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Is the Easter Bunny still using cocaine with your mom?
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How do you like my new bunny?
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You're reading What does the Easter Bunny do for the rest of the year?
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It doesn't take long either. A lot of rabbits can have like 70 babies in a month or something like that.
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
no way near THAT many. They get 10 cubs a litter or something, and the cubs can't make it on their own until they're at least something like 1½ month old. But even if it was 70 a month and they all survived, you would need WAY more than just 70 easter bunnies ;).
Unless of course the easter bunny has a transatlantic jet plane or something similar..
by GreenFreak on September 13th, 2008
I'm gonna google it and see exactly how many it is......
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
Ok so apparently rabbits can have 12 babies per litter. But female rabbits can get pregnant within a day or two after giving birth, which is prolly how they have so many. The average pregnancy lasts 30 to 33 days. So an average of 12 per month times 12 months a year......................... 144 babies a year average if the mother breeds non-stop. In rabbits that technically is even possible but I'm sure they don't want to be bred constantly. They could be but they wouldn't like that I don't think.
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
well, the cubs are unable to survive without the doe, so there wouldn't be much point in her abandoning the first litter to get another. (sorry if I'm using the wrong nouns, my first language isn't English, so I'm not quite sure about all the deffirent words related to rabbits)
Unless of course the Easter Bunny is male and has a whole harem of female rabbits ;)
by GreenFreak on September 13th, 2008
The female bunny is called a doe. The male is called a buck. I dunno what babies are called.
What is your first language???
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
Danish
by GreenFreak on September 13th, 2008
Holy shit really?????? I have a bunch of old Danish coins. One is from 1916 and one is from 1881. The rest aren't really worth talking about. They're just regular Danish coins.
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
Oh ya!! I also have one from 1865. Forgot about that one. The 1881 one says "Brodrafolkens Val". That IS Danish right??
.
I just found another from 1891 I didn't know I had. It has the same crown as the others and it says "2 Ore" with a line thingy through the o and there is a dolphin and some grass on it.
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
that sounds more like Swedish, actually. Does it say anything else? Do you collect coins?
by GreenFreak on September 13th, 2008
The 1865 one is actually 1863. Sorry.
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
Yep. I have entire coffee cans full of foreign coins. Does which one say anything else?? I have the 1916 one the 1891 one the 1863 one and the 1881 one. All of them but the 1863 say "ore" on them for denomination (1 for 1916, 2 for 1891, and 5 for 1881)
The 1863 one says "skilling rigsmont" with a line through the o in rigsmont. So you think the "ore" ones are Swedish??
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
the latter one sounds more like Danish. They use O-Umlaut (ö) in Swedish, while Danish use ø, but the letters describe the same sound, as far as I know
by GreenFreak on September 13th, 2008
hehe, you might want to arrange them in some order, somehow. gogogo! ;p
by GreenFreak on September 13th, 2008
Ok........
1863- Says "Skilling Rigsmont" with that line thingy through the "o" in Rigsmont. There is a 1 in the middle. That one I am pretty positive is Danish.
1881- The front has 3 crowns in a triangle shape and says "5 ore" with the line through the "o". The back has Brodrafolkens Val above the roman numeral 2 under a crown.
I'll do the other 2 in a seperate comment. Running out of room.
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
1891- has IX within a giant "C" and there is a crown above it. The back has "2 ore" with the line through the "o" with a dolphin on the left and some kind of flower on the right.
1916- Has "1 ore" with a line through the "o" and there are squiggly "s" shaped thingies on either side of that. The other side of the coin has X within a giant "C" and has a crown above it.
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
ah, the one from 1881 shouldn't by chance have a "æ" somewhere in its text?
by GreenFreak on September 13th, 2008
The C is for king Christian the 9th and 10th respectively, so those are definitely Danish.
If there's a giant F one some of them, that might be for Frederik, the Danish kings we're all called either Christian or Frederik
by GreenFreak on September 13th, 2008
The 1881 one doesn't have anything like that but I just now noticed that there is an Umlaut above the "a" in Val. I hadn't noticed before.
And on the 1863 there is a giant "F" with a crown and a small VII. I forgot to mention that but I was sure that one was Danish anyway.
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
Oooooohhh!!!! I dunno if this will make a difference but the 1881 one has an umlaut above the o in ore and not the line thingy. It is dark in here....... So is it Swedish??
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
hm.. I'm not quite sure about wether or not ø is used in Swedish... And the one from 1863 is most likely Danish then, Frederik 7th was king then
by GreenFreak on September 13th, 2008
yeah, must be, as I said "Brodrafolkens Val" sounds much more like Swedish. In Danish it would be something like "broderskabets vel" or similar
by GreenFreak on September 13th, 2008
No it isn't that "o" but the other one. The one with the two dots above it. What is that line called in the o you used in that last comment?? ø <<< that one. What is that line called?? That isn't the o on the 1881 one. It's the one with the two dots.
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
Oh. Nevermind. Forget I said anything in that comment I just posted. I misunderstood you.
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
ø is another letter, a vowel obviously. It's pronounced a bit like the e in her, sort of..
by GreenFreak on September 13th, 2008
Yeah but what is the line called?? I thought the dots above the o were umlauts?? What do they call that line?? Is that called an umlaut in Denmark??
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008
nope, it's an individual letter. Umlauts is a special type of letter "additions" (two dots). This letter is simply just called ø (just as å and æ)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umlaut_(diacritic)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%98
by GreenFreak on September 13th, 2008
So it's its own letter... cool!!!
The umlaut link didn't really go anywhere but I have had two years of high school German so I sorta know what it does anyway.
by King of Sexytown on September 13th, 2008