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In Norway. It means speed bump apparently lol.
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Matt85 · 36-40, M
@ninalanyon Lol, whoops. Thanks @WillaKissing I mean.
WillaKissing · 56-60
@Matt85 You are quite welcome!
WillaKissing · 56-60
@Matt85 It's all good being truly Dyslexic myself I get how you were confusing @ninalanyon with me, LOL.
Just remember I wear shoes/heels where I travel too! LOL
Just remember I wear shoes/heels where I travel too! LOL
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
Not OZ. The typeface and vegetation are wrong..😷
WillaKissing · 56-60
@ninalanyon I was dang sure it was here in the US given the factors you listed, but I had to drag the UK and OZ in on my joke.
ninalanyon · 61-69, T
@WillaKissing Someone should write a book on the etymology of place names. Why should there be a a place name ending in -ville in Indiana, is there some French connections?
The only one I can think of in England does make sense, if the local legends are correct: Waterlooville, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterlooville
The only one I can think of in England does make sense, if the local legends are correct: Waterlooville, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterlooville
WillaKissing · 56-60
@ninalanyon I would have to guess it is the French connection to the US and Canada from the colonial time period because both the US and Canada have tons of "Villes" through out their landscapes.
NortiusMaximus · M
There was a village called Fu****g in Austria. The spelling has been changed to Fugging now. There is also a Wank mountain in Germany.
Matt85 · 36-40, M
@NortiusMaximus Yeah people kept stealing the sign
NortiusMaximus · M
@Matt85 There's a beer named after the village too. It's a light beer (a hellbier in German) so it's called Fu****g Hell.