Class: Cars, Pick-up — Model origin: — Made for:
Background vehicle
Author | Message |
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◊ 2011-06-19 18:30 |
...Or "Brat", as some americans calls it. |
◊ 2011-06-19 18:31 |
In the far background left a selfmade Camper, based on a LWB Mercedes T2. |
◊ 2011-06-19 18:37 |
You make it sound like some nickname that us Americans use, when in actuality Brat was the official name that Subaru used here. |
◊ 2011-06-19 18:40 |
Hmmm, "Brat" seems not to be a too positive word in English: http://www.dict.cc/?s=brat |
◊ 2011-06-19 18:41 |
My bad! (BTW. Always wanted to use that line. Thanks for setting me up for that! ) Although the car looks like it could be the same model as Ronald Reagan`s old Brat. A 1978. -- Last edit: 2011-06-19 18:49:52 |
◊ 2011-06-19 18:49 |
And in Russian "brat" means "brother". |
◊ 2011-06-19 18:59 |
Wasn't it marketed as "BRAT" rather than "Brat" in the US, though? |
◊ 2011-06-19 19:06 |
@deltagolf yes BRAT is an acronym for Bi-drive Recreational All-terrain Transporter |
◊ 2011-06-19 19:17 |
I'm wondering how they came up with that acronym... did they just open a dictionary at a random page, choose a random word and then try to describe the vehicle using words starting with the letters in the word they chose? |
◊ 2011-06-19 19:44 |
It's one of the most highly regarded sausages in the country. |
◊ 2011-06-19 20:46 |
It means a badly behaved, often spoiled child. "Army brat" is an American term so I'm not that familiar with it but I think it just means any child whose father is in the military and often spends their childhood living in different places. -- Last edit: 2011-06-19 20:51:34 |
◊ 2011-06-19 20:52 |
Beat on the brat with a baseball bat |
◊ 2011-06-20 05:22 |
Not a pickup, but close enough: /vehicle_396090-Subaru-GL-1984.html -- Last edit: 2011-06-20 05:23:21 |