So instead of doing some schoolwork due Tuesday I decided to spend my night
reading this.
Oh dear lord.
Some of my favorites:
"I cannot imagine why nobody yet mentioned root beer. From a German perspective, that is the single weirdest thing to learn about, tightly followed by the taste of "grape" juice."
"4700 kinds of toothpaste."
"I was startled to
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Comments 37
Ha ha, I like that one!
I've been to Mexico and England. Mexico is all kinds of suprises (and not very good ones--LOL). England--I was surprised by the wall socket/outlet thing; different from ours. We couldn't plug in our appliances (hair curler and stuff). Oh, and that there's an extra light right before green to tell you it's going to be green--I liked that.
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And I don't get the wall socket thing. Do they not have them? So what do you plug your appliances in?
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They have them but they're different from ours so you can't plug in our cords into their sockets. We had to buy special adapters/connectors and then connected our cords to these connectors and then these connectors into the outlets.
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And I totally forgot that American traffic lights go red-green and then green-yellow-red when you have to stop. It's true, ours go red-yellow-green too, but I'm pretty sure that's because we all drive manuals and like to have that extra second or two to shift into first gear.
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- People will often say "we should get together" or "you should come over sometime for dinner" but don't actually mean it, they just say it to be polite.
One of my friends swears that there was an American English phrasebook where "you should come over sometime for dinner" was translated as "goodbye."
:D
Yeah, stuff like that is seriously an experience. ;)
5. Everyone speaks English. More so than in the States!
LOL! Although possibly true if you go to, say, the Netherlands.
And now I'll stop spamming your comments, sorry.
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I'm so curious now. Like, shoes aren't kept in the house? There aren't free refills? THERE AREN'T PB&Js? I had one of those thing morning for breakfast. And no volunteering?
I love the "you should come over" stuff. Such an easy way to end a conversation. Another one if you ever come to the South. "bless your heart" typically means the person who says it is looking down at you.
I'm loving this topic. So much. :D
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Ah no, we do keep our shoes inside, but we don't wear them inside. I know that's a regional thing in the US too though. Nope, no free refills here, and you can very rarely buy peanut butter. But that's okay because we kinda don't like that and would rather eat Nutella instead. < /overgeneralizing >. Volunteering happens here too, but there's no phony I-need-to-volunteer-to-put-this-on-my-college-application stuff, I guess? And in general, volunteers at homes for the elderly or at museums would take away "real" jobs (and social workers are underpaid anyway), so our politicians are trying to counteract that. I think the one sector where tons of volunteering goes on is sports, i.e. teaching youth teams and such.
LOL, yeah!
:D
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Considering most Americans don't travel to a foreign country I can totally believe that. Most people haven't traveled out of their own state much, much less to another country. Having a passport in Europe seems like a necessity.
The customer service thing...that's just rude. It's pretty damn great to be able to take something back after you've open and used it.
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Come to think of it, I've never seen anything about school children in school buses in Europe. How else would kids get to school? Maybe they're not necessary there?
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