Geisterjagd or Ghost Hunt might be a good one. they have a Klausjagen ( Claus-Hunt) a parade of various St. Nick characters (not in red and white get-up) on Dec .6. so Geisterjagd or Ghost Hunt- like the sound of that. a spooky Jag indeed! Jag meaning entertainment originally was a verb meaning to hunt- not so light-hearted was the Judenjagd or (Jew Hunt) an apb ( all points bulletin) alert by the Gestapo and SS units. Jag, not the car- originally meant (Hunt) as a verb.
Peter Bakula has: Played Larry in "Happy Halloween" in 1989. Played Todd in "Happy Halloween 2" in 1990. Played Todd in "Happy Halloween 3" in 1991. Played Todd in "Happy Halloween 4" in 1992. Played Todd in "Evil One" in 1995. Played Ned in "Happy Halloween 666" in 1997. Played himself in "After Image" in 1999.
There is actually no such language as "Swiss". Switzerland has 4 official languages: 1. German 2. French 3. Italian 4. Romansh
Although they don't celebrate halloween in Germany in most cases, they do still have a way to say Happy Halloween. Glucklichen Halloween is the proper way to do it! Make sure to emphasize the umlaut otherwise it will take on a different meaning.
The Swiss people are only known as the Swiss. They do not go by another name, not even one that a person can ake fun of. The swiss people are very smart and most citizens who live there can speak 4 different languages.
There's actually no such language as Swiss. Switzerland has 4 official languages: German, French, Italian, and Romansh. Please specify which language you want to translate into.
You can purchase a Halloween School Girl outfit on various Halloween websites. An agent will be happy to direct you to the correct area so that you can buy one.
It doesn't make much sense to have 'Swiss' as certificate for a language... in Switzerland German, french, Italian and the latin based rumantsch are official languages. While rumantsch is 100% Swiss only, the other three exist in Swiss dialect forms. Although official writtings now use the 'real' German, french, Italian people speak the dialects... Swiss Italian with one to one latin parts and Swiss German beeing a form of medieval German... If someone looks for certain documents in different languages in Switzerland, the person will see that there is never a Swiss flag. German documents show Germany's flag, french papers the drapeau of France and the Italian ones the tricolore of Italy. If Swiss people call their language 'Swiss', they mainly think of Swiss German... as Swiss french is closer to the 'real' french, and Swiss Italian is often called 'ticinese' (as that's the main region where people speak Swiss Italian). But overall there is no 'Swiss' only used for one language...
CAuse ur gay muhahahahahhahh happy halloween
Most Swiss people speak German, French and Italian so French is one of the official languages
There is no language called "Swiss." Switzerland has four official languages, and you'd have to specify which one you meant. The official languages are German, French, Italian, and Romansh (in decreasing order of the percentage of the population that speaks them as their primary language). Swiss children are usually taught at least one language other than their primary tongue at school, so "auf wiedersehen" would be understood by most if not all Swiss... for that matter, it's likely that most of them would also understand "au revoir" or "ciao".
According to the last census in 2000, 63.6% of Swiss speak German.
Either German, French, Italian or Rumantsch (a 100% Swiss language with latin roots). The three main languages also exist in Swiss dialect forms... especially the Swiss Italian has much one to one latin in it (even more than Italian itself). And the Swiss German is some kind of medieval German developing in another way than the German did in Germany or Austria (or the Netherlands - as dutch was called 'low-German' due to geographical aspects).