Kurva anyátok

Azokat nem szeretem. Meg a szeleburdikat sem.

What do Hungarians learn about Romanians in history class? Do they really tell you that you were "the first in Transylvania", as if that would even matter now, or even in 1918?

I always find laughable the claims of Hungarians online that Romanians were some shepherds who migrated to modern Romania's territory from eastern Serbia, or even more laughably, Albania, and apparently these shepherds were badass enough to overwhelm the natives of the Carpathian basins and impose their language on them. Their military character is at least certainly attested in their vocabulary! (bătrân < veteranus, sarcină < sarcina, bătaie < battalia, luptă < lucta, armă < arma, scut < scutum, spadă < spatha, săgeată < sagitta, arc < arcus, cetate < civitas, ucidere < occidere, oaste < hostes...)

Attached: ethnographic_czoernig_1855_4.jpg (2759x2022, 3.85M)

I also find absurdly idiotic the claim that the Romanian language was "invented" somehow in the 19th century, when there are a wealth of printed documents in Romanian from four centuries before (about the same time as printed works in other laic languages, such as Finnish, started to appear). I'm posting just an example. At the time Romanian was written in the Romanian Cyrillic alphabet.

Attached: carte-romaneasca-de-invatatura-1643.png (1009x1737, 3.69M)

fornettit eszek :D

de hiszen az szar lett nem?

finom

>lett

régen a sajtos pogijuk finom volt

hát ha normális pogácsákat akarok enni akkor elmegyek egy pékségbe. De a töltött cuccok amiket csinálnak egész jó. Most kolbászos pizzaszeletet eszek. Megmelegítettem és raktam rá kecsapot. Nagyon fincsa

veszel nekem is?:D