Comment by the_gipsy 17 days ago But Charlie is a fool, a half-moron. Arthur is not dumb. 6 comments the_gipsy Reply metabagel 17 days ago Charlie Brown is a child. rolymath 16 days ago [flagged] jfengel 17 days ago Sorta. The whole point of the strip is that they don't talk or act like children."Schultz" is German for "brown". He's very much the author's adult POV, using a child-looking character to disarm the cynicism. unwind 17 days ago Brown in German is actually, wait for it, "braun". impossiblefork 17 days ago Schultz actually is not German for brown. It's a name deriving from the name of a kind of medieval tax official. rags2riches 17 days ago > "Schultz" is German for "brown".Beleg fehlt.
metabagel 17 days ago Charlie Brown is a child. rolymath 16 days ago [flagged] jfengel 17 days ago Sorta. The whole point of the strip is that they don't talk or act like children."Schultz" is German for "brown". He's very much the author's adult POV, using a child-looking character to disarm the cynicism. unwind 17 days ago Brown in German is actually, wait for it, "braun". impossiblefork 17 days ago Schultz actually is not German for brown. It's a name deriving from the name of a kind of medieval tax official. rags2riches 17 days ago > "Schultz" is German for "brown".Beleg fehlt.
jfengel 17 days ago Sorta. The whole point of the strip is that they don't talk or act like children."Schultz" is German for "brown". He's very much the author's adult POV, using a child-looking character to disarm the cynicism. unwind 17 days ago Brown in German is actually, wait for it, "braun". impossiblefork 17 days ago Schultz actually is not German for brown. It's a name deriving from the name of a kind of medieval tax official. rags2riches 17 days ago > "Schultz" is German for "brown".Beleg fehlt.
impossiblefork 17 days ago Schultz actually is not German for brown. It's a name deriving from the name of a kind of medieval tax official.
Charlie Brown is a child.
[flagged]
Sorta. The whole point of the strip is that they don't talk or act like children.
"Schultz" is German for "brown". He's very much the author's adult POV, using a child-looking character to disarm the cynicism.
Brown in German is actually, wait for it, "braun".
Schultz actually is not German for brown. It's a name deriving from the name of a kind of medieval tax official.
> "Schultz" is German for "brown".
Beleg fehlt.