/North/ general - perfidious Albion edition
Invited : /Skandi/ /balt/ /Eire/ /Scotland/
Matter at hand : Should Germany and Netherlands become part of /North/? Take the poll!
strawpoll.me
/North/ general - perfidious Albion edition
Invited : /Skandi/ /balt/ /Eire/ /Scotland/
Matter at hand : Should Germany and Netherlands become part of /North/? Take the poll!
strawpoll.me
Other urls found in this thread:
lituanus.org
twitter.com
first for /east/
As of now poll is equal
Bump
stop excluding northern england you cunt
Now it isn't anymore... I still have hope left, but I wonder why you hate us. I'd love to be part of /North/, I know we aren't as nordic as Iceland, but we're THE Germanics. Have you ever been to Northern Germany? But I will accept your decision since I know you're based.
where's the option in the poll for letting in netherlands only
Lithuaniabro, i really appreciate your OC
Great OC, thanks for putting in the effort.
Will you stab me otherwise?
no you are my norden broder and i would never hurt you
now stop being mean to england
N E E K E R I
Last thread England said they are not /north/
that's because southerners are basically french or pakistani
you can't exclude norf from /north/
The /east/ vs /north/ war is gonna be great
Where does the North England start and South England begin?
They can't win against weaponized autism
basically the danelaw
So, what does /north/ do for living?
>why yes, I am Nordic, how could you tell?
based
I study
>Yes, we believe in Northern superiority, how could you tell?
What are you studying?
I am studying law
Studying IT, drinking alcohol and partying and having anonymous sex in stairwells
can I into /north/ pleas
History major, specializing in East Asia
Nice, I do the same
Basically study all day, drink all night because of rich daddy money
I am willing to declare you honorary nordic, if you denounce the EU
Are you weaboo?
Might as well post as long as we Germans are tolerated here: I study language science and literature in order to become a journalist. If that doesn't work I can still try to make a living by working in public relations.
We can only hope.
What do you want to specialize in journalism ?
I study Linguistics
What kind of?
What do you think of this?
lituanus.org
Depends how you define weaboo
If you define it as a person who enjoys japanese media and finds their culture and language interesting, then yes
If you define it as obessing over japanese shit, and thinking everything created in Japan is superior to stuff created in your own country, then no
Regardless, i've mostly focused on Korean and Chinese history. But i do intend to focus a bit more on Japan later
My study stuff mainly fits the feuilleton since we do much about literature, but it's not really specialized at this point and from my experience with internships, actually choosing a branch can be quite random. I haven't really decided yet, right now I tend towards preferring being specialized in science/economy. But it's a really hard choice and I'm glad I still have time.
I want to specialise in computational linguistics, apart from that I study Nordic languages as a hobby.
I’m not gonna read that at 1:30 but I find that very interesting and would like to know more about how indoeuropean languages evolved and developed.
I do it because of rich country money. My dad is also rich but he doesn't give me any.
If Germany and the Netherlands get a vote so should northern poland
I live in the northern half of my country :)
>being rich in Sweden
What about it?
Maybe, if they give it back to us.
Yeah, I know that feeling. I'll have to choose specialization this year as well, my family wants me to be financial lawyer, while I lean towards criminal law. But criminal lawyers are underpaid here (as far as lawyers go, it's still above average wage).
Same. But my mom slips me some money.
I am planning on opening my own business soon
Only Prussia, just because they were balts and later Germans.
Both sound interesting, is the difference in pay that large?
financial or corporate lawyers - 4 to 12 k euros a month
Criminal law - 1.5-3k euros if you work as a prosecutor, as a lawyer 2- 5 k
It basically talks why balto-slav group can't exist and gives some pointers leading to possible balto - germanic group
Alright, that is in fact a large gap. Have you ever thought about emigrating? I don't know if the wages are better in other countries, but I've heard many Lithuanians, especially young students, leave the country.
Law is localized
Also, pay in Vilnius isn't bad
>balto - germanic
My bruder.
>Because they were balts and later Germans
Pomerania is literally on the Baltic coast and pic related
>Law is localized
Fuck, I kinda forgot. Is it that much of a difference though? I mean, you're in the EU and stuff. Concerning emigration, I was just asking out of curiosity and I'm glad if you've found your place, so to say. Concerning the choice between criminal and financial law, in the end you just have to listen to your heart, I'd say. I know it sounds cheesy, but take your time and then you'll see. Maybe it will be clear when you have to make the choice.
>Recently, with the help of my students, I checked the supposed lexical innovations found only in Baltic and Slavic against the newest findings in etymological works. The result is that only 16-20 lexical items can be considered as occurring only in Baltic and Slavic. All the others can be found in one or more other branches of the Indo-European languages. One can compare that result with the lexical stock common only to Baltic and Germanic languages. There are at least 72 such words, though no one has yet posited a common Balto-Germanic proto-language.
I kinda like the money, so I will probably choose financial or corporate law against my better judgement
Won few mock trials on corporate law
As of difference, even though most of continental mainland has same law system - continental, every country interprets laws differently, has different law structure and hierarchy.
And even then, there are other differences. For example, in Lithuania there is talks of introducing juries to judicial system, which is the thing that has been only in anglo saxon judicial law (Think Usa, Britain, Australia and etc).
basically law systems go like this
Though to be fair, many Lithuanian lawyers also studied some German law.
>Louisiana
Truly French
I wonder how american lawyers practice there
I mean, in continental law you can't even really use a precedent as a law (in law hierarchy, it's generally pretty low in importance in continental law)
Sorry for replying late. I will do a bit of research about that if I have the time, really interesting.
I'll go to bed now, good night my northern brothers.
shit you also have this meme concerning law students. In Poland we are saying that a law student tells everybody that he is a law student, he trains crossfit and is vegan.
In Lithuania pic related is 100 percent accurate