Let's see if I can make this out...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Cailín
"gefeliciteerd met je verjaardag!"
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A quick translation...
gefeliciteerd -
ge like in german implying something in front of a verb (right? I've never studied German more than one basic course in the Uni more than ten years ago but a lot of verbs seem to have this ge-prefix in them for some reason) and
feliciteerd meaning happy or joyous or whatever...
felix navidad... so let us celebrate over and over again?
met - like German
mit or English with?
je - your?
verjaardag -
Jaar is year or
Jahre and
dag is like in Swedish/Danish/Norwegian meaning a day, and this
ver is again some of this German prefix-stuff I never learned what was it all about...
Sorry Cailín, I do not mean that we should reduce the Dutch language to all these other languages but only tried to make it comprehensible with the hints of these other languages I know even something about...
Gah.
Hyvää syntymäpäivää
Brinn! (gefeliciteerd met je verjaardag!)