It is dutch, but sadly not many people can translate it for you.
Google translator says,
"Yes true I have no other site I forget because they have no more dry". or
"Yeah, right! I have no other site. Have they forgotten? Because I have no more ds."
Babel fish:
"Yes am correct I have no other site am them forget because no more d have"
Apparently it's just gibberish.
Ja = yes het=it klopt=that's right bedankt= thanks ,thank you Yes that's right ,thank you
anders = different, differently woanders = elsewhere
red mean healthy and strenght white long living and geen happy living
According to the Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary Eleventh Edition, the word beguine is a noun with two definitions and pronunciations.Bequine pronounced BAY-geen or bay-GEEN (hard 'g' sound) means a member of a community of women devoted to philanthropy and asceticism but not under vows in the Netherlands during the 13th century.Bequine pronounced bi-GEEN (bi with an 'i' as in sit, hard 'g' in geen) is a dance that resembles the rhumba that is popular on the Caribbean islands of Saint Lucia and Martinique.
Do you mean clean as in "not dirty"? Or as in "not on drugs"?"not dirty"We are clean = We zijn schoon"not on drugs"We are clean = we zijn nuchter (nuchter = sober)But I would recommend saying "we hebben geen drugs gebruikt" ("we haven't used any drugs" or "we are not on drugs right now".)
Andre has no meaning in Hebrew, but you can spell it out phonetically as אנדריי
Gin Ichimaru can be broken into three different parts, each by syllable. In Japanese, Gin means silver. This most likely refers to his hair color. Ichimaru can be translated in many different ways. Ichi means one and maru can mean festival, man, ring, or circle. It can also mean the Japanese name for a circle, which used to mean correct. The most likely definition is Silver One-man, because Gin is the only man in the series Bleach with silver hair.
The word 'Gingdiska' doesn't exist in Japanese, nor does it exist in English. Perhaps you meant 銀ですか (gin desu ka) which means something along the lines of "is it silver?" in Japanese.A common phrase learnt by students of Japanese is 元気ですか (genki desu ka) which means "how are you?". The pronunciation is somewhat like what I imagine 'Gingdiska' would be pronounced like.Pronunciation銀ですか (gin desu ka) - "geen deska"元気ですか (genki desu ka) - "gehn-key deska"
he was a mean person who lived with mean people in a mean castle on a mean hill in a mean country in a mean continent in a mean world in a mean solar system in a mean galaxy in a mean universe in a mean dimension
you mean what you mean
Mean is the average.
Mean