The German for birth control pills will blow your mind
So what’s the German for birth control pills?
Is German real pic.twitter.com/yBje6J3XKF
— Evan Edinger (@EvanEdinger) December 11, 2017
Of course it is.
AAAHAHHAA
— dodie (@doddleoddle) December 12, 2017
well we actually just call it "die pille" most times
— merry quinmas (@leafena) December 11, 2017
yeah, it's a very literal language, gloves is literally hand shoes
— brady (@yahboybrady) December 11, 2017
this was literally gonna be my follow up tweet tomorrow haha
— Evan Edinger (@EvanEdinger) December 11, 2017
try fridge
— brady (@yahboybrady) December 11, 2017
Or elevator. Or lightbulb. Or slug.
— leonie (@rhapsodyinlilac) December 11, 2017
Don’t try to pretend you’re not about to do just that.
I love the language purely cause of the simplicity
— brady (@yahboybrady) December 11, 2017
Yes, telling the time in German is also very simple. It is half to not half past & 25 minutes past is 5 minutes before half to the hour.
— Mads Mikkelsons (@MikkelsonsMad) December 12, 2017
Therefore 6.25 is 5 before half seven.
— Mads Mikkelsons (@MikkelsonsMad) December 12, 2017
That’s not simple. That’s a living hell.