Podcasts about Nynorsk

One of two official written standards for the Norwegian language

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Best podcasts about Nynorsk

Latest podcast episodes about Nynorsk

Norskpodden

I denne episoden har vi besøk av Ingrid som forteller oss om forskjellene mellom Nynorsk og Bokmål.Transkripsjon:https://lingu.no/norskbloggen/nynorskInstagram:https://www.instagram.com/linguno/

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com
Throwback Thursday S1 #23 - Using the Internet in Western Norway

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 6:30


learn how to access the web at an Internet cafe in Nynorsk

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com
Throwback Thursday S1 #46 - Being Vegetarian in Western Norway

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2024 7:24


learn a few phrases so you can tell your hosts what you don't like to eat in Nynorsk

Simon og Tore
Underdressed på nasjonaldagen, do's and dont's på date og nynorsk-guruen Tore

Simon og Tore

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2024 41:21


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com
Throwback Thursday S1 #41 - A Guide to Foreign Exchange in Western Norway

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2024 8:29


learn about exchanging foreign currency in Nynorsk

Tekstbehandlingsprog
Yndig analyse av yndige nynorskdikt

Tekstbehandlingsprog

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2024 39:28


I denne veka si sending snakkar Sofie, Maria og Karen om hjartespråket: nynorsk. Kva skapar eit vakkert dikt, og har skiftmål noko å seie om dette? Det diskuterar me denne veka! Bli med på reisa tilbake til Vestlandet.

Nokon må gå
Urinering, oppsplitting og nynorsk. Høyr episoden hos Podme eller i BT-appen.

Nokon må gå

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2024 0:32


INP er splitta i to, men har eigentleg det nye partiet til Owe Ingemann Waltherzøe nokon sjanse? I Bergen skulle det bli lov å tisse i fjorden, men folk må halde seg litt til. Og så var det nynorsk, då. Er det synd på lærarar som må undervise på nynorsk? Produsent: Arve Stigen

Spuzziness. Der Sportbusiness Podcast mit Kim Scholze
Outdoor Business - Christian Schou (Chief Executive Skibum at Hygge)

Spuzziness. Der Sportbusiness Podcast mit Kim Scholze

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2023 29:10


What I enjoy most about podcasting is the diversity of our industry and the great passion of the personalities as influencers and drivers. I found Christian Schou in a roundabout way - it's fun to listen to him - he doesn't beat around the bush - he loves to say: let's go skiing when I ask him for business-relevant impulses :-) So open your ears for Christian Schou, open your eyes for House of Hygge. Christian Schou likes to emphasize the energy with which the Norwegian brand House of Hygge is making its way. Christian is the manager and Chief Executive Skibum (as he calls himself) of House of Hygge. The brand was founded in 2004 as a supplier of slack line kits. His own description is better than any word I could find for his status quo in 2023: "When I founded House of Hygge, I wanted to go skiing. I made the world's first slackline set. The money financed many seasons in Chamonix, climbing expeditions in the Himalayas and surfing in tropical paradises around the world. There were times when there were no budgets and no ambitions other than the best possible experiences in nature. This is still the lifeblood of our company. To this day, employees receive a written notice if they don't ski when it snows. I am impressed by what our small group has achieved so far. We are working hard and will continue to do so. Personally, I'm still mainly interested in the great experiences. Keeping things real. But what I am really proud of is that we are creating year-round jobs in rural Norway. We are an "outdoor lifestyle brand", as it is called in Nynorsk. Our strategy is to become a fully-fledged supplier of sportswear, from head to toe, inside out, summer and winter. We received wonderful confirmation of this when we were voted "Newcomer of the Year" by the Norwegian Sports Industry Association. The vision is still firm: to give people a break from everyday life. We can therefore promise you that we will work hard to continue to be both the best in the test and the best at the party." Contact and further links: House of Hygge: https://www.linkedin.com/company/house-of-hygge/?originalSubdomain=de https://houseofhygge.no/ Christian Schou: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christian-schou-229507127/?originalSubdomain=no Christian's recommendation: https://www.hubermanlab.com/

Tempopodden
Nynorsk Viagra og sjimpansepoliti

Tempopodden

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2023 43:32


I dagens episode, får ein mellom anna svar på kva som fekk Benjamin til å knekke sammen av latter, og kvifor Kristian meiner at han framleis ikkje har bikka over til å bli ein full blown incel.I tillegg til dette, får ein høyre om kalde fisker, nye konkurrentar, moderleg spleisehjelp, berusa barndomshelter, og mykje meir!

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com
Throwback Thursday S1 #45 - How Do You Eat This Norwegian Food?

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2023 4:58


learn how to ask "How do you eat this?" in Nynorsk

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com
Throwback Thursday S1 #39 - Norwegian Post Office Part 1 - Sending Letters, Postcards, and Packages Home

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2023 8:19


Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com
Throwback Thursday S1 #30 - Where Can I Find This Place in Nynorsk?

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2023 4:10


learn how to ask where you can find a certain place in Nynorsk

'Zhpenn ar Vretoned zo
An nynorsk hag ar bokmål

'Zhpenn ar Vretoned zo

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2023


Div skritur a vez implijet en deiz-hiziv evit skrivañ norvejianeg : an nynorsk hag ar bokmål. Ofisiel int o-div abaoe 1980, met ne vênt ket implijet partout memes-mod. Div skritur evit skrivañ ar memes langaj ? Droll a-walc'h eo, kea ?

Foross-podden
124 Pasjonssalmer – Nynorsk pasjonsskildring – Jakob Sande

Foross-podden

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2023 6:41


 Denne fasteserien gir oss et glimt av bakgrunnshistorien til og innholdet i viktige pasjonssalmer fra kirkens historie. Pasjonssalmene kretser rundt Jesu lidelseshistorie og er velegnet til å bruke i eget andaktsliv i fastetiden.  

Stord-Podden
Bonusepisode - Cecilie Anna - Slår et slag for Kvinnehelse og Shout Out på Nynorsk (med Einar Økland på telefon)

Stord-Podden

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2023 10:17


Her er eit lite bonus-klipp med Cecilie Anna og Einar Økland. Takk for eit flott besøk i studio Cecilie Anna! Har du ikkje lytta til episoden finn du den her: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4cIqUK1tEx4zlSORjlvO96?si=2811f91553c14bef Vil du støtte SunnhordlandPodden? Sjekk ut: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/sunnhordlandpodden/subscribe Vil din bedrift bli sponsor? Ta kontakt via post@sunnhordlandpodden.no --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/sunnhordlandpodden/message

Frokostshowet på P5
Kan Alexandra nynorsk?

Frokostshowet på P5

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2023 43:45


Vida og Niklas forteller viagrahistorier mens Alexandra har vært på opera. Episoden kan inneholde målrettet reklame, basert på din IP-adresse, enhet og posisjon. Se smartpod.no/personvern for informasjon og dine valg om deling av data.

Dagsnytt 18
Beklager til samene, kvinnehelse må prioriteres og mangler nynorsk retteprogram

Dagsnytt 18

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2023 59:27


* Regjeringen beklager overfor Fosen-samene etter én uke med aksjoner. Likevel varsler aksjonistene opptrapping i morgen. * Kvinnehelseutvalget roper varsko, og foreslår en milliard kroner til kvinnehelse. Det er ikke nok, svarer Sanitetskvinnene. * Retteprogrammer i skolen godtar ikke at nynorskbrukere skriver eg. En skandale sier Noregs Mållag. * Forskere i omstridt forskningsprosjekt om ME møtes med en strøm av innsynsbegjæringer. - Belastende og forstyrrende, sier en av forskerne bak - som frykter for den frie forskningen. Hør episoden i appen NRK Radio

Artnaal
Felt K1 - Rad 48 - Gravnummer 165 | Podcast

Artnaal

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2023 15:00


Felt K1 - Rad 48 - Gravnummer 165 | Podcast Nama Jafari: Alt hadde mistet fargen Stjernene var frosne om natten Skitne stønn falt ned bygningene Jeg fanget likene til vennene mine fra vannet Skitne stønn falt nedover veggene Jeg fanget likene til vennene mine fra vannet Skitne stønn falt nedover illustrasjonene Jeg fanget likene til vennene mine fra vannet Likene av morgenens barn, hvis unge ansikter ville roe ånden til en vinterkveld Likene av lysets barn, som mellom eikegrenene, sammen med englers sølvstemme, sang frihetssangen Lik og lik Jeg så på trærne og blomstene Jeg så på bilene og menneskene Jeg så på klumpene i halsen og skyggene Jeg var kaldt, jeg var nervøs Jeg ville rope "hva skjedde med deg"? Hva skjedde med oss? Hva skjedde med meg? Men Alt hadde mistet fargen Stjernene var frosne om natten Og jeg fanget likene til vennene mine fra vannet. ……………………..

 | Samtale | Kroppen til en kvinne kom ut av de pregede utskjæringene til Djevelen fra Oslo på tårnfoten av Oslo domkirke. Hun var blå og skalv. Kroppen til en mann kom ut av de pregede utskjæringene til Djevelen fra Oslo på tårnfoten av Oslo domkirke. Han var stille, og. Og det rant blod fra togvognene da jeg så på snøen som smeltet i mørke vinkler. Den skjelvende kvinnekroppen, mannens stille kropp, de mørke vinklene av smeltende snø ved Djevelen fra Oslo var nok til å lage denne podcasten. My guest er forfatter og skribent. Noen av bøkene hennes er: Kjønn og ukjønn, sakprosa, Samlaget 2015. Nynorsk for dumskallar. Samlaget 2013. Norsk etymologisk oppkok - Du veit ikkje kva du snakkar om. Samlaget 2012. Min gjest er Kristin Fridtun. Hør på Kristin og hør på henne som leser en del av en av bøkene hennes. ……………………..
 Podcast Nr: 39 Felt K1 - Rad 48 - Gravnummer 165 
Forfatter og Regi: Nama Jafari
 Gjest: Kristin Fridtun
 Stemmen i lydmiks: Malin Rojahn Olafsen
 Cover design: Nama Jafari
 Mix and adjusting the sound: Nama Jafari
 Oversettelse: Poopak Jamshidi, Lise Eriksen Merethe
 Støttet av Kulturrådet 
……………………..

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com
Throwback Thursday S1 #12 - Where Is the Bathroom in Nynorsk?

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2023 6:08


Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com
Throwback Thursday S1 #40 - Norwegian Post Office 2 - What’s in This Package?

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2022 6:25


Lexman Artificial
David Patterson from Argent, talking about his trip to Nynorsk

Lexman Artificial

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2022 4:38


David Patterson is a chiropodist and glazier from Argent, and he tells us about his trip to Nynorsk.

Stord-Podden
Roald Kaldestad - om Falturiltu og Barnebøker på Nynorsk

Stord-Podden

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2022 44:54


4.-11 november er det igjen klart for Falturiltu - det største enkeltståande nynorskarrangementet i landet vårt. Kunstnarleg leiar for Falturiltu og forfattar – Roald Kaldestad er med i denne episoden og du blir betre kjend med han og ein av dei mest besøkte litteraturfestivalane for barn- og ungdom i Noreg. Roald brenn for høgtlesing, og du får ein smakebit av boka Englafjell. Les meir om Falturiltu på https://www.falturiltu.no Sponsor: Sunnhordland Trafikkopplæring AS - https://su-tra.no

Midnight Train Podcast
Our History of Swear Words. (Sorry, Mom)

Midnight Train Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2022 124:37


Sign up for our Patreon for bonuses and more! www.themidnightrainpodcast.com    Do you happen to swear? Is it something you happen to do when you stub your pinky toe on the coffee table? What about when you've just finished dinner and you pull that glorious lasagna out of the oven, burn yourself and then drop your Italian masterpiece on the floor, in turn burning yourself once again? Odds are that if you're listening to this show, you have a rather colorful vernacular and aren't offended by those that share in your “darker” linguistic abilities. Those dramatic and often harsh, yet exceedingly hilarious words, have a pretty amazing history. Were they written in manuscripts by monks? Or, did we find them used by regular people and found in prose like the names of places, personal names, and animal names? Well, could they tell us more about our medieval past other than just that sex, torture, plagues and incest was all the rage? Let's find out!   Fuck   Let's start with our favorite word. Let's all say it together, kids. “Fuck!” This most versatile yet often considered one of the worst of the “bad words” doesn't seem to have been around in the English language prior to the fifteenth century and may have arrived later from the German or th Dutch. Leave it to those beautiful Germans to introduce us to such a colorful word. In fact, the Oxford English Dictionary says it wasn't actually used until 1500. However, the name of a specific place may have been used even earlier.   Many early instances of fuck were said to actually have been used to mean “to strike” rather than being anything to do with fornicating. The more common Middle English word for sex was ”swive”, which has developed into the Modern English word swivel, as in: go swivel on it. Some of the earliest instances of fuck, seen to mean “hitting” or “striking,” such as Simon Fuckebotere (from in 1290), who was more than likely in the milk industry, hitting butter, or Henry Fuckebeggar (1286/7) who may have, hit the poor.   The earliest examples of the word fuck in the English language appeared in the names of places. The first of these is said to be found near Sherwood in 1287: Ric Wyndfuk and Ric Wyndfuck de Wodehous. These both feature a kestrel known as the Windfucker which, we must assume, went in the wind. The next definite example comes from Bristol 1373 in Fockynggroue, which may have been named for a grove where couples went for “some quiet alone time.”   However, Somewhere among the indictment rolls of the county court of Chester (1310/11), studied by Dr. Paul Booth of Keele University (Staffordshire), a man whose Christian name was Roger is mentioned three times. His less Christian last name is also recorded. The name being mentioned repetitively pretty much means it did not result from a spelling mistake but rather it's the real thing. Meaning, the man's full name was Roger Fuckebythenavele. Not only does his second name move back the earliest use of fuck in its modern sense by quite a few decades; it also verifies that it is, in fact, a Middle English word. But of course, there are those fuckers that will undoubtedly debate it's fucking origin.   The stem *fukkō-, with its characteristic double consonant, is easy to explain as a Germanic iterative verb – one of a large family of similar forms. They originated as combinations of various Indo-European roots with *-nah₂-, a suffix indicating repeated action. The formation is not, strictly speaking, Proto-Indo-European; the suffix owes its existence to the reanalysis of an older morphological structure (reanalysis happens when people fail to analyze an inherited structure in the same way as their predecessors). Still, verbs of this kind are older than Proto-Germanic.   *fukkō- apparently meant to ‘strike repeatedly, beat' (like, say, “dashing” the cream with a plunger in a traditional butter churn). Note also windfucker and fuckwind – old, obsolete words for ‘kestrel'.   A number of words in other Germanic languages may also be related to fuck. One of them is Old Icelandic fjúka ‘to be tossed or driven by the wind' < *feuka-; cf. also fjúk ‘drifting snowstorm' (or, as one might put it in present-day English, a fucking blizzard). These words fit a recurrent morphological pattern observed by Kroonen (2012): Germanic iteratives with a voiceless geminate produced by Kluge's Law often give rise to “de-iterativised” verbs in which the double stop is simplified if the full vocalism or the root (here, *eu rather than *u) is restored. Kluge's law had a noticeable effect on Proto-Germanic morphology. Because of its dependence on ablaut and accent, it operated in some parts of declension and conjugation, but not in others, giving rise to alternations of short and long consonants in both nominal and verbal paradigms.   If the verb is really native (“Anglo-Saxon”), one would expect Old English *fuccian (3sg. *fuccaþ, pl. *fucciaþ, 1/3sg. preterite *fuccode, etc.). If these forms already had “impolite” connotations in Old English, their absence from the Old English literary corpus is understandable. We may be absolutely sure that *feortan (1/3 sg. pret. *feart, pret. pl. *furton, p.p. *forten) existed in Old English, since fart exists today (attested since about 1300, just like the word fuck) and has an impeccable Indo-European etymology, with cognates in several branches. Still, not a single one of these reconstructed Old English verb forms is actually documented (all we have is the scantily attested verbal noun feorting ‘fart(ing)').   One has to remember that written records give us a strongly distorted picture of how people really spoke in the past. If you look at the frequency of fuck, fucking and fucker in written English over the last 200 years, you may get the impression that these words disappeared from English completely ca. 1820 and magically reappeared 140 years later. Even the first edition of the Oxford English Dictionary pretended they didn't exist. The volume that should have contained FUCK was published in 1900, and Queen Victoria was still alive.   According to the Oxford English Dictionary: Forms:  α. 1500s fucke, 1500s– fuck; also Scottish pre-1700 fuk.   Frequency (in current use):  Show frequency band information Origin: Probably a word inherited from Germanic. Etymology: Probably cognate with Dutch fokken …   In coarse slang. In these senses typically, esp. in early use, with a man as the subject of the verb. Thesaurus » Categories » intransitive. To have sexual intercourse. ▸ ?a1513   W. Dunbar Poems (1998) I. 106   Be his feirris he wald haue fukkit.   transitive. To have sexual intercourse with (a person). In quot. a1500   in Latin-English macaronic verse; the last four words are enciphered by replacing each letter with the following letter of the alphabet, and fuccant has a Latin third-person plural ending. The passage translates as ‘They [sc. monks] are not in heaven because they fuck the wives of Ely.' [a1500   Flen, Flyys (Harl. 3362) f. 47, in T. Wright & J. O. Halliwell Reliquiæ Antiquæ (1841) I. 91   Non sunt in cœli, quia gxddbov xxkxzt pg ifmk [= fuccant uuiuys of heli].]   transitive. With an orifice, part of the body, or something inanimate as an object. Also occasionally intransitive with prepositional objects of this type. [1680   School of Venus ii. 99   An hour after, he Ferked my Arse again in the same manner.]   transitive. To damage, ruin, spoil, botch; to destroy, put an end to; = to fuck up 1a at Phrasal verbs 1. Also (chiefly in passive): to put into a difficult or hopeless situation; to ‘do for'. Cf. also mind-fuck v. 1776   Frisky Songster (new ed.) 36   O, says the breeches, I shall be duck'd, Aye, says the petticoat, I shall be f—d.   transitive. U.S. To cheat; to deceive, betray. Frequently without. 1866   G. Washington Affidavit 20 Oct. in I. Berlin et al. Black Mil. Experience in Civil War (1982) v. xviii. 792   Mr. Baker replied that deponent would be fucked out of his money by Mr. Brown.   transitive. In oaths and imprecations (chiefly in optative with no subject expressed): expressing annoyance, hatred, dismissal, etc. Cf. damn v. 6, bugger v. 2a. See also fuck it at Phrases 2, fuck you at Phrases 1b. 1922   J. Joyce Ulysses ii. xv. [Circe] 560   God fuck old Bennett!   Phrases   Imprecatory and exclamatory phrases (typically in imperative or optative with no subject expressed sense).  P1. Expressing hostility, contempt, or defiant indifference. Categories » go fuck yourself and variants. 1895   Rep. Senate Comm. Police Dept. N.Y. III. 3158   By Senator Bradley: Q. Repeat what he said to you? A. He said, ‘Go on, fuck yourself, you son-of-a-bitch; I will give you a hundred dollars'; he tried to punch me, and I went out.   fuck you. 1905   L. Schindler Testimony 20 Dec. in People State of N.Y. Respondent, against Charles McKenna (1907) (N.Y. Supreme Court) 37   Murray said to me, ‘Fuck you, I will give you more the same.' And as he said that, I grabbed the two of them.   P2. fuck it: expressing dismissal, exasperation, resignation, or impetuousness. 1922   E. E. Cummings Enormous Room iv. 64   I said, ‘F— it, I don't want it.'   P3. fuck me and elaborated variants: expressing astonishment or exasperation. 1929   F. Manning Middle Parts of Fortune II. xi. 229   ‘Well, you can fuck me!' exclaimed the astonished Martlow. Cunt Cunt is a vulgar word for the vulva or vagina. It is used in a variety of ways, including as a term of disparagement. Reflecting national variations, cunt can be used as a disparaging and obscene term for a woman in the United States, an unpleasant or stupid man or woman in the United Kingdom, or a contemptible man in Australia and New Zealand. However, in Australia and New Zealand it can also be a neutral or positive term when used with a positive qualifier (e.g., "He's a good cunt"). The term has various derivative senses, including adjective and verb uses.   Feminist writer and English professor Germaine Greer argues that cunt "is one of the few remaining words in the English language with a genuine power to shock". The earliest known use of the word, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, was as part of a placename of a London street, Gropecunt Lane. Use of the word as a term of abuse is relatively recent, dating from the late nineteenth century. The word appears not to have been taboo in the Middle Ages, but became that way toward the end of the eighteenth century, and was then not generally not allowed to be printed until the latter part of the twentieth century.   There is some disagreement on the origin of the term cunt, although most sources agree that it came from the Germanic word (Proto-Germanic *kunto, stem *kunton-), which emerged as kunta in Old Norse. The Proto-Germanic form's actual origin is a matter of debate among scholars. Most Germanic languages have cognates, including Swedish, Faroese, and Nynorsk (kunta), West Frisian, and Middle Low German (kunte), Middle Dutch (conte), Dutch kut (cunt), and Dutch kont (butt), Middle Low German kutte, Middle High German kotze ("prostitute"), German kott, and maybe Old English cot. The Proto-Germanic term's etymology ia questionable.   It may have arisen by Grimm's law operating on the Proto-Indo-European root *gen/gon "create, become" seen in gonads, genital, gamete, genetics, gene, or the Proto-Indo-European root guneh or "woman" (Greek: gunê, seen in gynaecology). Relationships to similar-sounding words such as the Latin cunnus ("vulva"), and its derivatives French con, Spanish coño, and Portuguese cona, or in Persian kos (کُس), have not been conclusively demonstrated. Other Latin words related to cunnus are cuneus ("wedge") and its derivative cunēre ("to fasten with a wedge", (figurative) "to squeeze in"), leading to English words such as cuneiform ("wedge-shaped"). In Middle English, cunt appeared with many spellings, such as coynte, cunte and queynte, which did not always reflect the actual pronunciation of the word.   The word, in its modern meaning, is attested in Middle English. Proverbs of Hendyng, a manuscript from some time before 1325, includes the advice:   (Give your cunt wisely and make [your] demands after the wedding.) from wikipedia. The word cunt is generally regarded in English-speaking countries as unsuitable for normal publicconversations. It has been described as "the most heavily tabooed word of all English words".   Quoted from wikipedia: Some American feminists of the 1970s sought to eliminate disparaging terms for women, including "bitch" and "cunt". In the context of pornography, Catharine MacKinnon argued that use of the word acts to reinforce a dehumanisation of women by reducing them to mere body parts; and in 1979 Andrea Dworkin described the word as reducing women to "the one essential – 'cunt: our essence ... our offence'".   While “vagina” is used much more commonly in colloquial speech to refer to the genitals of people with vulvas than “cunt” is, its  origins are defined by its service to male sexuality, making “cunt” —  interestingly enough — the least historically misogynistic of the two. “Cunt” has also been used in Renaissance bawdy verse and in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, but it was not until Shakespeare's era that its meaning began to fundamentally shift, during the dawn of Christian doctrine.   Arguably, if cunt simply means and refers to “vagina”, then why would that be bad? Vaginas are pretty great! They provide people with pleasure, they give life, and they're even a naturally developed lunar calendar! So, why would a person refer to another, assumedly pissy person as a vagina?    So, should we as society fight the negative stereotypes and embrace the term cunt again? It's a tiny word that bears a lot of weight, but it should be anything but scary or offensive. It can be a massive dose of love instead of an enormous force of hate if we actively define our vocabulary rather than letting it define us.   Words only have that type of power when the uptight, vanilla flavored, missionary only Karen's and Kevin's of the world decide they don't like them. This has been going on for as long as we've been using words. So, let's take it back. We love you, ya cunts!   coarse slang in later use. Thesaurus » Categories » The female genitals; the vulva or vagina. Cf. quaint n.1 a1400   tr. Lanfranc Sci. Cirurgie (Ashm.) (1894) 172   In wymmen þe necke of þe bladdre is schort, & is maad fast to the cunte. 1552   D. Lindsay Satyre Procl. 144   First lat me lok thy cunt, Syne lat me keip the key. 1680   Earl of Rochester et al. Poems 77   I fear you have with interest repaid, Those eager thrusts, which at your Cunt he made. 1865   ‘Philocomus' Love Feast iii. 21   I faint! I die! I spend! My cunt is sick! Suck me and fuck me!   A woman as a source of sexual gratification; a promiscuous woman; a slut. Also as a general term of abuse for a woman. 1663   S. Pepys Diary 1 July (1971) IV. 209   Mr. Batten..acting all the postures of lust and buggery that could be imagined, and..saying that the he hath to sell such a pouder as should make all the cunts in town run after him.   As a term of abuse for a man. 1860   in M. E. Neely Abraham Lincoln Encycl. (1982) 154   And when they got to Charleston, they had to, as is wont Look around to find a chairman, and so they took a Cunt   A despised, unpleasant, or annoying place, thing, or task. 1922   J. Joyce Ulysses ii. iv. [Calypso] 59   The grey sunken cunt of the world.   Bitch   Women were frequently equated to dogs in Ancient Greek literature, which was used to dehumanize and shame them for their alleged lack of restraint and sexual urges. This is believed to have originated from the hunter goddess Artemis, who was frequently depicted as a pack of hounds and was perceived to be both beautiful and frigid and savage. According to popular belief, the term "bitch" as we use it today evolved from the Old English word "bicce," which meant a female dog, about the year 1000 AD. The phrase started out as a critique of a woman's sexuality in the 15th century but eventually evolved to signify that the lady was rude or disagreeable.   Clare Bayley has connected this growth of the term "bitch" as an insult to the suffrage struggle and the final passage of women's suffrage in the early 20th century, particularly the 1920s. Men were intimidated when women started to challenge their subordinate roles in the patriarchal power structure, and the phrase started to be used to ferocious and irate females. Men's respect for women and the prevalence of the term are clearly correlated, since usage of the term rapidly decreased during World War II as men's appreciation of women's contributions to the war effort increased.   However, as they competed with women for employment after the war ended and the men went back to work, the word's usage increased once more. As the housewife paradigm started to fade away during the war, the position of women in the workplace and society as a whole underwent an irreparable change. However, males perceived the presence of women in the workforce as a challenge to their supremacy in society.   With songs like Elton John's "The Bitch is Back" ascending the charts in 1974, the slur became more common in mainstream culture and music in the latter decades of the 20th century. As a result of artists like Kanye West and Eminem using the term "bitch" to denigrate women and depict violence against them in their lyrics, hip-hop culture has also long been accused of being misogynistic.   We just need to look at Hillary Clinton's recent campaign for president in 2016 to understand how frequently this slur is leveled at women, especially those in positions of authority who are defying patriarchal expectations and shattering glass ceilings. Rep. AOC being called a "fucking bitch" by a GOP Rep. is another similar example. It is evident that the usage of the phrase and the degree to which males regard women to be a danger are related.   bitch (v.)   "to complain," attested from at least 1930, perhaps from the sense in bitchy, perhaps influenced by the verb meaning "to bungle, spoil," which is recorded from 1823. But bitched in this sense seems to echo Middle English bicched "cursed, bad," a general term of opprobrium (as in Chaucer's bicched bones "unlucky dice"), which despite the hesitation of OED, seems to be a derivative of bitch (n.).   bitchy (adj.) 1925, U.S. slang, "sexually provocative;" later (1930s) "spiteful, catty, bad-tempered" (usually of females); from bitch + -y (2). Earlier in reference to male dogs thought to look less rough or coarse than usual. The earliest use of "bitch" specifically as a derogatory term for women dates to the fifteenth century. Its earliest slang meaning mainly referred to sexual behavior, according to the English language historian Geoffrey Hughes:   The early applications were to a promiscuous or sensual woman, a metaphorical extension of the behavior of a bitch in heat. Herein lies the original point of the powerful insult son of a bitch, found as biche sone ca. 1330 in Arthur and Merlin ... while in a spirited exchange in the Chester Play (ca. 1400) a character demands: "Whom callest thou queine, skabde bitch?" ("Who are you calling a whore, you miserable bitch?").   In modern usage, the slang term bitch has different meanings depending largely on social context and may vary from very offensive to endearing, and as with many slang terms, its meaning and nuances can vary depending on the region in which it is used.   The term bitch can refer to a person or thing that is very difficult, as in "Life's a bitch" or "He sure got the bitch end of that deal". It is common for insults to lose intensity as their meaning broadens ("bastard" is another example). In the film The Women (1939), Joan Crawford could only allude to the word: "And by the way, there's a name for you ladies, but it isn't used in high society - outside of a kennel." At the time, use of the actual word would have been censored by the Hays Office. By 1974, Elton John had a hit single (#4 in the U.S. and #14 in the U.K.) with "The Bitch Is Back", in which he says "bitch" repeatedly. It was, however, censored by some radio stations. On late night U.S. television, the character Emily Litella (1976-1978) on Saturday Night Live (portrayed by Gilda Radner) would frequently refer to Jane Curtin under her breath at the end of their Weekend Update routine in this way: "Oh! Never mind...! Bitch!"   Bitchin' arose in the 1950s to describe something found to be cool or rad. Modern use can include self-description, often as an unfairly difficult person. For example, in the New York Times bestseller The Bitch in the House, a woman describes her marriage: "I'm fine all day at work, but as soon as I get home, I'm a horror....I'm the bitch in the house."Boy George admitted "I was being a bitch" in a falling out with Elton John. Generally, the term bitch is still considered offensive, and not accepted in formal situations. According to linguist Deborah Tannen, "Bitch is the most contemptible thing you can say about a woman. Save perhaps the four-letter C word." It's common for the word to be censored on Prime time TV, often rendered as "the b-word". During the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign, a John McCain supporter referred to Hillary Clinton by asking, "How do we beat the bitch?" The event was reported in censored format:   On CNN's "The Situation Room," Washington Post media critic and CNN "Reliable Sources" host Howard Kurtz observed that "Senator McCain did not embrace the 'b' word that this woman in the audience used." ABC reporter Kate Snow adopted the same location. On CNN's "Out in the Open," Rick Sanchez characterized the word without using it by saying, "Last night, we showed you a clip of one of his supporters calling Hillary Clinton the b-word that rhymes with witch." A local Fox 25 news reporter made the same move when he rhymed the unspoken word with rich.   A study reported that, when used on social media, bitch "aims to promote traditional, cultural beliefs about femininity". Used hundreds of thousands of times per day on such platforms, it is associated with sexist harassment, "victimizing targets", and "shaming" victims who do not abide by degrading notions about femininity   Son of a bitch The first known appearance of "son-of-a-bitch" in a work of American fiction is Seventy-Six (1823), a historical fiction novel set during the American Revolutionary War by eccentric writer and critic John Neal.  The protagonist, Jonathan Oadley, recounts a battle scene in which he is mounted on a horse: "I wheeled, made a dead set at the son-of-a-bitch in my rear, unhorsed him, and actually broke through the line." The term's use as an insult is as old as that of bitch. Euphemistic terms are often substituted, such as gun in the phrase "son of a gun" as opposed to "son of a bitch", or "s.o.b." for the same phrase. Like bitch, the severity of the insult has diminished. Roy Blount Jr. in 2008 extolled the virtues of "son of a bitch" (particularly in comparison to "asshole") in common speech and deed. Son of a bitch can also be used as a "how about that" reaction, or as a reaction to excruciating pain. In politics the phrase "Yes, he is a son of a bitch, but he is our son of a bitch" has been attributed, probably apocryphally, to various U.S. presidents from Franklin Roosevelt to Richard Nixon. Immediately after the detonation of the first atomic bomb in Alamogordo, New Mexico, in July 1945 (the device codenamed Gadget), the Manhattan Project scientist who served as the director of the test, Kenneth Tompkins Bainbridge, exclaimed to Robert Oppenheimer "Now we're all sons-of-bitches." In January 2022, United States President Joe Biden was recorded on a hot mic responding to Fox News correspondent Peter Doocy asking, "Do you think inflation is a political liability ahead of the midterms?" Biden responded sarcastically, saying, "It's a great asset — more inflation. What a stupid son of a bitch." The 19th-century British racehorse Filho da Puta took its name from "Son of a Bitch" in Portuguese. The Curtiss SB2C, a World War 2 U.S. Navy dive bomber, was called "Son-of-a-Bitch 2nd Class" by some of its pilots and crewmen. In American popular culture, the slang word "basic" is used to derogatorily refer to persons who are thought to favor mainstream goods, fashions, and music. Hip-hop culture gave rise to "basic bitch," which gained popularity through rap music, lyrics, blogs, and videos from 2011 to 2014. "Bros" is a common word for their male counterparts. Other English-speaking nations have terms like "basic bitch" or "airhead," such as modern British "Essex girls" and "Sloane Rangers," as well as Australian "haul girls," who are noted for their love of shopping for expensive clothing and uploading films of their purchases on YouTube. Oxford English Dictionary  transitive. To call (a person, esp. a woman) a bitch. 1707   Diverting Muse 131   Why how now, crys Venus, altho you're my Spouse, [If] you Bitch me, you Brute, have a care of your Brows   transitive. To behave like a bitch towards (a person); to be spiteful, malicious, or unfair to (a person); to let (a person) down. 1764   D. Garrick Let. 23 Aug. (1963) II. 423   I am a little at a loss what You will do for a Woman Tragedian to stare & tremble wth yr Heroes, if Yates should bitch You—but she must come.   intransitive. To engage in spiteful or malicious criticism or gossip, esp. about another person; to talk spitefully or cattily about. 1915   G. Cannan Young Earnest i. x. 92   It's the women bitching at you got into your blood.   intransitive. Originally U.S. To grumble, to complain (about something, or at someone). Frequently collocated with moan. 1930   Amer. Speech 5 238   [Colgate University slang] He bitched about the course.   †3. intransitive. To back down, to yield. Obsolete. rare. 1777   E. Burke Let. 9 May in Corr. (1961) III. 339   Norton bitched a little at last, but though he would recede; Fox stuck to his motion.   Shit shit (v.) Old English scitan, from Proto-Germanic *skit- (source also of North Frisian skitj, Dutch schijten, German scheissen), from PIE(proto indo-european) root *skei- "to cut, split." The notion is of "separation" from the body (compare Latin excrementum, from excernere "to separate," Old English scearn "dung, muck," from scieran "to cut, shear;" see sharn). It is thus a cousin to science and conscience.   "Shit" is not an acronym. Nor is it a recent word. But it was taboo from 1600 and rarely appeared in print (neither Shakespeare nor the KJV has it), and even in the "vulgar" publications of the late 18c. it is disguised by dashes. It drew the wrath of censors as late as 1922 ("Ulysses" and "The Enormous Room"), scandalized magazine subscribers in 1957 (a Hemingway story in Atlantic Monthly) and was omitted from some dictionaries as recently as 1970 ("Webster's New World"). [Rawson]   It has extensive slang usage; the meaning "to lie, to tease'' is from 1934; that of "to disrespect" is from 1903. Also see shite. Shat is a humorous past tense form, not etymological, first recorded 18th century.   To shit bricks "be very frightened" attested by 1961. The connection between fear and involuntary defecation has generated expressions in English since the 14th century. (the image also is in Latin), and probably also is behind scared shitless (1936).   shit (n.) Middle English shit "diarrhea," from Old English scitte "purging, diarrhea," from source of shit (v.). The general sense of "excrement" dates from 1580s (Old English had scytel, Middle English shitel for "dung, excrement;" the usual 14c. noun for natural discharges of the bodies of men or beasts seems to have been turd or filth). As an exclamation attested in print by 1920 but certainly older. Use for "obnoxious person" is by 1508; meaning "misfortune, trouble" is attested from 1937. Shit-faced "drunk" is 1960s student slang; shit list is from 1942. Shit-hole is by 1937 as "rectum," by 1969 in reference to undesirable locations. Shitload (also shit-load) for "a great many" is by 1970. Shitticism is Robert Frost's word for scatological writing.   Up shit creek "in trouble" is by 1868 in a South Carolina context (compare the metaphoric salt river, of which it is perhaps a coarse variant). Slang not give a shit "not care" is by 1922. Pessimistic expression same shit different day is attested by 1989. To get (one's) shit together "manage one's affairs" is by 1969. Emphatic shit out of luck is by 1942. The expression when the shit hits the fan "alluding to a moment of crisis or its disastrous consequences" is attested by 1967.   Expressing anger, despair, surprise, frustration, resignation, excitement, etc. 1865   Proc. Court Martial U.S. Army (Judge Advocate General's Office) U.S. National Arch.: Rec. group 153, File MM-2412 3 Charge II.   Private James Sullivan...did in contemptuous and disrespectful manner reply..‘Oh, shit, I can't' or words to that effect.   Ass/Asshole The word arse in English derives from the Proto-Germanic (reconstructed) word *arsaz, from the Proto-Indo-European word *ors-, meaning "buttocks" or "backside". The combined form arsehole is first attested from 1500 in its literal use to refer to the anus. The metaphorical use of the word to refer to the worst place in a region (e.g., "the arsehole of the world"), is first attested in print in 1865; the use to refer to a contemptible person is first attested in 1933. In the ninth chapter of his 1945 autobiography, Black Boy, Richard Wright quotes a snippet of verse that uses the term: "All these white folks dressed so fine / Their ass-holes smell just like mine ...". Its earliest known usage in newspapers as an insult was 1965. As with other vulgarities, these uses of the word may have been common in oral speech for some time before their first appearances in print. By the 1970s, Hustler magazine featured people they did not like as "Asshole of the Month." In 1972, Jonathan Richman of Modern Lovers recorded his song "Pablo Picasso", which includes the line "Pablo Picasso was never called an asshole."   Until the early 1990s, the word was considered one of a number of words that could not be uttered on commercial television in the United States. Comedian Andrew Dice Clay caused a major shock when he uttered the word during a televised MTV awards show in 1989. However, there were PG-13 and R-rated films in the 1980s that featured use of the word, such as the R-rated The Terminator (1984), the PG-13-rated National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation (1989), and the PG-rated Back to the Future (1985). By 1994, however, vulgarity had become more acceptable, and the word was featured in dialog on the long-running television series NYPD Blue, though it has yet to become anything close to commonplace on network TV. In some broadcast edits (such as the syndication airings of South Park), the word is partially bleeped out, as "assh—". A variant of the term, "ass clown", was coined and popularized by the 1999 comedy film Office Space.   The word is mainly used as a vulgarity, generally to describe people who are viewed as stupid, incompetent, unpleasant, or detestable. Moral philosopher Aaron James, in his 2012 book, Assholes: A Theory, gives a more precise meaning of the word, particularly to its connotation in the United States: A person, who is almost always male, who considers himself of much greater moral or social importance than everyone else; who allows himself to enjoy special advantages and does so systematically; who does this out of an entrenched sense of entitlement; and who is immunized by his sense of entitlement against the complaints of other people. He feels he is not to be questioned, and he is the one who is chiefly wronged.   Many would believe the term ass to be used to describe an ungulate or a hoofed mammal of the smaller variety. Those people would be correct. However ass would be used as slang to describe the incompetence of people as they seem to resemble that of a donkey. Slow and stupid. We don't see donkeys in this manner but the people of old may have.   A stupid, irritating, or contemptible person; a person who behaves despicably. Cf. arsehole n. 3, shithole n. 2. Quot. 1954, from a story originally told in 1933, provides evidence for the development of this sense from figurative uses of sense 1. [1954   V. Randolph Pissing in Snow (1976) lxx. 106   When God got the job [of making men and women] done,..there was a big pile of ass-holes left over. It looks to me like the Almighty just throwed all them ass-holes together, and made the Easton family.]   Dick/dickhead   Dick is a common English language slang word for the human penis. It is also used by extension for a variety of slang purposes, generally considered vulgar, including: as a verb to describe sexual activity; and as a term for individuals who are considered to be rude, abrasive, inconsiderate, or otherwise contemptible. In this context, it can be used interchangeably with jerk, and can also be used as a verb to describe rude or deceitful actions. Variants include dickhead, which literally refers to the glans. The offensiveness of the word dick is complicated by the continued use of the word in inoffensive contexts, including as both a given name (often a nickname for Richard) and a surname, the popular British dessert spotted dick, the classic novel Moby-Dick, the Dick and Jane series of children's books, and the American retailer Dick's Sporting Goods. Uses like these have given comic writers a foundation to use double entendre to capitalize on this contradiction. In the mid-17th century, dick became slang for a man as a sexual partner. For example, in the 1665 satire The English Rogue by Richard Head, a "dick" procured to impregnate a character that is having difficulty conceiving:   “The next Dick I pickt up for her was a man of a colour as contrary to the former, as light is to darkness, being swarthy; whose hair was as black as a sloe; middle statur'd, well set, both strong and active, a man so universally tryed, and so fruitfully successful, that there was hardly any female within ten miles gotten with child in hugger-mugger, but he was more than suspected to be Father of all the legitimate. Yet this too, proved an ineffectual Operator.”   An 1869 slang dictionary offered definitions of dick including "a riding whip" and an abbreviation of dictionary, also noting that in the North Country, it was used as a verb to indicate that a policeman was eyeing the subject. The term came to be associated with the penis through usage by men in the military around the 1880s.   The term "dick" was originally used to describe a vile or repulsive individual in the 1960s.   A stupid, annoying, or objectionable person (esp. a male); one whose behaviour is considered knowingly obnoxious, provocative, or disruptive. Cf. dick n.1 6. 1960   S. Martinelli Let. 28 Dec. in C. Bukowski & S. Martinelli Beerspit Night & Cursing. (2001) 132   You shd listen to yr own work being broadcast [on the radio]... You cd at least tell ME when to list[en] dickhead!   Twat noun Slang: Vulgar. vulva. First recorded in 1650–60; perhaps originally a dialectal variant of thwat, thwot (unattested), presumed Modern English outcome of Old English thwāt, (unattested), akin to Old Norse thveit “cut, slit, forest clearing” (from northern English dialect thwaite “forest clearing”)   What does twat mean? Twat is vulgar slang for “vagina.” It's also used, especially in British English slang, a way to call someone as stupid, useless, or otherwise contemptible person. While twat has been recorded since the 1650s, we don't exactly know where it comes from. One theory connects twat to the Old English term for “to cut off.” The (bizarre) implication could be that women's genitalia were thought to be just shorter versions of men's.   Twat was popularized in the mid-1800s completely by accident. The great English poet Robert Browning had read a 1660 poem that referred, in a derogatory way, to a “nun's twat.” Browning thought a twat must have been a kind of hat, so he incorporated it into his own work.   Words for genitalia and other taboo body parts (especially female body parts) have a long history of being turned into abusive terms. Consider a**, d*ck, p***y, among many others. In the 1920s, English speakers started using twat as an insult in the same way some use a word like c**t, although twat has come to have a far less offensive force than the c-word in American English. In the 1930s, twat was sometimes used as a term of abuse for “woman” more generally, and over the second half of the 1900s, twat was occasionally used as slang for “butt” or “anus” in gay slang.   Twat made headlines in June 2018 when British actor Danny Dyer called former British Prime Minister David Cameron a twat for his role in initiating the Brexit referendum in 2016—and then stepping down after it passed.   Twat is still common in contemporary use as an insult implying stupidity, especially among British English speakers.   Even though it's a common term, twat is still vulgar and causes a stir when used in a public setting, especially due to its sexist nature. Public figures that call someone a twat are often publicly derided. Online, users sometimes censor the term, rendering it as tw*t or tw@t.   If you're annoying, you might be accused of twattiness; if you're messing around or procrastinating, you might be twatting around; if you're going on about something, you might be twatting on. Twatting is also sometimes substituted for the intensifier ”fucking”.   As a term of abuse: a contemptible or obnoxious person; a person who behaves stupidly; a fool, an idiot. Now chiefly British. The force of this term can vary widely. Especially when applied to a woman, it can be as derogatory and offensive as the term cunt (cunt n. 2a), but it can also be used (especially of men) as a milder form of abuse without conscious reference to the female genitals, often implying that a person's behaviour, appearance, etc., is stupid or idiotic, with little or no greater force than twit (twit n.1 2b). 1922   ‘J. H. Ross' Mint (1936) xxxv. 110   The silly twat didn't know if his arse-hole was bored, punched, drilled, or countersunk. The top 10 movies with the most swear words: The Wolf of Wall Street (Martin Scorsese, 2013) – 715 Uncut Gems (Josh and Benny Safide, 2019) – 646 Casino (Martin Scorsese, 1995) – 606 Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back (Kevin Smith, 2001) – 509 Fury (David Ayer, 2014) – 489 Straight Outta Compton (F. Gary Gray, 2015) – 468 Summer of Sam (Spike Lee, 1999) – 467 Nil By Mouth (Gary Oldman, 1997) – 432 Reservoir Dogs (Quentin Tarantino, 1992) – 418 Beavis and Butt-Head Do America (Mike Judge, 1996) – 414

united states god tv women american relationships history father australia english school house men law online british french new york times joe biden australian german spanish italian united kingdom public new zealand open berlin kanye west modern class meaning greek abc world war ii heroes supreme court proverbs reflecting wolf south carolina navy speech washington post snow civil war brexit dutch shit shakespeare new mexico suck saturday night live mtv latin scottish moral prime fox news odds renaissance swedish fuck iv back to the future eminem terminator spouse new world bitch hillary clinton bros feminists charleston pg elton john world war portuguese hip rochester frequency earl alexandria ocasio cortez generally south park vaginas almighty gadgets hustlers poems mint webster persian norton artemis chester operator rec franklin delano roosevelt pie grimm filho phrases merlin richard nixon middle ages yates asshole hemingway slang john mccain variants cf moby dick kjv office space christmas vacation browning mccain national lampoon sherwood ancient greeks pablo picasso queen victoria corr proc obsolete david cameron p3 manhattan project anglo saxons robert frost amer aye boy george arse circe brute germanic weekend update ely joan crawford batten american english pessimistic quoted old english colgate university sporting goods chaucer oxford english dictionary puta kluge bitchin swear words atlantic monthly north country brows cunt nypd blue richard wright blackboy shat american revolutionary war british english canterbury tales gilda radner twats situation room indo european gary gray gop rep modern english middle english old norse peter doocy robert browning seventy six jonathan richman danny dyer in american emphatic sorry mom oed modern lovers rick sanchez police dept germaine greer respondent syne love feast alamogordo aaron james andrea dworkin phrasal deborah tannen proto indo europeans jane curtin faroese nynorsk paul booth some american john neal howard kurtz flen kate snow proto germanic catharine mackinnon shitload assholes a theory roy blount jr
Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 91 - Magne Skrede og Svein Dvergsdal

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2022 78:46


Magne Skrede måtte rett og slett få med Svein Dvergsdal til å halde seg i handa på denne episoden av Go' Knall. Her snakkar vi 4 generasjonar i same selskap. Oppstart av arbeidsmiljølova, køyre og kviletid, og moro når mobiltelefonen kom.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 90 - Reidun Fatnes

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2022 67:28


Reidun er den tøffe veterinæren i Førde som har rotte fobi. Yrkesvalet denne dama har tatt er ikkje for pyser! Tunge tak og lite søvn må ein kunne tåle. Mykje latter og moro i denne episoden, keisarsnitt på feil sau, dialekt problem og høgdeskrekk på fjellet er nokre utdrag.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 89 - Dan Eivind Berge

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2022 67:25


Dan Eivind Berge er ein likandes og artig kar frå Sandane som trivast svært godt på E39. Han blir av og til mistenkt for å være narkoman sykkeltjuv i Bergen og er også ein kløppar på å selje gamle trebåtar til svenskar på fest og frukt til fine fruer i Ålesund. Så her vert det mange gode historier med andre ord.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 88 - Arnhild Mallasvik

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2022 64:02


Arnhild Mallasvik er ei uhøgtideleg dame som likar å le og ELSKAR å køyre Porsche. Vi er også innom det vanskelegaste nokon kan oppleve, det å miste eit barn. Arnhild fortel om deira historie og korleis dei har valt å takle det. Å velje å leve, trene, samt halde seg aktiv i arbeid med arrangement rundt kreft. Denne episoden av Go' Knall er til minne om Amalie. Du vil ALDRI bli gløymt.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 87 - Nils R. Sandal og Kjell Dvergsdal

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2022 83:57


Nils R. Sandal og Kjell Dvergsdal i lag på Go' Knall er dynamitt. Høge verv, gode historier og artige påfunn.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 86 - Jo Marius Bøyum Bøyabreen

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2022 79:25


Simon gjestar sin eigen podcast i utfordring frå Jo Marius som intervjuar. Litt om engasjement og ideane. Nestendrukning, soving på låven, sjukehus og spying på mora til bestekompisen. Feller, fangst og hans første møte med politiet i ung alder.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 85 - Leo Ajkic og Jon Bakken

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2022 89:05


Leo Ajkic og Jon Bakken, to fantastisk kjekke karar med gode og viktige verdiar i livet. Vi innom amerikansk fotball, opphav, historie og lokal suksess. Robinson, Rus og Flukt. Simon får seg også ein aha-opplevelse i research, for det er viktig, og det har faktisk desse gutta gjort på han.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 84 - Leif Einar Lothe og Knut Joakim Pedersen

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2022 57:11


Leif Einar Lothe alias «Lothepus» og Knut Joakim Pedersen alias «Kapteinen», to gode ramper frå Hardanger, hive seg med Simon i eit lystig lag!

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 83 - Linda Eide og Sigrid Moldestad

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2022 61:01


Linda Eide og Sigrid Moldestad i fri dressur på Go'Knall. Litt lett om livet, god humor og nydeleg musikk. Og Simon er spent på om dei liker kornøl.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 82 - Frank Kirkebø

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2022 52:52


Frank Kirkebø feirar første dag som «ikkje-dagleg leiar» for Frydenbø Førde med å vere gjest på Go'Knall. Litt om livet frå første sommerjobb, til bil og båt og det gode liv på hytta. Han kræsja også bilen til søstra i ein alder av 12 og brente opp bil på veg til Trøkk n' Truck. Simon krydrer på med diverse bilhistorier som eigentleg ikkje heng på greip.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 81 - Camilla Søvig og Irene Langeland

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2022 71:13


To herlege jenter, Camilla Søvig og Irene Langeland, som har opplevd mykje moro i lag. Sydenturar med hell og smell, dansing på bardisker, feil bil… Er Irene uheldig eller berre kloms?? Og kvifor kalte Camilla kjæresten sin for micropopp'n???

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 80 - BONUS! EXTRA! #3

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 29:46


Her vert det heilt nye historier frå tidlegare gjestar! Mykje moro med andre ord!

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 79 - Sigurd Kvikne

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2022 75:57


Sigurd Kvikne, eigar og drivar av Kvikne Hotel og 50% skyldig i at Kjartan Lauritsen har komt til verda. Historier om horder av islandske jomfruer i Balestrand og han sjølv i villrede på Hotel Plaza kun iført boksershorts. Og ikkje minst VERDENS BESTE prank på sin gode venn Erling Nessane.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 78 - Påskesjov del 2

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2022 48:51


No kan de nyte del 2 av påskas GO' KNALL LIVE PODCAST-SJOV.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 77 - Påskesjov del 1

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2022 56:03


I påska gikk VERDENS FØRSTE GO' KNALL LIVE PODCAST PÅSKESJOV av stabelen. Her kjem del 1, eller i alle fall det vi tør å vise.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 76 - Oppsop #4

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022 45:43


Mykje gode historier og kjekke tilbakeblikk.

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com
Throwback Thursday S1 #32 - Can You Take My Picture in Nynorsk?

Learn Norwegian | NorwegianClass101.com

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2022 4:22


learn how to ask others to take a photo for you in Nynorsk

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 75 - Kristian Myrmel

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2022 74:04


Eit eventyr av historier og mykje go' knall frå ein som leve av å selge knall til dagen. Mannen bak alvorleg mange klikk både i lokalavisa og riksavisene med sine fantestrekar. «Bjørnespor» og «mannen med ljåen» er reine legendehistorier som burde gått rett inn i Gaularsoga. Også litt alvor om sjukdom og korleis snu livet i positiv retning.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 74 - Trude Gjeitanger Høgseth Felde

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2022 67:34


Ei aktiv dame som kan være litt morgentrøtt. Bruker strikkinga i staden for psykolog, aktiv i kor, sokneråd, styreleiar i Jakob Sande-selskapet og jobber til dagen i Lotteritilsynet der ho bekjemper ulovlig pengespel. Har forløvrig også framstått ubevisst som mulig lesbisk i sin første tv opptreden.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 73 - Ronny Brede Aase

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2022 92:12


Sjølvaste Ronny Brede Aase gjestar Go'Knall, så her vert det mykje moro og godprat. Vi får blant anna høyre litt om alt Ronny har styra med, og det er ikkje så reint lite. Thomas Holme Smådal og Martin Vie diskar opp med nydeleg taco og øl frå Pikant, og vi har ny rekord på episodelengda...men kven passer vel tida i godt selskap?

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 72 - Thomas Østerbø

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2022 64:53


Thomas Østerbø er gjest på Go' Knall. Dagleg leiar i Entreprenørservice og ansvarleg for hundrevis av millionar med berre to år på yrkeskulen i ryggen. Oppvaksen i nydelege Vik med ein mangfaldig barndom der ein bl.a. fjerna kvepsebol med heimelaga flammekastar. Elles litt om livet i anleggs- og entreprenørbransjen, og litt hjortejakt og båtliv.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 71 - Oppsop #3

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2022 38:20


Runde tre med oppsop av gullkorn frå langt tilbake. Det begynne jaggu å bli ei fantastiske samling av historier etterkvart.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 70 - Kjell Einar Viken

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2022 67:58


Ein fantastisk flott mann som fortel om livets oppturar og nedturar og om korleis det var å bli enkemann med 3 små gutar. Litt om gutane og artige historier om guten i seg sjølv. Nedgraving av biler, jaga opp i lyktestolpe, kasta av båt i tåka og brutal opplæring i anleggsbransjen. Ja og sjølvsagt litt bilkøyring frå gode gamle dagar.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 69 - Arvid Andenæs

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2022 57:37


Ein gong Gløppar, alltid Gløppar seier den spreke og alt for aktive 67-åringen. Kjekke historier om livet i frå oppvekst på gard med moped når ein var 9 år, traktor når ein var 10 år, og bil når en var 12 år - til livet som næringslivstopp og eit voldsomt engasjement for distriktsutvikling. Vi får høyre om personligheter frå det ville Nord-Norge til det meir forsiktige Vestlandet, og forskjellige lederstiler. Og om det å være seg sjølv 100% og ikkje frykte å dumme seg ut.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 68 - BONUS! EXTRA! #2

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2022 38:13


Heilt nye historier frå tidlegare gjester. Her får vi mellom anna høyre om ein vektløftar angrepen av to meter lang firfisle og at tralla til Tenden bryt i hop, iskøyring på Holsa og ein samevits. Helena fekk litt for mykje å drikke og vakna på sofaen til ein gammal mann, og har Simon også vakna på feil plass?? Vi får også høyre nydeleg engelsk i syden og om airbag'en til Per Andreas Øren. Og elles litt om handling på polet, sprøyter i parken og prest på bjørnejakt.

Go' Knall med Simon Vie
Episode 67 - Jo Marius Bøyum Bøyabreen

Go' Knall med Simon Vie

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2022 67:15


Jo Marius Bøyum Bøyabreen, ein skikkeleg triveleg kar som finner på mykje lått og løye. Eigar og drivar av Brevasshytta i lag med mor, og av og til bestemor. Når han kjedar seg sprenge han rundball, treng han pengar selge han luft og vil han ha det moro snike han seg inn på campus i lag med Alex Rosen og drikke heilt til dei blir kasta ut. God på timing av fødsel.

Nokon må gå
Storkukstemning og brennende nynorsk

Nokon må gå

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2022 48:26


Bergen kommune har tapt i retten, og Eirin Eikefjord mener det skyldes «big dick energy». Bergen Frp skal gjenoppstå, og Gerd Margrete Tjeldflåt anklager Anne Rokkan for å hate nynorsk. Programledere: Anne Rokkan, Eirin Eikefjord og Gerd Tjeldflåt Produsent: Henrik Svanevik Vignettmusikk: Bjørn Torske – Bergensere (Smalltown Supersound) Illustrasjon: Tord Torpe Lydklipp: NRK, Unge Høyre

bergen unge h nynorsk eirin eikefjord