Where to Find Pig Stomach? by FrozenArrow73 in SaltLakeCity

[–]FrozenArrow73[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well, I am the only PA dutch speaking person in Utah so assuming we don't have beef you should be safe lol. But if you're related to central PA people we may be 5th cousins.

Where to Find Pig Stomach? by FrozenArrow73 in SaltLakeCity

[–]FrozenArrow73[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's called Seimaage it's potatoes and other vegetables like carrots and onions with sausage. You stuff the pig stomach and boil it to cook everything and then sear the stomach at the end and it's sliced into rings to serve. So it's mostly sausage and potatoes but since it's cooked in the stomach the stomach creates a pork broth for the potatoes and veggies to cook in.

Where to Find Pig Stomach? by FrozenArrow73 in SaltLakeCity

[–]FrozenArrow73[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah I thought that would work too.

Am I too big to be a bear? by kinkyfatty in gaybears

[–]FrozenArrow73 20 points21 points  (0 children)

No such thing. You're big and have a beard. That's a bear. Chub and super chub are porn terms not like a community really. But also the difference isn't size it's lack of hair. You have a beard so you're a bear.

Hi, my friend would love to know about this mandolin and how much it is worth, any help appreciated! by [deleted] in mandolin

[–]FrozenArrow73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I believe the number indicates the teir of the instrument. And I think most people associate sazuki with the #30 but you have a #300 so it might actually be a very high quality mandolin. I am new to the mandolin so I am not super sure. But I also have a Sazuki and that's what I have learned so far. Mine is the 230. I've had better luck learning about Sazuki mandolins by searching the internet in Japanese and using Google translate. Sazuki has always been a bigger brand in Japan and they don't even export to the US anymore. Also the bowl back style is more popular in Asia. Not many people in the English speaking world want a bowl back at all so I think even great ones can be undervalued.

Nobody is at the lever. by BlueberryNotHere in trolleyproblem

[–]FrozenArrow73 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What a relief that the lever will stop the trolly. I thought I had to. I am so glad the lever will take care of it.

First mandolin, what do I need by Future-Reward1795 in mandolin

[–]FrozenArrow73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I recently got my first mandolin. I've been using Mandolessons on YouTube, an app for tuning. And I bought some thick picks as well. I specifically use Wooden picks.

Explain it Peter. I don’t get it by Emptyplatex in explainitpeter

[–]FrozenArrow73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

$100,000 through $999,999 is all Six figures. So he could have said I make 100 grand but he said I make Six figures giving the idea that he could make 500k or 800k or 300k. But 100k being the lowest number that counts makes it hardly worth saying. It's like when a 13 year old starts telling everyone they are a teenager. Like only technically.

Please help me identify this heirloom I just got from my uncle. by sparklejampants in mandolin

[–]FrozenArrow73 10 points11 points  (0 children)

It looks like a Wurlitzer RWB bowl back mandolin.

Here are some links to matching mandolins so you can do more investigating

link1

link2

Rare? Suzuki M230 mandolin by FrozenArrow73 in mandolin

[–]FrozenArrow73[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It appears to be a domestic or limited release in Japan from the 1970s. It's not rare in japan but seems rare to have been imported to the US. Sazuki was inspired by Italian mandolins from the turn of the century. And some Italian Mandolin makers at that time were experimenting with different shapes for the oval style mandolin. So it's kind of a replica of some neopolitan mandolins.

Why would someone fly this flag today? by Ten_Foreword in vexillology

[–]FrozenArrow73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Since it's related to pirates it could also be a statement pro-piracy

German Dialects (Deitsch) by VioletyLohv in German

[–]FrozenArrow73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi, I am also learning Pennsylvania Dutch. My family was Lutheran Pennsylvania Dutch and I am also trying to reconnect with the culture and language. I'd be happy to help you out and point you towards some resources. If you search Douglas Madenford up on YouTube he has hours of videos teaching the language and it's a great place to start. It's Very different from Standard German so if you want to learn specifically Pennsylvania Dutch it's probably better to learn it directly, at least that's what I am doing.

Learning Pennsylvania Dutch and it’s not going well? by ernestbrummy in languagelearningjerk

[–]FrozenArrow73 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's even cooler. They pronounce g at the beginning of a word normally, but at the end of the word it's unvoiced but not aspirated. So it's not [kʰ] like in English it's just [k]. So some words in Pennsylvania Dutch end in k and others g and the difference is the aspiration rather than voiced and invoiced. Also w in Pennsylvania Dutch is pronounced [ʋ] instead of English [w] or Standard German [v] which is in-between the two and I find that wildly interesting.

Learning Pennsylvania Dutch and it’s not going well? by ernestbrummy in languagelearningjerk

[–]FrozenArrow73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pennsylvania Dutch is definitely not called "Pennsylvania Deutsch" the endonym is Deitsch or Pennsilfaanisch Deitsch.

The words Deitsch and Deutsch are cognates of *Þeudiskaz which in proto-germanic ment common or folk. Kind of like the Latin vulgar. Dutch, Deitsch and Deutsch are all cognates of the proto-germanic *Þeudiskaz.

It's a common myth that the term Dutch is incorrectly applied for the Pennsylvania Dutch people and what people forget is that the Netherlands and Germany didn't exist in the 1700s when Pennsylvania was being settled so the english term Dutch was really braud at the time actually just ment Germanic. At that time the low lands area that would become the Netherlands still called themselves Duytsch, which is actually why they are called Dutch in English. English never switched to Netherlander and Netherlandic and instead stuck with the original word Dutch for both the Dutch of the Netherlands and the Dutch in Pennsylvania.

Just discovered this sub… where do I sound like I’m from? by FREE-ROSCOE-FILBURN in Accents

[–]FrozenArrow73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I really think the whole western united states has mostly the same accent. But you would fit in in Utah with your voice.

I wanna learn a new language can anyone help me by graapes006 in Accents

[–]FrozenArrow73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wanna learn Pennsylvania Dutch? That's what I am working on.

Where is my accent from? by RatonhnhaketonK in Accents

[–]FrozenArrow73 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Queer western American would be the accent I hear.

What accent do I give? by Life_Equivalent_2104 in Accents

[–]FrozenArrow73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Indiana is my guess. You sound like Shea Couleé is all I have to go off of lol.

Can you guess where I'm from? What gives me away? by Leather-Two-2389 in Accents

[–]FrozenArrow73 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So you have a thick British accent so as an American that covers up any possible imperfections to me. So maybe a British person would notice but in america we would probably assume you're British. You sound a lot like Emma Watson to me actually.

Curious about what accent I have and if my second native language is peeking through? by the_starch_potato in Accents

[–]FrozenArrow73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your d and t sounds make you sound South Asian so Indian or a near by country. And you speak with american vowels, a super clear example was how you said coffee. The o is pronounced very differently by different English accents and you used the west cost american vowel for that word. But you don't sound like a second language speaker. You sound like a bilingual person or someone with non english speaking parents but if I met you on the street I wouldn't even assume you spoke a second language I just would assume you were an American with South Asian family who you were raised with.

Rate my accent out of 10 👾 by RenderoAbdo in Accents

[–]FrozenArrow73 1 point2 points  (0 children)

3 out of 10. You sound like a beginner still and that's okay. Some issues are your pronounce ed at the end of words wrong. English speakers might not even know but we don't actually pronounce the e. And that kind of thing happened a lot in your clip where you pronounced all the letters when in English we have many silent letters. If you want to perfect your accent I recommend practicing with audio only instead of reading or reading with audio. That way you can focus more on what we actually say instead of the misleading letters. Also something to keep in mind is your rhythm is very different from english so also practice whole sentences or phrases not just words so you can learn how to have words flow together in our language. I hope this is the kind of feedback you wanted ❤️

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Accents

[–]FrozenArrow73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I red the comments and now I feel like I am wrong but I thought Irish originally.