How do you say that name?
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lovtrekvist — 20 years ago(March 07, 2006 04:58 AM)
I think they picked it on the one hand because no one else is called Grlszc. This name does not
exist
so to speak. Steven has no social number either and he is no human being. Why should he have a human name then?
And yey, it
really
sounds like gnashing teeth.
Sounds so catchy!
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Doodlebuger — 18 years ago(July 04, 2007 11:48 PM)
You are probably right about the intention of giving him a name that does not exist.
The r is like a vowel in some Slavic languages (Serbocroat, Czech). There is an island of Krk (pronounced ("Kerk") in ex Yugoslavia (Croatia) and there is a word "death" that is spelled smrt in Czech as well.
As to the ending, it looks Polish, but should have a z at the end as in "Grlszcz" (the combination szcz is used in latin transcription of Polish to describe the Slavic consonant shch, as in Khrushchov). In Italian, the sc of Brescia is pretty close.
Interesting movie. -
Doodlebuger — 18 years ago(July 05, 2007 04:13 AM)
You are probably right about the intention of giving him a name that does not exist.
The r is like a vowel in some Slavic languages (Serbocroat, Czech). There is an island of Krk (pronounced ("Kerk") in ex Yugoslavia (Croatia) and there is a word "death" that is spelled smrt in Czech as well.
As to the ending, it looks Polish, but should have a z at the end as in "Grlszcz" (the combination szcz is used in latin transcription of Polish to describe the Slavic consonant shch, as in Khrushchov). In Italian, the sc of Brescia is pretty close.
Interesting movie.
a lot of vowels. But the joke about the police was right grins