World International
Published May 27, 2003
mother/babyRN, RN
3 Articles; 1,587 Posts
hi there from the usa....i was interested in making a flyer for a nursing project and thought it might be nice to indicate how much nurses appreciate each other...if anyone is interested, please let me know how to say ( and spell) " i love being a nurse", in your language.....thanks!
Diana in Sweden
99 Posts
jag älskar att vara en sjuksköterska
literaly "I love to be a nurse"
HUGS
tattooednursie, LVN
660 Posts
Usually when I say "Take this job and shove it." I mean I love being a CNA. lol
Now now, lets keep this going, although there are nights when I know how you feel.....Thanks Diana in Sweden! Now if I can only pronounce it!
well it is for a flyer right? it could be fun for those receiving it to try :)
we should be able to get some languages together .. we know we have japanese don't we .. what else is out there ? surely spanish, french....etc.... there must be more people than me that use more than one language??
HUGS :kiss
I know some sign language, but that will be too hard to post.
I just spelled it out with my hands for you
jnette, ASN, EMT-I
4,388 Posts
Ich liebe Krankenpflege ! :)
Thankyou1...More ! More! Thanks for the cheer leading Diana!
was that german jnette? or dutch maybe ?
anytime mother/babyRN
Originally posted by Diana in Sweden was that german jnette? or dutch maybe ? anytime mother/babyRN
German, Diane. Or you could say "Krankenpflege gefaellt mir.." or "Ich mag Pflegedienst"... :)
thanks jnette "kranken" is sick right? .. cool to know what language it is...
mother/baby... if you like I could research into our nordic languages .. I don't speak them though so that might be concidered cheating :)
Originally posted by Diana in Sweden thanks jnette "kranken" is sick right? .. cool to know what language it is... Yes.."krank" means sick "kranken" means "the sick" (plural)..."Pflege" means care... ergo "care of the sick" ! So the term "nurse" is "carer of the sick"... or "one who provides care to the sick".
Yes.."krank" means sick "kranken" means "the sick" (plural)..."Pflege" means care... ergo "care of the sick" ! So the term "nurse" is "carer of the sick"... or "one who provides care to the sick".