Spyke
lemmy.world

Ok. Just gonna pin this comment. Be very careful about jokes that could be interpreted as threats of violence or encouragements of violence. Lemmys rules are quite strict on this issue. Please consider this before posting your comments. Thank you in advance.

27
kbin.social

Literally means to throw out a window.

Y'know... To pull a Putin on your political detractors.

31
TheGodreply
lemmy.world

Thats such a zoomer reference. Ancient boomers remember the real defensters

6

Never get into an argument with a Czech above the ground floor of a building with big windows. Especially if you're Austrian.

6
Yendorreply
reddthat.com

My favourite part of that URL, is that it specifies the year. Because when the rulers of Prague forget they are servants of the people, they get a repeat performance.

3

Millennial here. I've only ever seen it or heard about it in fiction in my time. Being thrown out of a window by another person just seems so fantastical to me, since I've never heard of it happening IRL on the news. Just in history and Wikipedia articles.

3
samus12345reply
lemmy.world

Always seemed like such a strange word. Like, it's such a common thing that English needed a word that specifically means to throw someone out a window?

3
Obireply
sopuli.xyz

I believe it comes from French.

3

That's why I made the joke. I've heard about the Nazi idiot getting arrested over it

4
sh.itjust.works

I'm honestly quite shocked that billionaire CEOs and all around shitheels haven't seen any assassination attempts. You see and hear constant criticism calling them evil monsters and yet not one mentally unhinged person has made them a target? I'm sure they have security and what not but the paparazzi have no problem getting pictures.

13
TheGodreply
lemmy.world

Fun Fact, defenestration is called that bc Fenster or similar are the word for Windows in central european languages.

It is basically dewindowering someone

9
daniskarmareply
lemmy.world

Fenestra is the latin word for window. Similar words are used in some latin languages as Italian, catalán or Galician.

I don't think it would be much used in central Europe, maybe in Romanian, as it also derivated from latin. But I don't think that would be the case for Germanic or slavic languages.

Edit: just looked it up, seems like some Germanic languages also have the same Latin root for window.

10

Dutch has the word "venster" which also means window, however the word "raam" is more commonly used.

Bonus fact: a window sill is a vensterbank (literally window bench/couch)

4

"Fenêtre" in French. And "defenestré/defenestration" is the direct translation. Looks to me like another word nicked from the French by the "perfides albions".

3

To Czechs it did come from German since all 3 happened while we were under controls of various german kings

1

Haha, yea, for sure. looks up defenestrate in a dictionary

Mmh, indubitably.

5

I think there are a lot more people who deserve defenestration, of both definitions.

2

You reached the end

Metaphorically, of course | Spyke