it means having a good time with friends and family there are several expresions that the danish use with the word huger in them i know some of them but cant spell them
madness
West
City/Town
Hermann Vinterberg has written: 'McKay's modern Danish-English, English-Danish dictionary, by Hermann Vinterberg and Jens Axelsen' -- subject(s): Danish, Danish language, Dictionaries, English, English language 'Dansk-engelsk ordbog' -- subject(s): Danish language, Dictionaries, English 'McKay's modern Danish-English, English-Danish dictionary' -- subject(s): Danish, Danish language, Dictionaries, English, English language
Banquet is an English equivalent of the Danish word 'festmiddag'.
left-cut it probably means chris zang
The language is Danish, and "jeg elsker dig" translates to "I love you" in English.
The girl's name Trisha is a variant of Patricia (Latin) and Tricia (English), and the meaning of Trisha is "noble or patrician". This is not a Danish name.
Let's speak in Danish
English: Father Danish: Far
No, "huger" is not a standard word in English. The correct comparative form of "huge" is "more huge" or simply "huge" when used in a general sense. However, in informal contexts, some may use "huger" colloquially, but it is not widely accepted in formal writing.
I don't know the exact word in english but 'rovmordere' are killers who kill their victims because they steal from them