Mr. Tea
Let's Talk About Ceps
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Price and availability of drugs, especially poppers.
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Yes it was - but I only just saw this response I'm afraid - tell me anything and everything really, I've been to Budapest a couple of times but I'd love to hear from someone finding their way around it. Also interesting to me cos I've just moved abroad (well more than a year ago now) and I'd be interested to hear about the same experience in other places. Gotta rush now but might think of some proper questions, cheers.Sorry Rich, that question was for me?
pointless exaggeration
Just annoys me when they say "This guy is a michelin starred chef" or "He plays for Benfica" or whatever and you can just look it up and it's bollocks... seems to happen a lot. Like weirdly a lot.
don't denmark have one of the most racist policies and laws of all of europe? https://www.thelocal.dk/20180226/da...nishments-for-crimes-in-underprivileged-areas
i think they are similar to holland in that respect that they have build a perfect image of itself and marketed it to the rest of the world.
I'm not sure it's that to be honest. It's something that I've often noticed that people from smaller countries are more patriotic and more inclined to say things like "our food/music/weather is the best" than people from, I dunno, the US, who just assume on some level that people already think that.Yeah they're not big on humility or self-irony, are they? I like arrogant people, but more the Zlatan kind than the Cristiano kind.
Actually I think the Portuguese are fairly modest personally. When I hear them exaggerate like above it's normally to big up someone else so that makes it a lot better intentioned and easier to put with I suppose.Yeah they're not big on humility or self-irony, are they? I like arrogant people, but more the Zlatan kind than the Cristiano kind.
You get that a lot in London with kids literally beginning a sentence in Urdu or Turkish or whatever and finishing it in English. My friend is a professor of languages and he told me that often, in one sense at least, the kids kinda don't know where one language begins and the other ends. Or at least they would need to think about it....switch back and forth between danish and english, sometimes speaking whole sentences in English. That's not an exaggeration, it's actually a thing, very funny to overhear sometimes.
You get that a lot in London with kids literally beginning a sentence in Urdu or Turkish or whatever and finishing it in English. My friend is a professor of languages and he told me that often, in one sense at least, the kids kinda don't know where one language begins and the other ends. Or at least they would need to think about it.