justinacolmena
Gold Member
- Banned
- #41
I don't even like the word "husband" in the English language. Some guy goes to work or else he's out on the farm sporting a wedding band on his finger, because he has to service a wife with expensive tastes.
If a woman marries a man, that is simply her "man" in Swedish, because the English word "husband" is from Swedish «husbonde», literally a man, usually a farmer, who owes money on a mortgage for the house he lives in, whether he is married or not. He is indebted and "bound" to the "house" like a serf in medieval Europe or a sharecropper in Reconstruction-era southern U.S.
If a woman marries a man, that is simply her "man" in Swedish, because the English word "husband" is from Swedish «husbonde», literally a man, usually a farmer, who owes money on a mortgage for the house he lives in, whether he is married or not. He is indebted and "bound" to the "house" like a serf in medieval Europe or a sharecropper in Reconstruction-era southern U.S.