Humes fork
Banned
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2011
- Messages
- 3,358
I know. But I'm not sure if the English "Saturday" has a similar origin. The rest of their weekdays have the same linguistic origin as ours thought. Tiw is Tyr, Wodan is Odin, and so on.
But it's not like anyone is sweating in Sweden anyway... just think how smelly the French were back then!This is why the Swedish name of Saturday is "lördag" from "lögardagen" or washing day.

This reminds me of how the makers of "Camp Coffee essence" in Scotland were obliged to change their "racist" label too:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-404516/Camp-coffee-forced-change-label-PC-brigade.html
Hm, Mon- and Sunday are moon and sun, I guess. I always figured Saturday was the day of Saturn (Cronus), a Roman leftover.
Edit: Apologies for activating the star device gizmo thing.
I really think one would have to go some to beat the South African gob stoppers called ****** Balls - I believe they changed their name in more recent time to Variety Balls (they started off black and changed colour as you made your way through them).

The real question is, do the candies taste good?
Are you saying ****** balls change colour as you suck on them?![]()
[qimg]http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-0bWfz946TSI/Tnh5CCW-itI/AAAAAAAADzU/ikT5PCH_ewc/s1600/kpuffar.png[/qimg]
In a recent op-ed, a Swedish person of Asian origin complained that many(?) Swedes have stereotypical views of Asians and make fun of them. Among the examples he pointed to is the sweets package above, which he felt reinforced the sterotype.
The firm (Fazer) took notice of it and announced that they would redesign it. The word "Kina" [Sheena] is just the Swedish word for China.
My question is, would the package be considered racist or stereotypical in other countries?
As for if Swedes have stereotypical views of Asians, I'm not an Asian so I can't tell how they percieve it. But it's very possible.
Is there actually anything Chinese about these snacks?
Rice. I think they're sort of like sweet Rice Krispies bunched together and covered with chocholate.