I think the difference is the perception of whether a piece of Lego is “a Lego”; in Europe, that’s typically not the way the word is used.
I started writing a rebuttal that amused me until I noticed I’d misread your comment, and I don’t want to delete it, so despite being irrelevant to what you’ve said…
How many super glues do you use for a repair? Do you play on an astroturfs field? Are people carrying maces in their bag for self-defence? Do you eat Jell-Os and burn kerosenes?
That’s punishment for ‘Legos’.
If I see more than one thing, I put an “s” at the end of it.
I don’t support Lego tryin to be like “sheep” and “deer.” 🙄
I think the difference is the perception of whether a piece of Lego is “a Lego”; in Europe, that’s typically not the way the word is used.
I started writing a rebuttal that amused me until I noticed I’d misread your comment, and I don’t want to delete it, so despite being irrelevant to what you’ve said…
I do not respect corporations. Legos.
If that were true, you’d just call them building blocks.
In Germany we call them Klemmbausteine, because fuck Lego.
Well okay I respect one corporation I’ll call it hook and loop
Let’s go harder and do Lego’s. Lego’s
Legos’s
LegOS 1.2
Leg O’s
Oui le goes
Legos my eggos
I will call them Legos till the day I die, like everyone I know has for 50 years.
I never heard them called “Lego” until the last few years. So its like kleanex and xerox
Legos legos legos legos legos legos
One Lego would be pretty useless, except as a caltrop.
Don’t know (m)any Europeans then?