• @Custoslibera
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    351 year ago

    Could someone please explain the joke?

    I don’t know the reference or German.

    • @ChickenLadyLovesLife
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      801 year ago

      German band Rammstein has a famous song named “Du Hast” which starts off the chorus with “du … du hast … du hast mich etc. etc.”. Du hast is German for “you have”.

      • @[email protected]
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        541 year ago

        And if you’re just listening to the song, the lyrics sound like “you… you hate… you hate me… you asked me…”, etc. It’s a play on words and you’re not really supposed to understand if it’s hast (have, part of a past tense phrase) or hasst (hate) until the whole sentence is out

        • Lvxferre
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          21 year ago

          Rammstein is fan of this sort of “new verse = old verse + something that contradicts the meaning of the old verse” wordplay. It does the same in “Wo bist du”, like:

          • “Ich liebe dich” - I love you
          • “Ich liebe dich nicht” - I don’t love you
          • “Ich liebe dich nicht mehr” - I don’t love you any more
          • “Ich liebe dich nicht mehr oder weniger als du” - I don’t love you more or less than you
          • “Als du mich geliebt hast” - than you loved me […]

          with every verse forging a meaning that is destroyed in the next by the addition of (a) new word(s).

      • @Custoslibera
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        131 year ago

        Thank you, I don’t listen to industrial metal so I was never going to get this one.

      • @dangblingus
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        81 year ago

        And is a homonym of “du haßt” creating the German double entendre of “you have me/you hate me”

      • @[email protected]
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        -31 year ago

        Almost. “Du” does mean “you” but “hasst” means “hate”. Not “have”.

        So basically the guy shouted “you” and the Germans shouted back “you hate”.

        • @GargleBlaster
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          371 year ago

          Almost. The song is called “Du hast” not “Du hasst”. The double meaning of hast (have) and hasst (hate) is still the main wordplay in the song though