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quite stretched out posted:im not a very smart man can someone set out what Straight Black Kaiser actually is? I've seen it used several times and can't work it out It's basically a joke about asking stuff like "What would happen if Ned Kelly was Chinese and wore a pointy hat on top of his helmet?" algebra testes posted:Lmao just lmao at this post. Try reading a book lmao or questions like "What would happen if Auspol threads were funny?"
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 08:44 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 03:37 |
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holy poo poo that was quick lmao
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 08:51 |
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drat. Game respect game. I actually came in to ask that exact question but Willus beat me to it, thanks for clearing it up!
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 08:54 |
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my dad posted:Ah, I see it's time for the annual forums game of "Spot the actual historian" There's quite a few.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 08:55 |
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HEY GAIL posted:knecht in the military context is usually a term of honor for infantry. it's respectful. "servant of the land." Yeah, it's for a 40K game - I'm spit-balling ideas for a one-shot, mercenary soldiers serving on ships for boarding and such. So I was trying to figure out what they'd be called if they had the hats and the poofy slashed clothes and laser pikes and everything.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 09:01 |
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Elyv posted:Gay Black Hitler is sort of a catch-all in this thread for "hey what if <insert incredibly improbable thing here> were to happen, could Germany have won WW2?" As I understand it, you start with "hey what if certain event went like (this) instead", but to make that happen in that way a bunch of earlier things have to be different, and for those to have been different then other conditions must have changed, and it keeps ramifying until you have Gay Black Hitler purging the Zoroastarians from Hyper-Brazil. The Lone Badger fucked around with this message at 09:05 on Mar 22, 2017 |
# ? Mar 22, 2017 09:02 |
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ulmont posted:So Weltraumskavallerie? Weltraumsritter or Kosmosritter is probably the word to use. Also, Knecht is actually a term meaning 'boy' or 'young man', but can be both adoring or perjorative. When used in a military sense, like HEY GAIL says, it's more akin to 'soldier'.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 09:07 |
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Hmmm...
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 09:37 |
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Tias posted:Weltraumsritter or Kosmosritter is probably the word to use. Weltraumsjaeger or Weltraumsgrenadier could be your space special forces. Raumsoldat was used in some old sci-fi, I think.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 09:43 |
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I'm just going to use 'fire eaters' if I ever come up with my OC Donut Steel not-Astartes setting. Calling your special soldiers something German is just asking for an Anime adaptation.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 10:22 |
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Tias posted:Also, Knecht is actually a term meaning 'boy' or 'young man', but can be both adoring or perjorative. When used in a military sense, like HEY GAIL says, it's more akin to 'soldier'. 'Lad'? As in, 'the lads' and 'our lads'. The Lone Badger fucked around with this message at 10:48 on Mar 22, 2017 |
# ? Mar 22, 2017 10:45 |
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I'd like to think it has a special kind of meaning that's hard to translate to non-germanics, but yeah, 'lad' is actually near perfect!
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 10:57 |
HookedOnChthonics posted:This is really neat, thanks for linking it. Also at around 26:20 we can see that the time-honored tradition of stealing your enemy's boots off their corpse was still alive and well in 1944.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 13:00 |
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Drop the -s after Weltraum, it sounds weird. Also I wouldn't translate “Knecht“ as “lad“ - in today's usage it means “farmhand“, and in earlier times it additionally meant “foot soldier“ in contrast to cavalry (Ritter), though outside of the Landsknechte I think this meaning disappeared along with the Middle Ages or so. I'd suggest “Raumknechte“, you can drop the Welt- from Weltraum (cf. Raumschiff, 'space ship') and make it sound less clunky. It still sounds kinda weird I think, but to non-German ears it should be perfectly serviceable
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 13:12 |
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Just finished a rather interesting history book called Iron Dawn, about the Monitor and Merrimack. While it's a battle most Americans remember from school, what I thought interesting about this book is that the ironclads' first battle (they fought more than once) only occupies a single chapter near the end, and the majority of the book is spent looking at the politics, industry, and innovations that lead to both ironclads' construction. I'd never heard of John Ericsson, the man responsible for much of the Monitor's design and innovations, and had no idea the two ships were such political and industrial hot potatoes for their respective nations. Pretty good read if you have an interest in those two ships in particular or just a love of ironclads and the general stumbling along of people transitioning from wooden ships to metal ones.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 13:20 |
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Thanks! I just wanted my spacemans to have poofy clothes, but now I have consider space cuirassiers, too. Are reiters and cuirassiers the same thing in different languages?
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 13:26 |
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Rockopolis posted:Thanks! I just wanted my spacemans to have poofy clothes, but now I have consider space cuirassiers, too. Space cuirassiers sounds like some kind of 30YW in space. "WE ARE THE PAPPENHEIM. PROTESTANTISM IS FUTILE."
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 13:53 |
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ulmont posted:So Weltraumskavallerie? plz post your space german merc story
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 14:13 |
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Traditionally, most writers like to equate footsoldiers on spaceships to marines, so it seems like the most logical thing would be to use the German word for that if there is any.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 15:22 |
SlothfulCobra posted:Traditionally, most writers like to equate footsoldiers on spaceships to marines, so it seems like the most logical thing would be to use the German word for that if there is any. I think in WW2 the German word for "Marines" was "Amerikaner".
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 15:26 |
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I propose Raumseebataillon or Raummarinestoßtrupp
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 15:43 |
chitoryu12 posted:Also at around 26:20 we can see that the time-honored tradition of stealing your enemy's boots off their corpse was still alive and well in 1944. Dead men don't walk.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 16:03 |
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Wouldn't you get in trouble for turning up to fight with the wrong boots on? Or at least for failing to look after your boots, uncomfortable, walking, for the use of?
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 16:23 |
OwlFancier posted:Wouldn't you get in trouble for turning up to fight with the wrong boots on? Not in the middle of combat in an active campaign, everyone has slightly bigger problems to worry about.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 16:34 |
OwlFancier posted:Wouldn't you get in trouble for turning up to fight with the wrong boots on? By this point in time, unless you were a Soviet conscript shivering in a threadbare jacket with 5 rounds of 7.62x54 and a broken rifle stock to your name, you were probably stealing from corpses for souvenirs to send back home rather than augmenting your own kit.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 16:35 |
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chitoryu12 posted:By this point in time, unless you were a Soviet conscript shivering in a threadbare jacket with 5 rounds of 7.62x54 and a broken rifle stock to your name, you were probably stealing from corpses for souvenirs to send back home rather than augmenting your own kit. Actually about that, how did people manage to bring home stuff like japanese swords and enemy rifles and stuff? Were you just allowed to grab whatever you wanted and ship it home no worries or something?
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 17:01 |
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Nenonen posted:Hmmm... Advance Wars + Carcassone?
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 17:04 |
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OwlFancier posted:Actually about that, how did people manage to bring home stuff like japanese swords and enemy rifles and stuff? A US GI in vietnam mailed a vietnamese man's skeletal arm home as a souvenir They met together recently and became friends. There is a pic of the US guy presenting the VN guy his arm back as a gift https://www.google.com/amp/www.inde...1787.html%3Famp
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 17:07 |
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Phi230 posted:A US GI in vietnam mailed a vietnamese man's skeletal arm home as a souvenir He was only practising his 2nd Amendment right to bear arms
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 17:08 |
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OwlFancier posted:Actually about that, how did people manage to bring home stuff like japanese swords and enemy rifles and stuff? Here's the paperwork my grandfather filled out to bring home his Luger: So...pretty much yes.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 17:21 |
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OwlFancier posted:Actually about that, how did people manage to bring home stuff like japanese swords and enemy rifles and stuff? Pretty much. There WERE official channels where you would get an officer to sign off on your trophy rifle or whatever and have it shipped back military post, and this is where you get things like bring back rifles with capture papers, but for the most part people just didn't give a gently caress. This is before all the assorted import bans. Hell, before 1968 felons etc could still buy guns, and it's not until 1993 that you have mandated background checks to make sure that prohibited possessors aren't buying. Along with the official path there was just throwing poo poo in your duffel and going home. LOTS of guns (and medals etc) came back this way as well. There is a thing in German rifle collecting known as the "duffel cut" where rifle stocks were cut in half so that the guns could fit in a guy's bag, and then the cut repaired in the states. The '68 legislation is where gun ownership started being really controlled, so Vietnam is the first one where they really started giving a gently caress about guys taking things back.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 17:23 |
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chitoryu12 posted:I think in WW2 the German word for "Marines" was "Amerikaner". I think that was WWI. In WWII, it was whatever is German for "Thank You For Your Service In The Pacific Theatre, No, We're Fine, Please Keep Hammering Our Erstwhile Asian Partners."
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 17:33 |
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In Anthony Beevor's book on the fall of Berlin, he mentions the Red Army gave every soldier a regular parcel delivery back home through their field postal system, "an open invitation to loot". There are tales of Russian soldiers trying to put postage on sheets of glass. All the belligerent armies had tales of officers quietly advancing their careers with thoughtful gifts for their commanding officers. So yes, it wasn't even backchannel in WW2, it was profoundly frontchannel.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 17:49 |
Cyrano4747 posted:Pretty much. There WERE official channels where you would get an officer to sign off on your trophy rifle or whatever and have it shipped back military post, and this is where you get things like bring back rifles with capture papers, but for the most part people just didn't give a gently caress. This is before all the assorted import bans. Hell, before 1968 felons etc could still buy guns, and it's not until 1993 that you have mandated background checks to make sure that prohibited possessors aren't buying. Still not too hard to bring back.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 17:51 |
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chitoryu12 posted:Still not too hard to bring back. Yeah, the only really HUGE difference is that people gave way more of a gently caress about MGs. I mean, in WW2 technically you were supposed to pay your tax to get the stamp because of the '34 law, but that was readily ignored and TONS of vets registered them after the war or amnesty dewatted them. Hell, even now you have the odd tragic story of someone finding grandpa's take home MP40 in the attic and having to quietly part it out rather than sell it for $20k+ because the old man never did the paperwork. You still see full auto bringbacks in vietnam, but hte paperwork was annoying enough for that that you see a LOT more regular rifles and pistols. What they really cut down on was the free for all of just carrying guns back home with you.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 17:54 |
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Loxbourne posted:In Anthony Beevor's book on the fall of Berlin, he mentions the Red Army gave every soldier a regular parcel delivery back home through their field postal system, "an open invitation to loot". There are tales of Russian soldiers trying to put postage on sheets of glass. All the belligerent armies had tales of officers quietly advancing their careers with thoughtful gifts for their commanding officers. Looting was explicitly forbidden. Yes, you could send parcels back home. These parcels were checked. If you had poo poo in there you weren't supposed to have, criminal charges were laid. Calling it an open invitation to loot is incredibly lazy scholarship.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 18:42 |
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Cythereal posted:Just finished a rather interesting history book called Iron Dawn, about the Monitor and Merrimack. While it's a battle most Americans remember from school, what I thought interesting about this book is that the ironclads' first battle (they fought more than once) only occupies a single chapter near the end, and the majority of the book is spent looking at the politics, industry, and innovations that lead to both ironclads' construction. I'd never heard of John Ericsson, the man responsible for much of the Monitor's design and innovations, and had no idea the two ships were such political and industrial hot potatoes for their respective nations.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 19:06 |
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Ensign Expendable posted:Looting was explicitly forbidden. Yes, you could send parcels back home. These parcels were checked. If you had poo poo in there you weren't supposed to have, criminal charges were laid. Calling it an open invitation to loot is incredibly lazy scholarship.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 19:09 |
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HEY GAIL posted:since i have a special place in my heart for what might have been the silliest naval battle of all time, this looks great, thanks! Full title is Iron Dawn: The Monitor, the Merrimack, and the Civil War Sea Battle that Changed History by Richard Snow. The American Civil War was an awkward one in general, right in the sweet spot of technological and social change to make the war a complete loving nightmare for everyone involved. The book makes an interesting note, that while the total number of people killed in the naval theaters of the ACW was exceeded by the death toll of some battles on a single day, the proportion of the dead versus the number who served was the same. Whether you were in the army or navy, your odds of survival were the same. One funny bit I learned from the book: the Merrimack almost sank from ramming an ordinary frigate on its first day of combat. There's an excellent chance that the only reason the ship survived was because the ram hadn't been properly attached to the Merrimack and broke off with the sinking frigate before it could drag the ironclad completely under.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 19:10 |
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# ? May 27, 2024 03:37 |
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Ensign Expendable posted:Looting was explicitly forbidden. Yes, you could send parcels back home. These parcels were checked. If you had poo poo in there you weren't supposed to have, criminal charges were laid. Calling it an open invitation to loot is incredibly lazy scholarship. I thought the mass looting and postage happened only in the east Prussian campaign, I know by Berlin things were getting a bit more formal, but the postage for loot thing in East Prussia crops up in a lot of sources beyond Beevor.
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# ? Mar 22, 2017 19:12 |