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Happy Birthay Sceadugenga

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Happy Birthday mate ...... have a really good one (I wondered why I had the urge to have a beer at 7am this morning)

Happy b-day Scead of the unpronounceable name :)

Hope you have a great day.

Hip-Hip.............

Hope you get cake

garfield-taart_gif.jpg

Been trying to wish you happy birthday all day, just working on the pronunciation is all...... :)

Cheers all. Stuck in Oz with assorted problems at the moment, not really been in forum mode but slowly getting things sorted.

9 months without a drink now Thad. :)

My name's easy once you learn to copy and paste SB and Vic..... :D

And many happy returns.

ps the name's not difficult to pronounce when you're a Celt!

9 months without a drink now Thad. :)

Let me guess...... full body plaster cast.

Seriously, good on you J.

I'm a day late but Happy Birthday sceadugenga (You're right - the copy and paste really helps :) )

ps the name's not difficult to pronounce when you're a Celt!

True, but for sober people......

Been curious for years now, finally just checked Wikipedia

The Sceadugengan (Singular: Sceadugenga), or "shadow-goer", are fantastical beasts which are neither living nor dead, and which can shape-shift. They dwell in the forests of England. The first element of the name is from Old English sceaduwe (shadow)[1] and the second elements is likely to be from Old English gong (a going or journey) [2] or Old English gan (to go)[3].

The Sceadugenga are mentioned in Beowulf and form part of a sub plot in The Saxon Stories series by Bernard Cornwell.

I think thats just a fluke. I always suspected that sceadugenga was an anagram (or the result of dyslexia). The question should then be, sceadugenga is an anagram of what? :)

No, Vic's got it. I pinched it out of a Bernard Cornwell book.

It's not Celtic.....

Linguistically it is!

It's the horrible affliction which cometh from holding high a burning candle which dropeths hot wax on your extremities whilst listening to

Romeo and Juliet

Haha!

Hmm..what would happen if they choose Sceadugenga as the key stop word..but wrote it down instead of practicing what it should sound like.... :)

..im thinking too much.

It's not Celtic.....

Linguistically it is!

Nay Tigger, Danish/AngloSaxon.

Thinkings not good for girls Eek, they get confused enough listening to the results of other people thinking.... :)

It's not Celtic.....

Linguistically it is!

Thinkings not good for girls Eek, they get confused enough listening to the results of other people thinking.... :)

Just for the record, I kinda like Capn' Squeeky just the way she is.

It's not Celtic.....

Linguistically it is!

Thinkings not good for girls Eek, they get confused enough listening to the results of other people thinking.... :D

Just for the record, I kinda like Capn' Squeeky just the way she is.

Smooth buffer there taddy. :D However, i'll be gunning for Scea...birthday thread or not. :)

No matter how I look at it, it always comes out as Scungemonger.

Belated best wishes on your latest and may you have many more.

It's not Celtic.....

Linguistically it is!

Thinkings not good for girls Eek, they get confused enough listening to the results of other people thinking.... :D

Just for the record, I kinda like Capn' Squeeky just the way she is.

Just love that clip. There were lots more as well...

ps sceadugenga - Ireland was ruled by the Danes for more than 400 years - and then the English arrived! :)

ps sceadugenga - Ireland was ruled by the Danes for more than 400 years - and then the English arrived! :)

So that's the reason.

ps sceadugenga - Ireland was ruled by the Danes for more than 400 years - and then the English arrived! :)

So that's the reason.

Took us that long to teach the stupid b'stards how to look after pigs. :D

Happy belateds' Sceadugenga. Many of them too.

Regards.

First it took the Danes 400 years and then the Brits another 700 years, it had taken that long to teach them enough, just so they could put Great in front of their names

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