13.08.2008, 12:16
The venerable Ms. Krauss
She said her only love were her brother's dogs...
and that she liked tartare liver (eeeeeeeewwww)...I never understood why^^
My first teacher was Ms. (or Mrs. I don't know if she's married so far) Hufstadt..she was the evil in person^^
Once a boy, we all didn't know (at least most of us...I think he was a friend of one of our classmates..) hid under the teachers desk. Ms. Hufstadt came in, sat down and didn't notice him. After a while, he made some funny noises like grunting, but I think she had hearing hardness...and so she didn't notice that too. It was the moment we pupils discovered that something is in the classroom, but we didn't know there was the boy under her desk, and no one dared to say something, so the lesson proceeded.
Suddenly she stood up and began to scream (later she said the boy had touched her feet-ew) and the boy got out and immediately ran away, she tried to follow him, but was too lame, so she screamed after him :"Du Blödmann du". We hardly tried not to laugh, it was too funny, but afterwards she informed the headmaster and told him that she nearly had had a heartattack (she definitely exaggerated). She has never trusted us again and always complained that we were very bad kids...and the lessons with her were even more unbearable than before.
I don't think it was our fault, I mean, we didn't know that he was under her desk (well, I can say with assurance, that I didn't know he was there), someone could have said something about the noise, but what were we supposed to say? "Ms. Hufstadt, there is a strange noise, can't you hear it?" She would have been extremly mad because someone dared to interrupt AND said she couldn't hear it...^^
The time with her was a lesson for life.....avoid mean people as good as you
can^^
Ah^^ I didn't know that! My teacher never assertively said that it was Old English, she just said it was English like it was spoken and written these times, so I guessed it was Old English^^...
She said her only love were her brother's dogs...
and that she liked tartare liver (eeeeeeeewwww)...I never understood why^^
My first teacher was Ms. (or Mrs. I don't know if she's married so far) Hufstadt..she was the evil in person^^
Once a boy, we all didn't know (at least most of us...I think he was a friend of one of our classmates..) hid under the teachers desk. Ms. Hufstadt came in, sat down and didn't notice him. After a while, he made some funny noises like grunting, but I think she had hearing hardness...and so she didn't notice that too. It was the moment we pupils discovered that something is in the classroom, but we didn't know there was the boy under her desk, and no one dared to say something, so the lesson proceeded.
Suddenly she stood up and began to scream (later she said the boy had touched her feet-ew) and the boy got out and immediately ran away, she tried to follow him, but was too lame, so she screamed after him :"Du Blödmann du". We hardly tried not to laugh, it was too funny, but afterwards she informed the headmaster and told him that she nearly had had a heartattack (she definitely exaggerated). She has never trusted us again and always complained that we were very bad kids...and the lessons with her were even more unbearable than before.
I don't think it was our fault, I mean, we didn't know that he was under her desk (well, I can say with assurance, that I didn't know he was there), someone could have said something about the noise, but what were we supposed to say? "Ms. Hufstadt, there is a strange noise, can't you hear it?" She would have been extremly mad because someone dared to interrupt AND said she couldn't hear it...^^
The time with her was a lesson for life.....avoid mean people as good as you
can^^
Kristina schrieb:Shakespeare's English is an early form of Modern English (afaIk )
Ah^^ I didn't know that! My teacher never assertively said that it was Old English, she just said it was English like it was spoken and written these times, so I guessed it was Old English^^...
!...!