Macfan
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On this site in 1897 - Nothing Happened. Don...
I hear you. If what I described is similar to Minnesota you can bet it's from the Swedish mentality. Finns are rather strange too, in an introverted way, but oddly Norwegians and Danes are not very much like Swedes at all. I love Norwegians!There are a lot of people here in the U.S. (particularly the northernmost parts of the midwest, Minnesota, North Dakota, etc.) whose ancestors migrated here from Sweden. So that could explain that kind of behavior here in the States, I guess. It's odd because I've heard so much about the friendliness of small towns as opposed to the unfriendliness of big cities but it's not always true; depending on which big city you're in, sometimes people are very willing to chat and in some small towns--some I've been in anyway--you're invisible to them unless you were born and raised there.
Misanthrope comes from the Greek misanthrōpos “hating humankind” and was very likely popularized by the French playwright Moliere's Le Misanthrope, which depicts a bitter critic of society who chooses exile over contact with other people. In English, misanthrope (or its anglicized equivalent, misanthropist) has been applied to many a perceived antisocial crank, from satirist Jonathan Swift to philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche to Charles Dicken’s character Ebenezer Scrooge. It is one of several English words beginning with mis- (from Greek misein "to hate") naming persons who despise something or someone. The most familiar example nowadays is misogynist, used of a person who hates women. Two lesser-known variations on the theme are misandrist “one who hates men” and misopedist “a person who hates children.”The Misanthrope is a play by the 17th century French author, Moliere. He probably invented the term. It's been around for a long time.
I'm misanthropic, although I do like most of the people in this forum. I just hate everyone in person.
Nope. It does sound familiar ....... but it's here :"I was born under a wondering star,.........., Do you know where hell is? Hell is in hello. Do you know where heaven is? In goodbye its time for me to go!"
(you remember the movie "Paint your way on" using the above song at the start?)
I quite enjoy hearing what people have to say about meI know a few misanthropic people. hard to be with for very long. Personally I find people endless fascinating . Even if I am not too social I quite enjoy hearing what people have to say
It's the UK, a nation where November 5th. is celebrated each year in honour of the man who tried to assassinate King James I. It is said that Guy Fawkes is the only man in British history to entered parliament with honest intentions.Well how about that. If you're known to hate a place and everyone in it, you get a bench and a plaque.
I meant "Paint your wagon" of course, for the film containing the track "I was born under a wondering star", sung in the gravelly voice of whoever it was, (Lee Marvin of courseNope. It does sound familiar ....... but it's here :
I had nightmares for weeks and I couldn't play my harmonica for 2 months after hearing Lee Marvin's singing voice. It left me tone-deaf.I meant "Paint your wagon" of course, for the film containing the track "I was born under a wondering star", sung in the gravelly voice of whoever it was, (Lee Marvin of course).