Nice looking shave Johan. In Australia we say "it's pelting down" or "it's bucketing down" for heavy rain and we can also use the English "Cats and dogs" expression, another expression we can use is "when it rains it pours" which sort of refers to it's flooding, there's probably some others. For very easy we just say "Easy as". Congrats on your team winning sounded very exciting.👌🤠🤟
Nice shave Johan! The AC blade made short work of your week long growth! A great looking shavette as well 😎👍 Sometimes I'll just say "it's pouring outside" or "it's really coming down out there" when it's raining hard, but these aren't clever or funny in anyway 😄👍 Have a good one! Steve
Im late ! It was my birthday on Friday 😅. English Raining cats and dogs was originally when the dead animals would be washed down the filthiest mediaeval streets in heavy rain 🌧. Ive played inline hockey 🏒, amateur only , in a basketball court . Ten thousand times better than football. Ive been comparing shavettes to start straight shaving with on my last videos . Kismet is the best in my opinion to a real straight razor . Love your videos Johan!❤
It's pissing down, that's what I say anyway 😂. Kool shave, bro. Gonna have to try straights again, which is gonna be fun coz my hands shake like a bugga, not nerves, just knackered 😅. Be safe and keep laughing ✌️ 👍
"Lett" has the annoying property of most often meaning light as in low weight rather than easy (to do); but the Swedish "lett som en plett" has been imported, but isn't used much. I have heard the expression "raining kittens" being used, but mostly as a dialectical expression; more common would be "bucket down", "rain horizontally" may be used more. As for the origin of "raining cats and dogs", the Libarary of Congress says about its origin: "We don’t know. The phrase might have its roots in Norse mythology, medieval superstitions, the obsolete word catadupe (waterfall), or dead animals in the streets of Britain being picked up by storm waters." Philistine me only really associate Leksand with "knekkebrød"... And you must admit that it's difficult to take a place seriously when the name reminds you of the stuff chldren use to build casteles with using plastic buckets and spades: play sand.