MovieChat Forums > Judgment at Nuremberg (1961) Discussion > Construct your 'hare, hunter, field' sen...

Construct your 'hare, hunter, field' sentence.


To avoid persecution by the Nazis for "feeble-mindedness," as is described in a particularly famous scene.

Here is the sentence that came to my mind as I watched this scene again recently: "The hunter chased the hare through the field." The sentence used in the film as an example is rather different -- the hunter shoots the hare.

More poetic examples?

"A hare, chased by a hunter, hides in the field."

Construct your own sentence?

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The field hare ate the hunter.

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Or how about: "The hare killed the hunter and smeared his blood across the field."

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"You said hare, hunter, and field."

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Herr Hunterfield is a good friend of mine from Stuttgart.


(I always wanted to say it and never had a place to....thanks.)



Alan Swann From The Movies?

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Although it should be Herr, that's a good one.

I'll feel dirty when the hair of Attila the Hun turns gray.

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You win.

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The feeble-minded Nazis lost sight of the circumcised hare hunter after a rat shot out of Hitler's a$$crack and proceeded to chase the feeble-minded Nazis across the field.

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hunter field.

hare...hunter...

....they already made up, when I walked in the court they had made
up their minds...MADE UP THEIR MINDS!

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I would've been considered "Feeble-Minded" too. Because, I didn't know what the Hell He was talking about. I was like, "Huh"?

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after hearing the correct sentence I considered sterilizing myself, since under pressure I could only come up with "a hunter with short hair was walking in a field"

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I'm not too quick with things like that either. Especially under pressure.

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What field do you work in Herr Hunter?

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Is that your own hare Mr. Hunterfield? Or is it a wig?

"Everyone is ignorant, only on different subjects". Will Rogers (1879-1935)

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