Nobody asked, but if anybody is curious: "dick" is the German word for "thick."
You may now resume your laughter.
Heh... German dick is thick đ
note to self: visit Germany soon
Yes indeed. Upon seeing this thread I thought I need to add the information you added, but going from dick to thick does absolutely not improve the situation.
It includes some poultry parts ..... which means it may have dick and cock
I wonder if it was spelled with an eth âðâ in old English and medieval German?
Maybe. But in modern German, the 'th' sound makes a hard T, not a hard... Oh, nevermind.
Nobody asked, but if anybody is curious: "dick" is the German word for "thick."
You may now resume your laughter.
Heh... German dick is thick đ
note to self: visit Germany soon
Yes indeed. Upon seeing this thread I thought I need to add the information you added, but going from dick to thick does absolutely not improve the situation.
It includes some poultry parts ..... which means it may have dick and cock
I wonder if it was spelled with an eth âðâ in old English and medieval German?
Maybe. But in modern German, the 'th' sound makes a hard T, not a hard... Oh, nevermind.
Wonder no longer: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/%C3%BEekuz
So it was thorn
All along!
What was German thinking??
Die Bart! Die!