• Happy pride month, xisters of the schlog!

Why does Estonia suck

Estonia is actually pretty nice
ILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRYILOVETERRY
 
I realized that after I made this post but I can't tell the two nationalities apart, they're both Baltic and both start with L.
The languages kinda similar structurally and both share a bunch of words, but unless you grew up on the border and learned at least a bit of the other, you cannot really understand, much less converse with each other.
 
Idk, but Lithuanian is one of few non-West-Slavic languages such as when I listen to it my brain feels some familiarity despite not knowin too much words. Maybe that's because they also have words with changing endings. The other ones are Kurdish and probably Farsi, but it's probably because they have more vowels than for example English or French.
 
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