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This Duo is Iconic! - Frieren Episode 3 Reaction

Highly requested and highly anticipated new show on the channel!! This is a first time watch for both of us, and we're SUPER excited to see why this show is so beloved! Thank you Patrons for voting, let's goooooo!! Check out our full-length watchalongs on Patreon! This video is for commentary and review ONLY and is not a replacement for watching Frieren: Beyond Journey's End, which we watched on Crunchyroll! Patreon 📺: https://www.patreon.com/BatCatChannel ♦ Follow and Subscribe! ♦ Nivi🦇 @NiviNeepo Twitter.com/NiviNeepo Twitch.tv/NiviNeepo Cashew🍁🌙 @CashewZero Twitter.com/CashewZero Twitch.tv/CashewZero ♪ Credits ♪ BGM - DOVA-SYNDROME Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, commenting, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Our videos are ONLY for commentary and criticism. They are not a replacement for watching the original content.

Comments

Rheinhard

Added this comment onYoutube as well: FYI, the name you refused to try and pronounce at 6:24 is "Größe Forest". Little German lesson: that "ß", which looks like a script "B" (or maybe a greek letter beta), isn't a "B" at all. It's a German letter we don't have in the English alphabet called an "ess-tset", and it's pronounced as if you replaced it with a double s (like "ss", as in "hiss"). Conveying the pronunciation of the o-umlaut "ö", is a little harder... it's basically like trying to say "eh" or "er" while keeping your lips pursed into a tight "o" shape. So "Größe" is pronounced something like "grey-ssuh". The word can mean "size", "magnitude" or "greatness". Without the umlaut it usually means "great" (for example, the most famous king of Prussia was Frederick the Great, in German "Friederich der Große"). Without the umlaut or the final "e", the word "Groß" (pronounced "gross") just means "big". Clearly the writers of this show were fond of German names; though sometimes I think they pick words that they think just look cool without much consideration of their meaning. Even the title, "Frieren" means "freeze" or "freezing". Another German tip BTW: When you see the letters "i" and "e" next to each other, the correct way to pronounce the pair is basically to go by the SECOND letter. So the "ie" in "Frieren" is pronounced like "ee", as you know from hearing the show's title. The "ei" is pronounced like "I", as with the name "Heiter".

BatCatChannel

Oh wow that's really cool! I had no idea 👀 I just assumed it was a fancy B 😅 I'll definitely remember that!