>>Same here, with beers (though it's been years since the last time I got to the fourth)(am: sixth). Lightyear is much tougher, I never completed one, so I don't have any idea how much time would four take.
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>Hm, in the moment you travel with 220km/s This the orbit around galaxies center. You might add up the 29,8km/s earth around sun rotation of earth - forget about it. The student may research if earth orbit is to add uo in the moment. light in vacuum was waht 300000km/s
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>As you can see you have done a fraction of a ly that could be expressed in integers. Do you feel a differnce now? No? Me too. Na starovije.
Fraction expressed in integers? Not a fraction anymore...
Na zdarovje (на здоровье) is russian (and similarly polish, na zdrowie)... but in serbian it's said when one sneezes (well, I guess that's just as in german, although you don't use accusative case, it's just "Gesundheit!"). At a toast, it's "živeli" (живели), equivalent to "vivant" but not quite, it literally means "lived" (pl.), and is short for "[may you/we all] lived long". Sometimes it's "u zdravlje" (in health - i.e. may we enjoy this one in good health). Interestingly, though, the word for toast (i.e. whatever little speech is made before raising the glasses, and definitely not Zwiebak) is "zdravica" - so it seems that historically we also used to say "nazdravlje" when drinking.
My preferred toast is "da smo živi i zdravi" (may we be alive and healthy), which I then shortened to "Živko Zdravko" (male names), to which I later added, with a little help from my friends, "Srećko i Veselin" (srećan - happy, veseo - joyous).
Which is what we pretty much did today - married for 35 years, so glasses were raised :).