auritsu about 12 years ago [hidden] Wouldn't it make more sense in plural? 'Ritter' could be both, singular or plural, but 'Drachen' is clearly plural. 0 Reply Copy ID Copy Link
Bananacat about 12 years ago [hidden] auritsu said:Wouldn't it make more sense in plural? 'Ritter' could be both, singular or plural, but 'Drachen' is clearly plural."Ritter" is both singular and plural.In german it would be "Der Ritter" for singular and "Die Ritter" for plural. 1 Reply Copy ID Copy Link
user 11314 about 12 years ago [hidden] Same for Drachen (Der Drachen = singular, Die Drachen = plural) 0 Reply Copy ID Copy Link
K17U about 12 years ago [hidden] Kikimaru said:Same for Drachen (Der Drachen = singular, Die Drachen = plural)No, actually.Der Drachen = KiteDer Drache = DragonDie Drachen = Dragons / KitesIn this case I'd definetly translate it as "Knights and Dragons". 1 Reply Copy ID Copy Link
user 11314 about 12 years ago [hidden] LOLK17U said:No, actually.Der Drachen = KiteDer Drache = DragonDie Drachen = Dragons / KitesIn this case I'd definetly translate it as "Knights and Dragons".Gah, I think this tripped me up when I was a kid, too! 0 Reply Copy ID Copy Link