we have it 
The article in general are about the technical history of the cars.
In the articles they always show a lot about tech facts and past problems, repairing, tips etc.
We say "schrauben" also for working/ repairing/ building on something.

The article in general are about the technical history of the cars.
In the articles they always show a lot about tech facts and past problems, repairing, tips etc.
We say "schrauben" also for working/ repairing/ building on something.
Re: Hello from germany
Hey, we do too!!vanwilder wrote:...We say "schrauben" also for working/ repairing/ building on something.
Work:
Boss, after catching worker horsing around: "What are you doing?"
Worker: "Just screwing aorund...!
Repairs:
Friend, when car starts to fling parts out the bottom: "Boy, you really screwed that up!"
Building:
Wife, returning from the local warehouse store: "Honey, look at the greenhouse I bought for you to build in the yard!"
Neighbor, shaking his head: "Boy, is your weekend screwed!"
LOL
E
- wgb1
- Roadster Fanatic
- Posts: 368
- Joined: Wed Feb 07, 2007 9:01 pm
- Location: NE Texas
Re: Hello from germany
All this translation is really "screwing" with my mind.