I've never heard of cats having other than 9 lives (NL, also speaking EN) but somehow 7 lives makes more sense to me; it's a lucky number, after all!
In English, you're also on cloud number nine, while we're auf Wolke sieben in German.
Maybe it's 7 or 9 depending on the cat. Like if it's an especially assholish cat, the cat god grants it another 2 ~~years of life~~ lives.
(I have had a teenager talking my ear off all day and it has made me illiterate.)
What happens if a cat walks from germany to denmark? Do they get 2 extra lives?
What if a cat loses their last life by a cannon that pushes them into denmark?.
What if a cat with only 1 life remaining walks from denmark to germany?
It's kinda interesting that the saying about cats having multiple lives is pretty much universal but then the amount differs. I wonder why that is
Source for France? Never heard about this.
Even though they're mostly anecdotic, there seems to be a consensus that both are used. There are some articles stating they're 9 and others stating they're 7, and depending who you ask they'll tell you one or another.
Un chat usagé a sept vies, mais un chat neuf vies
Wow, a blast from the past! I love Pinkie's Brew in russian!
Is it actually correct to use печь in this way? Wiktionary says it's about baking, like for bread.
Edit: Ah, the English version has a kind of food theme. Then does the analogy carry over properly? Hopefully someone here speaks Russian better than me.
I'm from Greece and I think I've only heard people talk about 9 lives here😄
Why is everything a purple shade?
Its explained in the post. It's for daltonic people to be able to see it bettee, although I dont have experience with it so I don't know if I did it right
Oh, didn't read it
Wrong, it's 1. I expect a corrected post on my desk by 4.
Map Enthusiasts
For the map enthused!
Rules:
-
post relevant content: interesting, informative, and/or pretty maps
-
be nice