Babaka

PapPap Serres, Greece Posts: 29,377
edited December 2010 in A Moving Train
http://grungereport.net/?p=1429 :) It's funny because "babaka" means daddy in Greek. Maybe it's something Vicky Karayiannis (Βίκυ Καραγιάννη) taught to their children. :D
Athens 2006 / Milton Keynes 2014 / London 1&2 2022 / Seattle 1&2 2024 / Dublin 2024 / Manchester 2024
Post edited by Unknown User on

Comments

  • :lol:
    "...Dimitri...He talks to me...'.."The Ghost of Greece..".
    "..That's One Happy Fuckin Ghost.."
    “..That came up on the Pillow Case...This is for the Greek, With Our Apologies.....”
  • redrockredrock Posts: 18,341
    Seeing that Cornell's mother in law is Greek, her referring to her grandchild's father as babaka (and you say it means daddy) seems perfectly normal to me. My mother is always referred to as 'bonne-maman' (a way of saying grandma in French) to my daughter, even when speaking in English.

    Would it be less funny if she captioned 'Daddy taking Christopher.....'? Or is it the syntax that is funny?
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