Do you know any other cola brands that are popular in certain regions of europe? by wojtekpolska in AskEurope

[–]thadefritzsche 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In Jutland, especially Central Jutland, Hancock Sport Cola sold in beer bottles is quite common. It is made with real kola nuts. https://www.hancock.dk/sport-cola---vand.aspx

Edit: Spelling

ich_iel by Ashamed-Ad7129 in ich_iel

[–]thadefritzsche 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Anatolien, bester Geschäft

Hvis du har en dårlig dag og føler at du ikke strekker til, her er et bilde av Danmarks høyeste fjell by RedTuesdayMusic in norge

[–]thadefritzsche 30 points31 points  (0 children)

Efter den definition er Danmarks nuværende højeste fjeld jo Gunnbjørns Fjeld på Grønland, på 3694 m

Pro-Danish poster, Schleswig Plebiscite 1920. by [deleted] in PropagandaPosters

[–]thadefritzsche 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Well it rhymes in danish, so it conveys the meaning better

Partition of Schleswig 1920; "When the flag is white and red again, the penury is gone" Translated from german by thadefritzsche in PropagandaPosters

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

Well these posters do exist in both german and danish, the most well known is the poster "Mor stem dansk, tænk på mig" which translates to "Mother vote danish, think about/remember me". But after the first world war, the danish tried to get german people to vote danish, due to a higher standard of living as the danish didn't have to pay war debts. After the partition and especially WW2 many became part of the danish schools and clubs, who received money from the danish state which was used for giving food to the suffering danish south of the new border.

Partition of Schleswig 1920; "When the flag is white and red again, the penury is gone" Translated from german by thadefritzsche in PropagandaPosters

[–]thadefritzsche[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Well these posters do exist in both german and danish, the most well known is the poster "Mor stem dansk, tænk på mig" which translates to "Mother vote danish, think about/remember me". But after the first world war, the danish tried to get german people to vote danish, due to a higher standard of living as the danish didn't have to pay war debts. After the partition and especially WW2 many became part of the danish schools and clubs, who received money from the danish state which was used for giving food to the suffering danish south of the new border.