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What means "hinner"?
Does it mean "to have time for sth."?
I can't find it in my dictionary.
20 de nov. de 2011 14:28
Correcciones · 6
Hm, I just found "Mastering Swedish" on youtube, but without subtitles. And to be honest, I'm hardly able to understand the differences (my vocabulary isn't very good).
i.e:
"sätt på en skygglapp" = put a blinker on
(just one space in "skygglapp" changes meaning of the whole sentence)
That's a really funny one, but both versions sound extremely similiar.
12 de diciembre de 2011
Ah~~ Well.. it definitely does not mean film <.< but it's also a medical term for ... err.. don't really know the english word... but the hinna you're looking for is the time related one ^^;;;
Hehe, ohh.. Swedish is... "Interesting" xD Haha I can show you this really funny thing called "Mastering Swedish" which basically points out all the messed up things about the language!
7 de diciembre de 2011
Aha, tack.
Yeah, I forget to search for the "Grundform" from time to time, but even when I use hinna, it tells me that it means "film" or that it's a synonym for "beläggning". :(
It's very comforting, that the Swedish also have problems with the different verb forms ;)
6 de diciembre de 2011
Just adding: The reason why it's not in your dictionary is because it's not the word's "grundform". "att hinna" ^_^
hinna, hinner, hunnit, har hunnit, hann... unless i'm forgetting something =D this isn't my strong suite <3
4 de diciembre de 2011
Tack så mycket. ;)
25 de noviembre de 2011
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