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NorwayBernd2021-06-12 13:04:39 · 5yNo. 115804reply
Listening to ASMR for language practice is kind of retarded. Is there something else I can do involving foreign languages? Online only English really matters so I'm not sure.
6 messages omitted.
New ZealandBernd2021-06-12 15:52:05 · 5yNo. 115814reply
I am currently listening to the drunk couple to the right of my room fug on their squeaky bed.
Gonna clap when I hear someone coom.
SloveniaBernd2021-06-12 19:17:29 · 5yNo. 115823reply
tfw OP posts your OC :3
 
I'm thinking, the streamers that go out in public and talk to strangers (you know the Malik Sanchez or Baked Alaska type) might be exactly what you're looking for.
However, I don't know of any examples of that in languages other than English (hell I barely know the English ones.)
GermanyBernd2021-06-13 16:44:15 · 5yNo. 115849reply
Play story-driven videogames in other languages! It's easier than watching movies because the dialogues are often slower or depend on your input and you can usually activate sub-titles. Reading comic books is also good, because the images help you understand the text.
SloveniaBernd2021-06-13 18:50:33 · 5yNo. 115852reply
>Play story-driven videogames
Hm, now that I think about it, this is exactly how I learned English mostly

NetherlandsBernd2021-06-12 15:15:10 · 5yNo. 115813reply
So apparently, when you carve shit into stone you want it to be good so you put a lot of effort. But when you write in clay or papyrus time is a bit more important and quality gets fucked.
2 messages omitted.
NetherlandscopticBernd2021-06-12 20:00:54 · 5yNo. 115829reply
Wait for the Greeks to arrive and especially their Christianity and you totally drop your paganism
NetherlandsDying a deathBernd2021-06-12 20:04:08 · 5yNo. 115830reply
The last hieroglyphic was carved in 392AD while the last demotic in AD452. By 11th century AD the language of at least 4000 years was dead.
Netherlandsmuh free market competition will fix itBernd2021-06-12 20:08:03 · 5yNo. 115831reply
Scholars divide the long history of ancient Egypt into periods and dynasties. A dynasty is a series of kings related by family, geographic origin, or some other feature. Our current system of dynasties dates to the work of an Egyptian priest named Manetho, who wrote a history of Egypt about 300 BC. Using older Egyptian archives as his source, Manetho divided Egypt’s pharaohs into thirty dynasties. These divisions are still used for the most part, though scholars have been able to revise them on the basis of more ancient historical material.
 
The dynastic history of Egypt begins around 3000 BC, when the country was unified under a single government. Before that time, Egypt was divided into a number of local centers of power; this is known as the Predynastic Period. Manetho began his Dynasty 1 with the legendary king Menes, who united the south and north and built a new capital at Memphis (just south of modern Cairo). Scholars have not been able to identify Menes with any of the known historical pharaohs. Today, the first king of Dynasty 1 is generally assumed to be either Aha or his predecessor, Narmer. In fact, there is evidence that a number of kings even before Narmer had control of most if not all of Egypt; to preserve the traditional dynastic numbering, scholars group these earlier pharaohs into a “Dynasty Zero.”
 
Dynasties 1 and 2 are known as the Archaic Period (ca. 3000–2650 BC). During this time we can trace the development of most traditional aspects of Egyptian civilization: government, religion, art, and writing. The first full bloom of Egyptian culture came during the Old Kingdom, Dynasties 3–6 (ca. 2650–2150 BC). This was the time when the great pyramids were built and the first full hieroglyphic texts appeared.
 
After Dynasty 6, the central government weakened and Egypt entered a phase of its history known as the First Intermediate Period (Dynasties 8–11, ca. 2150–2040 BC; Manetho’s Dynasty 7 does not correspond to any known historical kings). Toward the end of this period, Egypt was ruled by two competing local dynasties: Dynasty 10, with its capital at Herakleopolis in the north; and Dynasty 11, based at Thebes in the south.
 
Around 2040 BC, a king of Dynasty 11, known as Mentuhotep II, managed to gain control of the entire country; this event marks the beginning of the Middle Kingdom (Dynasties 11-13, ca. 2040–1700 BC). Dynasty 12, ruling from a new capital at Lisht (about thirty miles south of modern Cairo), inaugurated the second flowering of Egyptian culture. During its rule the first great works of Egyptian literature were written, in the phase of the language known as Middle Egyptian.
 
Toward the end of Dynasty 13, central authority over the entire country weakened once again, and Egypt entered its Second Intermediate Period (Dynasties 13–17, ca. 1700–1550 BC). This era began with competing native dynasties in the south and north (Dynasties 13–14). Around 1650 BC the rulers of an Asiatic settlement in the Delta gained control of most of the country. The Egyptians called these kings Hyksos (HICK-soes), meaning “foreign rulers”; they are traditionally assigned to Dynasty 15. Meanwhile, the area around Thebes, in the south of Egypt, was governed by two successive native dynasties (the 16th and 17th).
 
After a series of battles lasting some two decades, between the last kings of Dynasty 17 and the Hyksos, a king named Ahmose was able to conquer the Hyksos and reestablish a unified government. His reign marks the beginning of Dynasty 18 and the period of Egyptian history known as the New Kingdom (Dynasty 18, ca. 1550–1302 BC). Once again Egyptian culture flourished, as the pharaohs of Dynasty 18 extended Egyptian influence over much of the Near East and inaugurated great building projects in Egypt itself. The end of Dynasty 18 saw the rule of the heretic pharaoh Akhenaten (who tried to establish the worship of a single god) and his successors, including Tutankhamun—a series of reigns known as the Amarna Period (ca. 1346–1316 BC).
 
The last pharaoh of Dynasty 18, Haremhab (ca. 1316–1302 BC), managed to quell the internal disruption that resulted from Akhenaten’s experiment, and his successors once again presided over a strong and stable Egypt. Most of the kings of the next two dynasties were named Ramesses, and their rule is known as the Ramesside Period (Dynasties 19–20, ca. 1302–1086 BC). The reign of Ramesses II (ca. 1290–1224 BC) was the high point of this time, marked by a peace treaty with the Hittites (the second great power in the Near East), advances in Egyptian theology and philosophy, and the greatest building projects since the time of the pyramids, 1300 years earlier.
 
Though most of them bore the same name, the successors of Ramesses II were hard pressed to live up to his legacy. After the death of the last Ramesside pharaoh, Ramesses XI, Egypt once more fell into a period of disunity. For the next four hundred years, a time known as the Third Intermediate Period (ca. 1086–650 BC), the country was torn between competing dynasties of native rulers (Dynasties 21 and 24) and kings originating from Libya (Dynasties 22–23) and Nubia (Dynasty 25). Not until 650 BC was Egypt able to prosper under a period of stable, unified rule by a single dynasty of native kings. The rulers of this dynasty, the 26th (672–525 BC), governed from the city of Sais, in the north, and their reign is known as the Saite Period. It was marked by a resurgence in the arts, based on the classical forms of the Old and Middle Kingdom.
 
The Saite Period ended brutally, with the conquest of Egypt by a Persian army in 525 BC. For the first time in its dynastic history, Egypt was governed not as an independent country but as the province of a foreign empire. During the next two hundred years, known as the Late Period (Dynasties 27–30, 525–332 BC), Egypt tottered between Persian rule (Dynasty 27) and brief periods when native pharaohs managed to regain control (Dynasties 28–30). In 343 BC, the Persians conquered Egypt for the final time, ending the reign of Nectanebo II, the last native Egyptian to rule his country until the Egyptian revolution in AD 1952.
 
When Alexander the Great destroyed the Persian Empire in 332 BC, he gained control of Egypt as well. After Alexander’s death in 323 BC, the rule of Egypt passed to one of his generals, named Ptolemy. Though they were of Macedonian origin, Ptolemy and his descendants governed Egypt as pharaohs. The country prospered during the three hundred years of their reign, known as the Ptolemaic Period (323–30 BC), with a strong central government and an ongoing program of rebuilding and renewing the older monuments.
 
Ptolemaic rule ended in 30 BC, when the coalition of Marc Antony and the Ptolemaic ruler Cleopatra VII was defeated by Octavian, the future Caesar Augustus. Egypt became a province of the Roman Empire. Although its ancient customs continued under Roman rule for the next four hundred years, Egypt gradually lost its old identity, first to Christianity and then, in AD 641, to Islam. The Roman conquest of 30 BC is generally considered as the end of ancient Egyptian civilization.
SloveniaBernd2021-06-12 20:22:16 · 5yNo. 115833reply
I find it kinda funny
greek script is one of many branches coming from kanaanite script, which comes from using hieroglyphs based on their meanings (in semitic) as an alphabet – so not the same symbol as egyptians used (hieroglyphs for spelling words out were based on egyptian readings ofc)
and then when you have egyptians taking over greek alphabet, they supplement the missing letters from some demotic alphabetic symbols
so must letters travelled down via phoenician and greek, but some were inherited via hieratic and demotic
but ultimately it's still all derived from hieroglyphs

United StatesBernd2021-06-12 16:17:20 · 5yNo. 115817reply
I thought Russia manages better..
SloveniaBernd2021-06-12 19:20:02 · 5yNo. 115824reply
Fixing the mess that was created in the 90s is hard.
No matter how bad it looks, it's actually getting better.
Russia manages best! America will never be able to recover that quickly.

NetherlandsWe're hitting shitpost levels that shouldn't even be possibleBernd2021-06-12 12:25:28 · 5yNo. 115802reply

Germany4chan did something funnyBernd2021-06-10 22:38:49 · 5yNo. 115735reply
https://battlefield2042.com/
6 messages omitted.
New ZealandBernd2021-06-11 12:11:36 · 5yNo. 115747reply
EA could claim he's squatting the url and pay nothing.
FinlandBernd2021-06-11 16:11:51 · 5yNo. 115771reply
what bullshit, you should be able to have your own domain point wherever you want it to
TurkeyBernd2021-06-11 18:19:13 · 5yNo. 115776reply
TurkeyBernd2021-06-12 09:20:45 · 5yNo. 115799reply
It doesnt matter copyright owner which is ea is provileged. In fact i think berndgroup.com can seize our domain as well and there is nothing we can do about it.

New ZealandBernd2021-06-11 12:12:28 · 5yNo. 115748reply
I'm taking a huge shit at work.
6 messages omitted.
New ZealandBernd2021-06-11 17:54:41 · 5yNo. 115773reply
When you look at the amount of chemicals used to clean the processing bays, and the microplastics leftover after a shift, you begin to ponder whether or not it's worth purchasing industrially slaughtered meat.
I wouldn't source meat from my factory. Much of the plant isn't well cleaned due to burnouts neglecting their job. Safety standards are a superficial placeholder to keep governments pacified and our societies weak. Third worlders aren't afraid to eat meat that's been sitting below a plastic bag spinning on a debladed fan rotor to keep the flies away, so why have we sacrificed a few beneficial bugs and gained chemicals woth microplastics?
 
I really hate my job and was spreading my cough everywhere I could.
FinlandBernd2021-06-11 19:50:41 · 5yNo. 115781reply
arent yall worried that your negligence might kill someone some day
NetherlandsBernd2021-06-11 21:12:51 · 5yNo. 115785reply
Its his boss problem
New ZealandBernd2021-06-12 01:29:13 · 5yNo. 115793reply
No, my contract ends around the 1st of August and I'll never do another factory job so long as there is still feeling left in my hands.

TurkeyBernd2021-06-08 17:07:28 · 5yNo. 115485reply
eatings baklava and drinking tea while watching people on the street from my window.
 
r8 my 33 yr old Turk boomer settis
14 messages omitted.
Netherlandshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMgMAGu0w2kBernd2021-06-11 12:43:27 · 5yNo. 115752reply
Thread theme. Not turkic but oh well, thats what I am listening to right now and wanted to shitpost.
New ZealandBernd2021-06-11 13:19:57 · 5yNo. 115754reply
My friend, why haven't you begun growing your own herb? Seedsman should be able to hook you up
SloveniaBernd2021-06-11 15:14:51 · 5yNo. 115767reply
Where can I buy seeds, and can I grow this on an undisclosed location in the forest in subalpine climate?
New ZealandBernd2021-06-11 17:55:52 · 5yNo. 115774reply
Well a certain seedsman, might be able to ship to your country if its available on their list. Be sure to get insurance on that certain seedsman in case your package is seized by customs, otherwise you'll have to rebuy your seeds from that certain seedsman.
And weed will grow just about anywhere. You may be a bit late but it can be indoors as well.

NetherlandsBernd2021-06-08 15:28:30 · 5yNo. 115471reply
We should give the man a medal. Slapping the ridiculous wannabe Zeus/Napoleon banker dicksucker.
 
Are you for or against bitchslapping the actors that are acting as politicians today?
13 messages omitted.
New ZealandBernd2021-06-11 02:50:03 · 5yNo. 115737reply
Is it common for European leaders to appear in public nowadays? I would anticipate any sort of public event could resort in a more serious attack than this humiliating display of democracy.
NetherlandsBernd2021-06-11 11:32:23 · 5yNo. 115745reply
Its not like he appeared that public. Its just outside of a hotel? in the middle of nowhere with like 30 people of which half are his goons
NetherlandsBernd2021-06-11 12:09:00 · 5yNo. 115746reply
SloveniaBernd2021-06-11 15:16:20 · 5yNo. 115768reply
I heard he told in court that he slapped because he doubted that Macron would answer his challenge to sword duel.

CanadaBeen listening to nine inch nails a lot latelyBernd2021-06-10 00:14:19 · 5yNo. 115669reply
FinlandBernd2021-06-10 05:34:15 · 5yNo. 115677reply
rated age 15 out of 30
SwedenBernd2021-06-10 06:26:44 · 5yNo. 115679reply
0.5/10
GermanyBernd2021-06-10 06:30:56 · 5yNo. 115682reply
gay but not homosexual
GermanyBernd2021-06-10 17:43:15 · 5yNo. 115727reply
you are someone else i am still right here

TurkeyBernd2021-06-10 13:17:26 · 5yNo. 115696reply
henlo what's this board all about :DDD
GermanyBernd2021-06-10 13:19:55 · 5yNo. 115697reply
About self-pity.
SloveniaBernd2021-06-10 13:23:17 · 5yNo. 115698reply
NetherlandsBernd2021-06-10 16:34:53 · 5yNo. 115712reply
Virgin mockery. We are all keins here.

TurkeyBernd2021-06-10 02:18:07 · 5yNo. 115671reply
I love posting here at 5 AM.
United StatesBernd2021-06-10 02:23:56 · 5yNo. 115673reply
Türkroach to Hui (Germany xD)
TurkeyBernd2021-06-10 15:47:44 · 5yNo. 115710reply
Back to vierkanal.

NetherlandsBrussel delenda estBernd2021-06-10 00:44:23 · 5yNo. 115670reply
simple as
1 message omitted.
NetherlandsBernd2021-06-10 11:00:14 · 5yNo. 115686reply
Let us hope that Italy will do the needful
GermanyBernd2021-06-10 11:02:18 · 5yNo. 115688sagereply
Fuck off schizo.
FinlandBernd2021-06-10 14:11:15 · 5yNo. 115704reply
It's don't because they get so many gibs now
NetherlandsBernd2021-06-10 15:35:57 · 5yNo. 115706reply
Parrot mimicking. So cute.
 
They don't. Mafia and corrupt politicians get the gibs.

New ZealandBernd2021-06-10 02:23:32 · 5yNo. 115672reply
I'm catching a fookin cold and this means I'll have to get a covid test and visit a doctor, pay for both out of pocket and miss a week of work because my company requires any sick employee to ensure its not covid as a matter of exportation rules.
2 messages omitted.
GermanyBernd2021-06-10 11:04:09 · 5yNo. 115689reply
Why is missing work bad? Do you not get paid sick leave?
New ZealandBernd2021-06-10 12:45:06 · 5yNo. 115692reply
I only post after work while my dinner finishes. Most slower imageboards these days are a bit mundane. If I wasn't working, then I'd be camping and reading. I can't quite seem to get the same sort of intellectual interaction in real life as in imageboards but then its about meeting and understanding the personality types I encounter along my trails.
 
No sick leave and I'd have to pay out of pocket for the covid test as I've never had insurance despite pretending I did when I applied during both of my work visas. Also good news is that all work visas in NZ got another six month extension.
SloveniaBernd2021-06-10 13:24:27 · 5yNo. 115699reply
>pay for both out of pocket
>my company requires
Judaism.
New ZealandBernd2021-06-10 13:59:30 · 5yNo. 115701reply
Many such cases.

TurkeyAmong us thredaBernd2021-06-08 22:44:53 · 5yNo. 115566reply
Is bernd interested in with playing Among Us? It's much more enjoyable when you play with bernds.
15 messages omitted.
FinlandBernd2021-06-09 15:46:14 · 5yNo. 115649reply
So you're that turk from bronnen?
TurkeyBernd2021-06-09 17:50:08 · 5yNo. 115658reply
No I am not him.
Is that pic become famous or some thing?
SloveniaBernd2021-06-09 21:31:04 · 5yNo. 115663reply
fun fact:
I'm permabanned on bronnen for serious discussions
FinlandBernd2021-06-10 05:56:11 · 5yNo. 115678reply
no but https://www.bronnen.net/user.php?/int/res/3087405.html
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