Caught splinging at work












66















Én, to, tre, shabam,

go ahead an sprim that man!

Kvin, ses, sep, setresk,

saw him spling off on his desk!



Nove, dez, onze, spling,

not setresk is such a thing!

Treize, quatorze, quinze, sprim,

I might have to shabam him!




What kind of trouble am I in?










share|improve this question



























    66















    Én, to, tre, shabam,

    go ahead an sprim that man!

    Kvin, ses, sep, setresk,

    saw him spling off on his desk!



    Nove, dez, onze, spling,

    not setresk is such a thing!

    Treize, quatorze, quinze, sprim,

    I might have to shabam him!




    What kind of trouble am I in?










    share|improve this question

























      66












      66








      66


      7






      Én, to, tre, shabam,

      go ahead an sprim that man!

      Kvin, ses, sep, setresk,

      saw him spling off on his desk!



      Nove, dez, onze, spling,

      not setresk is such a thing!

      Treize, quatorze, quinze, sprim,

      I might have to shabam him!




      What kind of trouble am I in?










      share|improve this question














      Én, to, tre, shabam,

      go ahead an sprim that man!

      Kvin, ses, sep, setresk,

      saw him spling off on his desk!



      Nove, dez, onze, spling,

      not setresk is such a thing!

      Treize, quatorze, quinze, sprim,

      I might have to shabam him!




      What kind of trouble am I in?







      enigmatic-puzzle rhyme language






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Nov 20 '18 at 8:18









      jafe

      16.6k243163




      16.6k243163






















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          78














          "What kind of trouble am I in?" You're... having a small stroke? :P But seriously:




          The odd lines are counting from 1 to 16 in foreign languages (except for 4 words in gibberish that also function as verbs), but these are easy enough to understand anyway. So if you substitute the nonsensical verbs with the numbers they stand for, you get:


          go ahead an sixteen that man!

          saw him twelve off on his desk!

          not eight is such a thing!

          I might have to four him!


          ...Which could be deciphered if we use the languages each original line was using:


          go ahead an seize that man! (16 in French)

          saw him doze off on his desk! (12 in Portuguese)

          not ok is such a thing! (8 in Esperanto)

          I might have to fire him! (4 in Norwegian)

          So you were caught sleeping at your desk. [Perhaps while counting sheep? ;)]







          share|improve this answer



















          • 2




            For an added bonus: Norwegian could also be Danish.
            – Janus Bahs Jacquet
            Nov 20 '18 at 17:05











          Your Answer





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          1 Answer
          1






          active

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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          78














          "What kind of trouble am I in?" You're... having a small stroke? :P But seriously:




          The odd lines are counting from 1 to 16 in foreign languages (except for 4 words in gibberish that also function as verbs), but these are easy enough to understand anyway. So if you substitute the nonsensical verbs with the numbers they stand for, you get:


          go ahead an sixteen that man!

          saw him twelve off on his desk!

          not eight is such a thing!

          I might have to four him!


          ...Which could be deciphered if we use the languages each original line was using:


          go ahead an seize that man! (16 in French)

          saw him doze off on his desk! (12 in Portuguese)

          not ok is such a thing! (8 in Esperanto)

          I might have to fire him! (4 in Norwegian)

          So you were caught sleeping at your desk. [Perhaps while counting sheep? ;)]







          share|improve this answer



















          • 2




            For an added bonus: Norwegian could also be Danish.
            – Janus Bahs Jacquet
            Nov 20 '18 at 17:05
















          78














          "What kind of trouble am I in?" You're... having a small stroke? :P But seriously:




          The odd lines are counting from 1 to 16 in foreign languages (except for 4 words in gibberish that also function as verbs), but these are easy enough to understand anyway. So if you substitute the nonsensical verbs with the numbers they stand for, you get:


          go ahead an sixteen that man!

          saw him twelve off on his desk!

          not eight is such a thing!

          I might have to four him!


          ...Which could be deciphered if we use the languages each original line was using:


          go ahead an seize that man! (16 in French)

          saw him doze off on his desk! (12 in Portuguese)

          not ok is such a thing! (8 in Esperanto)

          I might have to fire him! (4 in Norwegian)

          So you were caught sleeping at your desk. [Perhaps while counting sheep? ;)]







          share|improve this answer



















          • 2




            For an added bonus: Norwegian could also be Danish.
            – Janus Bahs Jacquet
            Nov 20 '18 at 17:05














          78












          78








          78






          "What kind of trouble am I in?" You're... having a small stroke? :P But seriously:




          The odd lines are counting from 1 to 16 in foreign languages (except for 4 words in gibberish that also function as verbs), but these are easy enough to understand anyway. So if you substitute the nonsensical verbs with the numbers they stand for, you get:


          go ahead an sixteen that man!

          saw him twelve off on his desk!

          not eight is such a thing!

          I might have to four him!


          ...Which could be deciphered if we use the languages each original line was using:


          go ahead an seize that man! (16 in French)

          saw him doze off on his desk! (12 in Portuguese)

          not ok is such a thing! (8 in Esperanto)

          I might have to fire him! (4 in Norwegian)

          So you were caught sleeping at your desk. [Perhaps while counting sheep? ;)]







          share|improve this answer














          "What kind of trouble am I in?" You're... having a small stroke? :P But seriously:




          The odd lines are counting from 1 to 16 in foreign languages (except for 4 words in gibberish that also function as verbs), but these are easy enough to understand anyway. So if you substitute the nonsensical verbs with the numbers they stand for, you get:


          go ahead an sixteen that man!

          saw him twelve off on his desk!

          not eight is such a thing!

          I might have to four him!


          ...Which could be deciphered if we use the languages each original line was using:


          go ahead an seize that man! (16 in French)

          saw him doze off on his desk! (12 in Portuguese)

          not ok is such a thing! (8 in Esperanto)

          I might have to fire him! (4 in Norwegian)

          So you were caught sleeping at your desk. [Perhaps while counting sheep? ;)]








          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Nov 20 '18 at 9:19

























          answered Nov 20 '18 at 8:50









          Walt

          5,2591936




          5,2591936








          • 2




            For an added bonus: Norwegian could also be Danish.
            – Janus Bahs Jacquet
            Nov 20 '18 at 17:05














          • 2




            For an added bonus: Norwegian could also be Danish.
            – Janus Bahs Jacquet
            Nov 20 '18 at 17:05








          2




          2




          For an added bonus: Norwegian could also be Danish.
          – Janus Bahs Jacquet
          Nov 20 '18 at 17:05




          For an added bonus: Norwegian could also be Danish.
          – Janus Bahs Jacquet
          Nov 20 '18 at 17:05


















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