Talk:Asterix and the Great Crossing

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BetacommandBot (talk) 04:42, 12 February 2008 (UTC)

"No Romans" item removed
Romans do appear in this book, albeit very briefly, at the beginning. The decurion makes the "Ira furor brevis est" remark. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 61.9.108.4 (talk) 09:08, 19 February 2008 (UTC)

WikiProject Comics B-Class Assesment required
This article needs the B-Class checklist filled in to remain a B-Class article for the Comics WikiProject. If the checklist is not filled in by 7th August this article will be re-assessed as C-Class. The checklist should be filled out referencing the guidance given at Version 1.0 Editorial Team/Assessment/B-Class criteria. For further details please contact the Comics WikiProject. Comics-awb (talk) 15:24, 31 July 2008 (UTC)

External links modified
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Nøgøødreåssen
Nøgøødreåssen can't be a reference to the film For No Good Reason as the album predated it by 35 years. It probably just means "for no good reason". Should the link be removed? J I P &#124; Talk 12:46, 7 November 2019 (UTC)

Alphabetical evidence for Danishness
The letters Ø and Å are also used by (modern-day) Norwegians. The Swedes do not use the Ø (using the umlaut instead) but they do use the Å. Non-diacritic variants (e.g. Aa for Å) are also in use (albeit declining?). So the letter-substitution joke (which is head-ache inducing if your language actually uses these diacritics for real) does not make them particularly Danish, whereas the Hamlet, Mermaid, and Great Dane dog jokes are of course unmistakable.

In times closer to Astérix, the terms Dane and Half-Dane referred to Germanic peoples living not just in what we now call Denmark, but also the southern parts of the Scandinavian peninsula as well as the northern regions of present-day Germany and Holland. The non-celtic ethnicity of the English consists of these (Half-) Danes. 2A01:CB0C:CD:D800:38F2:DDF5:138D:105 (talk) 09:35, 9 December 2019 (UTC)