Talk:fektruo

RFV discussion: May–October 2017
Google Books has a single Swedish book, apparently about some outcast kids ("de nummerlösa") who were forbidden from speaking their native Esperanto by an authoritarian government in a dystopian setting: I'm pretty sure that doesn't count. I'm not sure whether this is durably archived. And then there's a Reddit comment (in an otherwise-English post). There's some other stuff, too, like this and this.__Gamren (talk) 15:31, 8 May 2017 (UTC)
 * 1) * 2015, Marta Söderberg, Athena, Gilla Böcker ISBN 9789187457319
 * ”Tror du att jag räddade dig bara för att du skulle kunna ge upp ? Då hade jag väl för fan låtit dig drunkna. Jävla fektruo!” [emphasis not mine]
 * Do you think I saved you just so you could give up? Then I would have fucking let you drown, wouldn't I? Damned shithole. [I never know how to render väl (or vel, in Danish) constructs in English]


 * I don't see that an Esperanto word used in Swedish doesn't count. Kajeroj el la Sudo (the last link) looks like a published periodical which is presumably durably archived. Google Groups (esp. soc.culture.esperanto) doesn't turn anything up, though.--Prosfilaes (talk) 05:05, 11 May 2017 (UTC)


 * It doesn't count because appearing in an X-language text is how we know that a word exists in X. If there were many Swedish texts using fektruo (preferably unitalicized), we would conclude that it was a Swedish word. You speak of "an Esperanto word used in Swedish", but then you are presuming that the word is in fact an Esperanto word, which is precisely what we are investigating!__Gamren (talk) 17:03, 29 August 2017 (UTC)
 * RFV failed (even if we do count the above, the quotes do not support the same sense).__Gamren (talk) 16:50, 22 October 2017 (UTC)