Frazz by Jef Mallett for March 27, 2021

  1. Straker01
    Straker UFO  about 3 years ago

    Toss me a beer you hoser.

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    RAGs  about 3 years ago

    The difference between jazz in the US and in Canada:

    A popular jazz tune in the US is “Take the A train”

    A popular jazz tune in Canada is “Take the train, eh”

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  3. Bluedog
    Bilan  about 3 years ago

    Frazz is right. Canadian isn’t A language, it’s two languages.

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  4. Grog poop
    GROG Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Neither is American.

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    Concretionist  about 3 years ago

    You can find the Canadian at the party by circulating stepping on people’s toes. When someone apologizes, that’s the Canadian.

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    222jo  about 3 years ago

    Shouldn’t it be “on the snow by the water”?

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    DorothyGlenn Premium Member about 3 years ago

    I hope panel two was an oops. I would rather have houses on the snow by the water. Less sinking.

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    BlueNAL  about 3 years ago

    Much like Louisianan

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    R.R.Bedford  about 3 years ago

    Well Canada has 3 if you count ‘Hongcouver’ as part of Canada

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  10. Michaelparksjimbronson
    well-i-never  about 3 years ago

    Ha! She’s good!

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    sappha58  about 3 years ago

    I have to agree with Mr Mallett: Canada feels good, has superlative people, and is just all-around a nice place.

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    cornshell  about 3 years ago

    Plus, most Norwegians speak English well.

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    ERBEN2  about 3 years ago

    And they have the greatest beer in this part of the world .

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    ERBEN2  about 3 years ago

    Even their Miller High Life is better than ours .

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  15. Taz by abovetheflames
    danketaz Premium Member about 3 years ago

    More like a vernacular.

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    sandpiper  about 3 years ago

    Well, beer-lovers in most other countries think US beer lacks a little something. Don’t drink beer so I don’t know. But it’s often said. Also espresso anywhere in Europe is definitely not the same as in US, so maybe there are more differences than we know of.

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    cervelo  about 3 years ago
    Check out St-John’s Newfoundland, (https://i.redd.it/tr7qwe0rqlx11.jpg) for colourful. The big monopoly looking houses at the top of the picture are called “The Rooms”. I was lucky enough to attend a meeting in that building in the top floor conference room. The view of the harbour is mind blowing. Please believe me when I say if you can only visit one place in Canada, make it Newfoundland. Take two weeks and rent a car… Canadians are friendly? Triple that for Newfies…
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    paul GROSS Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Having poutine for lunch?

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    Patricia Sherk Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Norwegian is easier to learn than French.

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    Burgundy2  about 3 years ago

    Sorry, eh? I’ll just go sit on the chesterfield and eat my Kraft Dinner.

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    COL Crash  about 3 years ago

    Even Regional Dialects can be a problem. The first time my German Wife with a Masters in English Linguistics spoke with my Parents over the phone she couldn’t understand most of what they said because of their heavy accents. We dubbed it Southernese.

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    amxchester  about 3 years ago

    No grammer police, you two. We say in speech & print – “on the water” and “on the river”, etc. – sprinkled throughout the US. Enjoy the comic instead.

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    Pipe Tobacco Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Interesting to see this from Michiganders (Frazz is set in Michigan). When I have traveled to the Southern U.S. I often have been asked if I am from Canada….. because to most “untrained” ears…. the Michigan accent and Canadian accent sound pretty damn similar. :)

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    Richard S Russell Premium Member about 3 years ago

    I once drove across Adanac from east to west before somebody set me straight. It made way more sense in the opposite direction.

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    MJ Weber Premium Member about 3 years ago

    I love Maritime Canada! Cape Breton Island!

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    Billy Yank  about 3 years ago

    And the “French” spoken in Quebec is not the same as that spoken in Paris. Even before the United Kingdom took over after the Seven Years War (French and Indian), French spoken in old France had drifted apart from the French spoken in New France. My mom once commented that a French Language teacher in Maine found her job challenging teaching Parisian French to French Canadian immigrants to Maine.

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    unfair.de  about 3 years ago

    It isn’t french either – not even Quebecquois is. Ask any Frenchman.

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    Richard S Russell Premium Member about 3 years ago

    Canadian isn’t a language, and neither is Mexican, as illustrated by this anecdote:

    Two brown-skinned people in a line at the Post Office were chatting with each other, but not in English. The guy in front of them got redder and redder, then finally turned and snapped “If you Mexicans want to speak Mexican, then go back to Mexico! This is America, and we speak English!”

    After a brief moment of startlement, one of them replied (in perfect English) “The language of Mexico is not Mexican. It is Spanish, imported here from Europe — from Spain. But we weren’t speaking Spanish. We were speaking Navajo. You know, the original language from around these parts. So if you want to speak English, then go back to England.”

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    Richard S Russell Premium Member about 3 years ago

    I thot “Frazz” was a contraction of “Frazier”, which seems to me to be more Scottish than Norwegian. Anyone know?

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    Thinkingblade  about 3 years ago

    I don’t know – I found Norwegian a bit easier to learn than Quebequois …

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    Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo]  about 3 years ago

    https://www.facebook.com/frazzcomic

    Posts Frazz10 hrs · and here it is. Not one, but FOUR new varieties of Frazz suds!

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    Jhony-Yermo  about 1 year ago

    And they were toques instead of beanies! Oh! Canada!

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