To explain Segeberg and SE-XY: In Germany, license plates start with letters indicating your place of living. Hansestadt Rostock has HRO, Leipzig has L and Westerstede has WST, for example. Many Germans either choose their initials and date of birth to follow or include their local letters to make up fun words. I saw a lot of L-OL license plates in Leipzig, for example. Segeberg has SE as a local indicator, so lots of people apparently choose their license plate to read SE-XY.
Our town has WIT, so we see a lot of WIT-ZE here.... my moms car has WIT-CH (first 2 letters of her first name). Funniest plate I remember to have seen one time was ST-FU
Oh great. You can also translate "Ente" to "canard", what is French for "duck" and that is why we use "Ente" that way, but it also means Fakenews or something similar. Maybe it is the best to read the English definition of "canard". And yes it is also the bird and we often use animal names as insults. "Ente" is an insult for a person that is clumsy and lazy, or that is ambitious in talking and lazy in actually doing.
@@mixlllllll If the temperature is high enough, and the relative humidity is high enough, it's the not being able to cool by sweating that kills you, in the sense of causing literal death... wet-bulb globe temperature / Kühlgrenztemperatur
Imagine 90s sunny, no wind, no clouds and the village two miles away needs to be rescued from the flooding caused by the HEAVY rainfalls that night… Nights currently are in the upper 70s, daytime shade at 90s (more like 95+), no wind, ongoing floods due to HEAVY rain the last weeks (humidity between just shy of 70% climbing to 90% (anywhere remotely cooler or wetter gets almost 100%) and basically no AC as that has only really been a feature built in the last decade or so and thus wasn’t a consideration in 90% of the buildings and in Germany, and especially DB (rail company) having enormous issues with their AC at temperatures above 90F, so you’re stuck in a tin can filled to the gills with sweating people, burning in the sun without AC…
Imagine 90s sunny, no wind, no clouds and the village two miles away needs to be rescued from the flooding caused by the HEAVY rainfalls that night… Nights currently are in the upper 70s, daytime shade at 90s (more like 95+), no wind, ongoing floods due to HEAVY rain the last weeks (humidity between just shy of 70% climbing to 90% (anywhere remotely cooler or wetter gets almost 100%) and basically no AC as that has only really been a feature built in the last decade or so and thus wasn’t a consideration in 90% of the buildings and in Germany, and especially DB (rail company) having enormous issues with their AC at temperatures above 90F, so you’re stuck in a tin can filled to the gills with sweating people, burning in the sun without AC…
I don't get why people are complaining. You get a 25ct discount thing for the shop, and the toilet gets cleaned. Need I remind you how toilets that are free to use look like on the Autobahn? I'd rather take a shit in the bushes sometimes.
@@ImNotQualifiedToSayThisBut To clarify: I tried to explain what Sanifair in this meme is. That doesn't mean that I agree with the meme. I'm not against pay-to-pee toilets.
13:40 Abischerz or Abschlusstreich is a prank that the graduation class plays to their school staff somewhere around the final exams. In my graduation year we asked the janitor for the keys to the main entrance and then hid it in one of 200 something plastic cups filled with diluted acrylic coulours. We then had our teachers answer a pop culture quiz and for every correct answer we took away some of the cups. They then had to look for the key in the remaining cups getting their fingers all dirty. Of course all the students of the lower grades also watched them crawling on the floor getting messy because classes couldn't start until they opened the front door. The year before built a laser labyrinth using red wool threads with bells attached between the teacher break room and the main entrance and had the teachers get to their morning coffee Mission Impossible style. 😅
At my school Abistreich meant no classes. The Abi class would meet every year at night before it, build a huge cage under one part of the school building (there was a newer building part that had no ground floor but a first floor, so they built it underneath). Then they would build the rest of the things for their program (like a stage, a climbing area, etc, that would vary every year, only the cage was a constant). Starting from around 5am the abi students would start to patrol the area around the school to catch as many teachers as possible, put handcuffs on them and lead them into the cage where they had to sit till the Abistreich was over, which would last till at least 1pm. If the teachers needed to use the bathroom, they had to ask one of the students guarding them and ask for permission into the microphone, so everybody on the school ground and 500m beyond would hear it. But at pretty much every entertainment program they would pull out at least one teacher who had to participate in whatever they would come up with. The younger students were actually free to join the Abistreich activities or go home. Most kids would at least stay till the traditional school papers burning at noon.
For our Abistreich, we had a TON of sand (probably literally ...) carted to our school that we used to transform the school yard into a "beach" and played "Baywatch". I still see us standing there after, shoveling the sand back onto the truck ... *lol* Worth it. Everyone LOVED Abistreich because, most of the time, there were no classes all morning, and the principal more often than not would cancel afternoon classes, too, so basically everyone got a day off school to party with the Abiturienten instead.
@@veladarney😅😂 That's hilarious. You know the tradition that unmarried 30 year old men have to clean a public space with a broom? A friend of mine was surprised by his dad - who is a truck driver for a construction company - with half a truckload of sand. He told me he did a similar thing on a friend's wedding some years before when he reversed his dump truck to the spot where they smashed the ceramics on Polterabend. First he opened the rear and out fell a single cup. Everyone laughed in relief. Then he raised the truck bed. He said he even had a toilet bowl and a sink in there. 😅
Schleswig Holstein has been Danish, Prussian, German, and even Austrian at some point in History. Some way back the Germanic tribes, the Vikings and the Holy Roman Empire had some say, too.
German grading is done with numbers instead of letters. The lower the number, the better. A 1.0 is the best grade and a 6.0 is the worst grade (which you can basically only get if you get literally everything wrong or don't even hand in your assignment). Generally speaking, a 4.0 or lower is considered a passing grade, so that's the equivalent of a C- or a D. So the guy in the meme is basically not celebrating that hr got a good or a passing grade, but that his failing grade wasn't as bad as it could have been.
Or maybe Germans need to realize that ACs aren't the devil and start buying them. They are also cheap to run (with a dynamic tariff) because there is now so much solar overcapacity that electricity prices go down when it's sunny.
@@andy1977 I agree. My preference would be an AC that can both cool and heat. But I live for rent and there's no chance to get an AC here. And there are people like my mother who hate it because it dehumidifies the air (or something like that). Also you have very little influence whether your employee installs one at your workplace. Quite often it's simply not your choice.
Fun fact. AC has contributed greatly to the fact that more and more people need AC. This is called the dealer-addict relationship or in short: 'MERICA!!11
@@andy1977 Energy prices are quite high here in Germany and not everyone can afford to have an AC running for most of the time. So the answer to that would be "Die Stromkosten will ich aber nicht bezahlen" when we see people using them. Furthermore, not everyone has access to solar power. Yes, we have partly solar power in our energy system, but it's not that much. And for example in cities where AC would make the most sense because of the heating effects of cities, there is not much space to have your own solar voltaic system. In the countryside it's easier when you have your own house and garden, but in the cities most people only rent a flat, so they don't own the place. And in the countryside it's most often cooler so you don't need an AC as much as in the city. There is also the habituation effect, so if you would buy an AC you will have problems in the future living without one because of the effect. So probably most of us are better off without an AC. And also, we Germans love to complain a lot about the smaller things in life☺️
@@andy1977 we got a mobile A/C, because we live in an appartement directly underneath the roof and the A/C is just enough to cool one room down to 26°C and pull out the humidity, when it's 30+°C outside. Changing rooms is still like entering an oven. There are so many horribly insulated buildings.
The weird wooden construct around the woman is a "Gehzeug", the closest translation would approximately be "walkhicle". It basically asserts that if car drivers take the liberty to use that much space (the surface area of a car), then pedestrians should have the right to take up the same amount of space as well. The concept was created by Prof. Dr. Knoflacher of the Vienna University of Technology. He is known for his bold and provoking concepts. A friend of mine actually got to use a Gehzeug once.
Just remember: Germany´s southern border lies on the similar latitude as Quebec City (Canada approx 47° N) and its northern border nearly reaches the latitude of Fort McMurray (Canada approx 55° N), so traditionally it was at least a bit cooler there...
Altitude alone would make you think it's cooler here, but non Europeans tend to forget the power of the Gulf Stream, plus geothermal heat. I live in Freiburg im Breisgau, french border to the west, Black Forest mountain range to the east and Alps to the south. We are on a geothermal hotspot and in July you can literally see the air flicker from heat coming from the ground. At 30°C it already gets harder to breath, as the air is not only extremely humid but also thick. Not to mention, temperatures rarely drop below 20°C at night in summer. And yeah, air con (or lack of it) is becoming a real problem here. Honestly, I don't even remember the last time i saw snow here.
Although it is quite a bit warmer than Quebec City because of the Gulf Stream. The nothern coast of europe is actively warmed by water directly from the gulf of mexico.
hast du was an den ohren? finde es ist sogar schlechter geworden. der sollte sich mal ein video anschauen, wie man die einzelnen buchstaben, diphtongs und so ausspricht. mittlerweile sollte er doch gerafft haben, dass man z.b. "die" wie "dee" ausspricht und nicht wie engl. "sterben"
Dafür, dass er keine Kenntnisse besitzt, die ihm die Aussprache erleichtern, ist es gar nicht schlecht. Ich bin gerade dabei Koreanisch und Griechisch zu lernen. Beim Koreanischen hab ich echt Probleme.
14:36 A better translation might be "refined to perfection - perished in full nobility". The German text is simply a spoonerism or shaking rhyme (Schüttelreim) like the Germans say. Like "When I'm cooking it's like 'Breaking Bad', while in your kitchen you're just baking bread."
13:00 the grading system goes from 1 to 6 in germany, and 6 is the worst grade (1 means very good, 2 means good, 3 means satisfying, 4 means enough, 5 means inadequate and 6 means not enough). If you get a 5 in your Certificate, you fail except you can compensate it with another grade. If you get two times a 5, you fail and have to repeat the class
10:52 this is referring to a very popular German meme which you even reacted to in a video where a man called "Rüdiger", also the surname of the German player seen here, is flying an rc plane and makes the owner crazy because of his dangerous maneuvers and ao he says "Nicht so tief Rüdiger, keine Kapriolen!" Memes like this have exploded since Rüdiger shot the own goal against Scotland at the EM
30+°C is a problem in germany, since most of the time it's very humid. Combine this with bad insulation and no A/C, the building just never cools off, so you're tired from the heat AND can't sleep at night. Also when you shower, sometimes you just can't get dry due to the humidity.
People explained 30 degrees and humidity already. Also keep in mind that most Americans sit in cars and houses all day long, having an AC. They barely experience weather as it is.
@@neutronenstern.My stuff is open for 4-5 months at a time. Nothing is touched and fans are running everywhere and that's still way too hot for most people to want to be in. Spain in June and July seems fine to me, but Denmark is way warmer to me. Even Americans living here say Denmark is unbearable compared to the US. It's a humidity thing. We don't care about USA heat, it's Denmark that's the problem. We even have a reality show about a summer hotel, and the lady says Americans can't handle the danish rooms as they're way too much for them and the AC stuff the hotel buys are not good enough for the Americans. My place is almost 90 square meters and I feel like it's tiny room at the y in London.
Your pronounciation gets better and better, Ryan! - Deine Aussprache wird besser und besser, Ryan! Your german interpretations(adhoc translation) is improving as well, which makes us really happy :) For the weather in germany: Radiohosts try to overly optimistically sell the heat as "comfortable"(angenehm), which goes against the usual german pessimistic mindset of workers, who hear radio while to and fro work. On that note 86F here in germany are quite humid which makes it less beareable. Love you ryan
Germany is just not that strong. They only won against Denmark because they got the penalty and later were in good spirit for the next goal. The Swiss are a good team. Germany won't reach the semi final.
@@Leenapantheri agree that our team is nowhere near where we were in 2014 or prior and i also agree that we will most likely lose to spain, but that referee was some bullshit. Go watch the game. I wouldnt even say he was biased, as he made a lot of bullshit decisions against switzerland as well. He was just really really bad.
the whole point about the heat complaints is, that we don’t have AC in our houses. That’s the hard part, outside you get cooked, inside you have a sauna. The few ways to cool down are going to the public swimming pool, Go shopping in malls (which have mostly AC), take a cold shower, or drive your car with AC on (which is really bad for the environment in the long run, but still sometimes you have to )
What you're not getting is the humidity here. We had 28 degrees Celsius here 2 nights ago and I was dying. Opened both windows next to me and had doors to the balcony open too, and sleep with nothing touching me apart from a wet towel all night. Had to do that for most summers in the last 10 years. I don't mind 30 if I'm outside, but don't want it inside..
I was a bit embarrassed to fall ill on vacation. But I also took sick leave because I was just lying in bed for a week. I must have fallen ill on the previous business trip.
School grades in Germany are reverse to those in the US. Here 1 is the best grade, and 6 is the worst. So a 4 is kinda meh - but not too bad if you expected a 5... :)
12:28 In germany, there is no GPA, the average is calculated from the actual grades, which goes from 1 (like english A) to 6 (english F). + grades are 0.3 points better (like 0.7 = 1+, 1.7 = 2+), - grades are 0.3 points worse (1.3 = 1-), think of it as one or two thirds. In higher education the grade is shown in a different number system ranging from 15,14,13 points for a 1+, 1, 1- all the way to 0 which is a grade 6, but its the same grade just in a different format. 5 points (grade 4) is the minimum required to pass a class. Hence, the 2nd place in the picture barely passed at all, while the 3rd place definitely failed, since 4.7 is too low of a grade. german grades 1-6 have their own names too: 1 = "sehr gut" / "very good", 2 = "gut" / "good", 3 = "befriedigend" / "satisfactory", 4 = "ausreichend" / "sufficient", 5 = "mangelhaft" / "lacking", 6 = "ungenügend" / "insufficient" side note: technically it is possible to graduate with an average of 0.7, if you get 1+ or A+ in every class.
7:08 the game at the soccer euro between the czech and turkish team ended with 5 yellow and 2 red cards for the czechs and 11 yellow cards for the turks.
I also love heat. However today it was hot and humid. Humidity peaked today at 98%. When it was like at 85% outside, we brought some empty glass bottles outside (not cooled bottles) And then instantly water condensed. This i never ever saw before. It feels like being in a greenhouse if you go outside right now. I guess this is because it rained a lot in the last days and now it evaporates.
Meine Klimaanlage braucht zum Entfeuchten 200 Watt. Wenn die 5 Stunden läuft, sind das 1 kWh = 30 Cent pro Tag. Dank Balkonkraftwerk ganz genau 0 Cent.
Nah it has something to do with our air. I've been to florida in the middle of summer where it was over 40°C and it was way easier to handle than 30°C in europe. Florida is way more humid so this doesnt make sense, but its what i experienced
so Ente - means both duck - the animal, and canard - the fake story, mostly in print media... and of course refers to Donald Duck... and Enten schnattern ... so quack - but also gaggle, chatter, gibber, babble
2:55 The German word for vehicle is "Fahrzeug" which literally means driving stuff. The sign on her construction says "Gehzeug" which means walking stuff. It's supposed to demonstrate how much more space a person driving a car takes up compared to a pedestrian. I guess she's protesting for less cars and more pedestrian zones in the city. Also this is in Austria, not Germany.
14:10 Sanifair is the "pay per sh*t" company running a big part of the bathrooms at german rest stations on the Autobahn... 15:17 "Ente" is also a word for news or a message that turns out to be untrue...
The meme about Rüdiger is a reference to a famous old video of some man and his son Rüdiger flying an RC plane. The man let's his son Rüdiger have the controls and for the whole video yells at Rüdiger to be careful, not fly too low and so on. It's quite funny how anxious he is. Also the football player in the photo is a German defender, who scored an own-goal in the first game of the European championship.
Yes, in Germany you get your vacation days back if you where sick during it. But we don't have sick days, so, there's no limit per se, when your sick, you're sick. (After 6 weeks though you have to visit a different doctor and get a bit less money, for as long an youre sick. But your job is save.)
10:51 This refers to the German meme of the RC guy who has his friend Rüdiger fly his brandnew model airplane and constantly yells at him because he flies too deep, too near to the haybales, a road sign or does loopings and corkscrew maneuvers.
To learn about an effective method to heat your home, cook, and bake with one wood fire, check out German Kachelofen. In English it is called Masonry stove or Ceramic stove
Compare same with same: in Germany, 30° it feels so more warm because of the high humidity; after rain comes sun, and at a minimum, temperatures of 30°C.
30 degrees in Spain is, as far as I have heard, something completely different than 30 degrees in Germany, so I would be interested to know how 30 degrees in Indiana compares to 30 degrees in Germany. Has something to do with humidity, among other things
As it's getting hotter, A/C sales are rocketing around the world. A/Cs pump out tons of C02 emissions, so because of A/Cs, the future will be so hot A/Cs won't be good enough!
In Germany, 30°C often come with a lot of humidity like yesterday. Here in southern Germany it was 33°C at the afternoon with a relativ humidity of about 85% which make it more or less comapreable to e.g. Miami. It wasn't fun at all. This is what it makes it annoying, not the 30-33°C itself. And ofc due to the lack of AC I had 30°C in my living room still at 11 p.m (living under the roof). The thing is, I would like to install an AC I even ask the landlord but while renting the apartment he did not allow it to me even thou I would pay it myself
Hol dir eine mobile Klimaanlage, aber eine mit 2 Schläuchen. Und dazu ein Kit um die Schläuche beim Fenster raus zu hängen und die Lücke abzudichten. Gibt's zb beim Pearl Versand. Der Channel Technology Connections hat dazu mal ein Video gemacht (vor paar Jahren), wo er erklärt warum das System mit den 2 Schläuchen so viel besser ist. Hab mir darum genau so eine gekauft. Die Schläuche dann noch isolieren und dann ist fein und du musst den Vermieter nicht fragen und kannst sie in die nächste Wohnung mitnehmen. Hab rund 600 für meine gezahlt. Ist nicht ganz so gut wie eine Splitanlage, aber DEUTLICH besser als die Anlagen mit nur 1 Schlauch.
As a US girl living in Germany, it is sooo funny to see how you discover the German language. If you ever need help with the "insiders"; I'm here 😅 Translation is not localization.... Love your videos ❤
13:54 Sanifair is a provider for public toilets. Many people claim without the privatisation of Autobahn rest stations - most went to Sanifair's parent company Tank&Rast - the toilet use would still be free of charge. Which in the eyes of someone in desperate need of a pee rummaging in their wallet for a 1 Euro coin to unlock the turnstile may look like utopia.
Ryan, your German prononciation is improving steadily! A few small tips to tweak it: • The double vowel "ei" is usually pronounced like the English i • The double vowel "ie" is like an English "ee" • "eu" is usually a sound like "oy".
4:00 AC is the exception in residential homes in germany. anything above mid-20°C is unbearable, because of the fact the most buildings are build with bricks over here and store heat quite long. It's nothing special to have days after days of 25°C indoors. And if it rains.. you just add humidity to the already miserable situation.
9:51 It doesn't say movie but move. So they're moving and realise that the date is already next week and they haven't packed or asked their friends for help or booked a transporter or something like that.
I'm not sure, if Ryan reacted to the "Rüdiger! Nicht so tief!" meme. And yeah "running a 5k" sounds way more dramatic, than going jogging for half an hour. Been there done that 🤣
7:10 - No. That was the last group match at the EURO and the referee gave 18 yellow and 2 red cards.The winner was in next round, the loser was out of Euro. Every card referee gave was correct, but he didnt show enough. 8:50 - KUH-1 ; Kuh is german for cow. 13:30 - Abischerz: Pupil passed the last class of highschool get their "Abitur" short: Abi. And than they do party and some jokes called "Abistreich" or "Abischerz" (Abi-jokes). If I remember correctly we placed bale of hay in front of every door. On the photo it obvis went wrong.
sth to consider about the complains about temperature: how hot it feels to you does not only depend on how hot it is but also on how humid it is. Germany tipically is very humid and 30°+ temperatures feel way hotter in germany compared to other countries. A friend of mine was in egypt for example (very dry air) and told me that 45°-50°C in egypt felt like 35°C in germany
3:41 Fun fact: what actually helps is drinking warm salvia tea. Sounds weird, but your body is getting warmer by eating ice cream, similar goes for cold showering. Your body temperature should be way above 30°C and cooling it down from the inside just makes your body work harder to compensate for that. Drinking something warm on the other hand lowers the heat production of your body so it has to get rid of less heat and you feel colder. Salvia also helps by reducing the amount you sweat, by tightening the sweat glands.
@@ownageDan First of all: I am not a doctor, i might be wrong. But second: I never had issues with heat with such a treatment. *As far as i know*, heat is mostly "felt" not necessary needed to cool down. Especially at 30°C. It is still way cooler than the normal body temperature. So why would you need to cool it down? Or asked the other way around: How many people do you think died on using deodorant(correctly)? Because it does basically the same. So back to the 30°C - this is not a deadly temperature. In the opposite, this is basically the temperature we are meant to live in. Of course we don't feel that comfortable anymore if we grew up in northern hemispheres like europe or northern america or something like that, but always thing of it that way: There are people that don't die and live in deserts at 50°C. On the other hand there are people dying on heat stroke. But even they don't die because it is 30°C, they die because their body temperature overcame 40°C. But 30°C outside cannot be responsible for 40°C inside.(It can, but it is pretty uncommon - like one in a centillion, thermodynamics is more statistical than most of the people think...) So they usually die because they do hard work while it is hot outside or they are unable to transfer heat from the inside.Or there are other effects that accumulate the heat. But physically there is no way known to me to die because of a 30°C temperature outside, without other stuff complicating it. If you know some - let me know. 🙂 So you are right: Turning it off would be very, very bad. But Salvia doesn't turn it off. It just tightens the channels, it tells the body to spare stuff. I don't know or understand the full process, but it doesn't sound like you cannot adopt to it, if it is really, really necessary.
Constantin Film movies are usually German productions, and a lot of them are really mid. They are either about the Holocaust in some way, or they feature the same 4 German actors playing the same role everytime. Sometimes both.
About the air conditioner: a lot of Germans don't use one cause they think it makes them sick. (At least I and some people I know get headaches and feel dizzy from them)
6:2x: Quite close, it's Germany's national Football (soccer) coach and his assistant. 12:20. You saw that guy when you reacted to "Max & Moritz", the teacher whose pipe they blew up.
4:05 and to make it worse the way your typical German house is build the thick walls heat up after a couple of days and radiate off the heat even when it's colder outside leading to a 'fun game' of trying to keep the heat outside as long as possible. Depending on how you live of course. Ground floor with a couple of stories above you it's fine but any person who ever lived in an attic apartment (worst case, dark non-reflective tiles on the roof and old or no isolation) will understand the agony.
Right now it'S 30° where I life with a humidity of 68%. The humiditi will go up to 90% in the night. It's not nice when everything you touch feels damp, your cloths don't dry and breathing is hard. I can't tolerate heat at all. I'm happy with 18-20°C Maybe 22° if it's a rainy/cloudy day. When it's hot, I always get migranes, have trouble breathing (Asthma) and feel ill altogether. Like being nauseous or dizzy. And yes. I stay in the shade (as sun for long periods on my skins feels like a burn - without having a sunburn. Just the feeling of a really hot coffee cup against your skin. Burning and unpleasent), I always carry water with me and drink lots. Doesn't help ^^° Summer is my least favourite season due to the heat. I love winter, as it's not hot then (and there are less spiders XD), even though my joints hurt a lot when they get to cold xD
7:15 Why is Ryan, as an American, so pissed off that he has to leave the room and I, as a German, can almost laugh myself to death about it and don't even know what his problem is?
Schleswig Holstein , big region bordering denmark, was alo in past part of denmark as a country under danish royalty, danish royalty is one big branch if european royalty. , the region is now under german teritory, has now danish subculture and even a political party with danes for the subculture. The football match could lead to new and old ideas 😂😂😂 Summer in germany is 'best weekend" of the year, its short, houses are well isolated, no need for a/c lol.
When it's 30° outside In a house made of stone it's easily just 20° without any ac. Just keep the windows closed over the day and open them when the air outside is cooling down. No energy, perfect temperature.
You prefer 100 degrees? Would you still say that, if you didn't have AC at home and at the office? If you went by bike or train (again without AC) and if you usually walk to the grocery store? Just wondering 😅
12:15: Some Germans say something like "The house must cost a mille", meaning "a million". In fact, "mille" means "thousand" in Italian or, even better, Latin. Such people want to say something cool, but only prove their low level of education.
Not all Houses are allowed to have AC's, for example: Old Buildings that are under Monument protection/Historic preservation. Even if you have to renovate your Roof, for example, they dictate, WHICH TILES you are allowed to use and which not! We had that problem and had to choose MORE EXPENSIVE ones. So Installing a AC could destroy "The overall Picture of the House" which wouldn't be allowed. On the Other site: Germany wants us to renovate and build climate friendly and save energy which is EXTREMELY HARD with all the stipulations you have to look out for. You even could get FINED if you install something that isn't allowed AND you have to Unistall it on your own costs. So the only Solution would be a Mobile AC... which are mostly only for small Rooms, therefore you have to buy around 2-3 of those, depending on the size of your home. And those are expensive to maintain...
This always seemed so, so strange to me. I didn'T look to much into this (i.e. the justification) but why some random house in some random villiage in rural saxony or something is "historical" and needs to be perseved is beyond me. Don'T get me wrong, I get a couple of them, I get why we keep castles and churches and maybe, sometimes, a Fachwerkhaus. But just some random house? Really strange to me.
Oh boy... ch is hard H z is ts tz (die Katze) is harder ts i+e is long i (misspelled in English as "double e" like "keep", S when it is followed by a vowel is pronounced as Z (for example "sie" is pronounced as Z + long i) S at the end of the word is S double S is a longer S ß (scharfes s) = longer "s" too. (archaic) "s" before p or T is "sh" "Sch" is always "sh"
It's always so weird seeing Ryan stand up, because in my mind he kind of only exists as a head and torso.
I think he's decided that leaving the room is funny and not just a boring filler..
@@ebbhead20 It's ok if he doesn't do it too frequently. Keep in mind that not everyone watches every single episode.
To explain Segeberg and SE-XY:
In Germany, license plates start with letters indicating your place of living. Hansestadt Rostock has HRO, Leipzig has L and Westerstede has WST, for example. Many Germans either choose their initials and date of birth to follow or include their local letters to make up fun words. I saw a lot of L-OL license plates in Leipzig, for example. Segeberg has SE as a local indicator, so lots of people apparently choose their license plate to read SE-XY.
Same around, where I live. S-AU, S-EX, ES-EL. I once saw ES-EX105. When you read it fast, it sounds like E605. 😂
WST (Wir sind Trottel) ist nicht "nur" Westerstede. Es ist das ganze Ammerland, so heißt dann auch der Landkreis.
Well, down here near Ansbach you get the occasional AN-AL
Our town has WIT, so we see a lot of WIT-ZE here.... my moms car has WIT-CH (first 2 letters of her first name). Funniest plate I remember to have seen one time was ST-FU
@@Ossey1976 In our Landkreis teachers have to go to school, cause they can´t write their job correct: LER - ER xxx
8:45 KUH-1 translates to cow-1. So it's Tiger, Alligator and Cow.
Fun fact: more people die from cow attacks than from shark attacks.
"Ente" stands for "NT" (not testified) in press, possibly fake news.
Litteraly "Ente" translates to "duck".
Oh great. You can also translate "Ente" to "canard", what is French for "duck" and that is why we use "Ente" that way, but it also means Fakenews or something similar. Maybe it is the best to read the English definition of "canard".
And yes it is also the bird and we often use animal names as insults.
"Ente" is an insult for a person that is clumsy and lazy, or that is ambitious in talking and lazy in actually doing.
I love the pun when someone yells: "Duck!"
Do not forget about Donald Duck
Or run around like Ralph Wiggum "Duck Duck Duck"
30° - it's not the temperature that offs you. Its the humidity.
(I think i geard that from a Floridian once.)
If by humidity you mean sweating 😂
THE Kentucky guy said that shortly ago:)
i'm dying at 30° whether it's humid or not. Yes, it's worse with high humidity but if it's >25° i'm deadge regardless
@@mixlllllll If the temperature is high enough, and the relative humidity is high enough, it's the not being able to cool by sweating that kills you, in the sense of causing literal death... wet-bulb globe temperature / Kühlgrenztemperatur
@@yannick-was-taken I know, but sweating is annoying 😁
86 degrees Fahrenheit in a dry climate can be very different from 86 degrees Fahrenheit in a more humid climate.
It's been the high 90s all summer here in North Carolina, and it's always very humid with no wind. Also lots of bugs. :(
@@asahearts1here in lower franconia 86 degrees means that the Air feels as sultry as in the rain forest
@@soewenue you know, that 90%+ humidity is like green house or even more?
Imagine 90s sunny, no wind, no clouds and the village two miles away needs to be rescued from the flooding caused by the HEAVY rainfalls that night…
Nights currently are in the upper 70s, daytime shade at 90s (more like 95+), no wind, ongoing floods due to HEAVY rain the last weeks (humidity between just shy of 70% climbing to 90% (anywhere remotely cooler or wetter gets almost 100%) and basically no AC as that has only really been a feature built in the last decade or so and thus wasn’t a consideration in 90% of the buildings and in Germany, and especially DB (rail company) having enormous issues with their AC at temperatures above 90F, so you’re stuck in a tin can filled to the gills with sweating people, burning in the sun without AC…
Imagine 90s sunny, no wind, no clouds and the village two miles away needs to be rescued from the flooding caused by the HEAVY rainfalls that night…
Nights currently are in the upper 70s, daytime shade at 90s (more like 95+), no wind, ongoing floods due to HEAVY rain the last weeks (humidity between just shy of 70% climbing to 90% (anywhere remotely cooler or wetter gets almost 100%) and basically no AC as that has only really been a feature built in the last decade or so and thus wasn’t a consideration in 90% of the buildings and in Germany, and especially DB (rail company) having enormous issues with their AC at temperatures above 90F, so you’re stuck in a tin can filled to the gills with sweating people, burning in the sun without AC…
14:17 No, Sanifair is the company, that makes you pay for using a bathroom.
Which is also why those bathrooms are ok and not... questionable.
So the person that made the meme thinks free stuff would be better? How american.
I don't get why people are complaining. You get a 25ct discount thing for the shop, and the toilet gets cleaned. Need I remind you how toilets that are free to use look like on the Autobahn? I'd rather take a shit in the bushes sometimes.
@@ImNotQualifiedToSayThisBut To clarify: I tried to explain what Sanifair in this meme is. That doesn't mean that I agree with the meme. I'm not against pay-to-pee toilets.
@@dnocturn84 fair enough, apologies for assuming
@@ImNotQualifiedToSayThisBut No problemo! Cheers!
13:40 Abischerz or Abschlusstreich is a prank that the graduation class plays to their school staff somewhere around the final exams.
In my graduation year we asked the janitor for the keys to the main entrance and then hid it in one of 200 something plastic cups filled with diluted acrylic coulours. We then had our teachers answer a pop culture quiz and for every correct answer we took away some of the cups. They then had to look for the key in the remaining cups getting their fingers all dirty. Of course all the students of the lower grades also watched them crawling on the floor getting messy because classes couldn't start until they opened the front door.
The year before built a laser labyrinth using red wool threads with bells attached between the teacher break room and the main entrance and had the teachers get to their morning coffee Mission Impossible style. 😅
At my school Abistreich meant no classes. The Abi class would meet every year at night before it, build a huge cage under one part of the school building (there was a newer building part that had no ground floor but a first floor, so they built it underneath). Then they would build the rest of the things for their program (like a stage, a climbing area, etc, that would vary every year, only the cage was a constant).
Starting from around 5am the abi students would start to patrol the area around the school to catch as many teachers as possible, put handcuffs on them and lead them into the cage where they had to sit till the Abistreich was over, which would last till at least 1pm. If the teachers needed to use the bathroom, they had to ask one of the students guarding them and ask for permission into the microphone, so everybody on the school ground and 500m beyond would hear it. But at pretty much every entertainment program they would pull out at least one teacher who had to participate in whatever they would come up with.
The younger students were actually free to join the Abistreich activities or go home. Most kids would at least stay till the traditional school papers burning at noon.
My Abischerz did not take place because of the year before…
For our Abistreich, we had a TON of sand (probably literally ...) carted to our school that we used to transform the school yard into a "beach" and played "Baywatch". I still see us standing there after, shoveling the sand back onto the truck ... *lol* Worth it. Everyone LOVED Abistreich because, most of the time, there were no classes all morning, and the principal more often than not would cancel afternoon classes, too, so basically everyone got a day off school to party with the Abiturienten instead.
@@veladarney😅😂 That's hilarious.
You know the tradition that unmarried 30 year old men have to clean a public space with a broom?
A friend of mine was surprised by his dad - who is a truck driver for a construction company - with half a truckload of sand.
He told me he did a similar thing on a friend's wedding some years before when he reversed his dump truck to the spot where they smashed the ceramics on Polterabend. First he opened the rear and out fell a single cup. Everyone laughed in relief. Then he raised the truck bed. He said he even had a toilet bowl and a sink in there. 😅
@@TheMrMaxxOh my god! What did they do? 😮
Schleswig Holstein has been Danish, Prussian, German, and even Austrian at some point in History. Some way back the Germanic tribes, the Vikings and the Holy Roman Empire had some say, too.
And we still have a danish minority here. And a German minority in Denmark. Quite a lot of similarities culturally too
About the radio moderator one: The meme calls them out for complaining when it gets hot, but never saying it's pleasant outside when it is.
German grading is done with numbers instead of letters. The lower the number, the better.
A 1.0 is the best grade and a 6.0 is the worst grade (which you can basically only get if you get literally everything wrong or don't even hand in your assignment).
Generally speaking, a 4.0 or lower is considered a passing grade, so that's the equivalent of a C- or a D.
So the guy in the meme is basically not celebrating that hr got a good or a passing grade, but that his failing grade wasn't as bad as it could have been.
I've written it several times :
Pronounce
ie - > ee like in bee
ei - > I like in I or why
I remember him getting it right at least once
0:52 Turn your air conditioner off for a year and then repeat that.
Or maybe Germans need to realize that ACs aren't the devil and start buying them. They are also cheap to run (with a dynamic tariff) because there is now so much solar overcapacity that electricity prices go down when it's sunny.
@@andy1977 I agree. My preference would be an AC that can both cool and heat. But I live for rent and there's no chance to get an AC here. And there are people like my mother who hate it because it dehumidifies the air (or something like that). Also you have very little influence whether your employee installs one at your workplace.
Quite often it's simply not your choice.
Fun fact. AC has contributed greatly to the fact that more and more people need AC. This is called the dealer-addict relationship or in short: 'MERICA!!11
@@andy1977 Energy prices are quite high here in Germany and not everyone can afford to have an AC running for most of the time. So the answer to that would be "Die Stromkosten will ich aber nicht bezahlen" when we see people using them. Furthermore, not everyone has access to solar power. Yes, we have partly solar power in our energy system, but it's not that much. And for example in cities where AC would make the most sense because of the heating effects of cities, there is not much space to have your own solar voltaic system. In the countryside it's easier when you have your own house and garden, but in the cities most people only rent a flat, so they don't own the place. And in the countryside it's most often cooler so you don't need an AC as much as in the city. There is also the habituation effect, so if you would buy an AC you will have problems in the future living without one because of the effect. So probably most of us are better off without an AC. And also, we Germans love to complain a lot about the smaller things in life☺️
@@andy1977 we got a mobile A/C, because we live in an appartement directly underneath the roof and the A/C is just enough to cool one room down to 26°C and pull out the humidity, when it's 30+°C outside. Changing rooms is still like entering an oven. There are so many horribly insulated buildings.
The weird wooden construct around the woman is a "Gehzeug", the closest translation would approximately be "walkhicle".
It basically asserts that if car drivers take the liberty to use that much space (the surface area of a car), then pedestrians should have the right to take up the same amount of space as well.
The concept was created by Prof. Dr. Knoflacher of the Vienna University of Technology.
He is known for his bold and provoking concepts.
A friend of mine actually got to use a Gehzeug once.
Danke für die Erklärung😅😅👌🏼🙏🏼
Just remember: Germany´s southern border lies on the similar latitude as Quebec City (Canada approx 47° N) and its northern border nearly reaches the latitude of Fort McMurray (Canada approx 55° N), so traditionally it was at least a bit cooler there...
Also we have way higher humidity and don't use ACs
@@Keksemann666 *nods to the ACs
Altitude alone would make you think it's cooler here, but non Europeans tend to forget the power of the Gulf Stream, plus geothermal heat.
I live in Freiburg im Breisgau, french border to the west, Black Forest mountain range to the east and Alps to the south.
We are on a geothermal hotspot and in July you can literally see the air flicker from heat coming from the ground. At 30°C it already gets harder to breath, as the air is not only extremely humid but also thick. Not to mention, temperatures rarely drop below 20°C at night in summer. And yeah, air con (or lack of it) is becoming a real problem here. Honestly, I don't even remember the last time i saw snow here.
Although it is quite a bit warmer than Quebec City because of the Gulf Stream. The nothern coast of europe is actively warmed by water directly from the gulf of mexico.
To drive that home, also be aware that even New York is on about the same latitude as Rome in Italy. In fact, it's even slightly more south than Rome.
Americans saying yeah 86Fahrenheit isn't that warm while still claiming you should by an AC even though it is "not warm" xD
They figure at 12. 19, is the teacher Lempel, from the Max and Moritz book.
Did you mean 12:19
Ryan is getting really good at: Deutsche Ausprache, respekt.
hast du was an den ohren?
finde es ist sogar schlechter geworden.
der sollte sich mal ein video anschauen, wie man die einzelnen buchstaben, diphtongs und so ausspricht.
mittlerweile sollte er doch gerafft haben, dass man z.b. "die" wie "dee" ausspricht und nicht wie engl. "sterben"
@@CodeNascher_ich glaube es war ironisch gemeint
Aussprache*
Wenn ich Ryan öfter zuhöre, glaube ich, eine neue Sprache zu hören
Dafür, dass er keine Kenntnisse besitzt, die ihm die Aussprache erleichtern, ist es gar nicht schlecht.
Ich bin gerade dabei Koreanisch und Griechisch zu lernen. Beim Koreanischen hab ich echt Probleme.
14:36 A better translation might be "refined to perfection - perished in full nobility". The German text is simply a spoonerism or shaking rhyme (Schüttelreim) like the Germans say.
Like "When I'm cooking it's like 'Breaking Bad', while in your kitchen you're just baking bread."
13:00 the grading system goes from 1 to 6 in germany, and 6 is the worst grade (1 means very good, 2 means good, 3 means satisfying, 4 means enough, 5 means inadequate and 6 means not enough). If you get a 5 in your Certificate, you fail except you can compensate it with another grade. If you get two times a 5, you fail and have to repeat the class
The referee giving lots of Warnings (yellow card) meme is really funny. Watched the match. It was brutal.
7:48 It means "how he puts mayonaise on your Döner".
Döner are served with sauces on a yoghurt base like cacik or spicy red sauce - not freaking mayo!
10:52 this is referring to a very popular German meme which you even reacted to in a video where a man called "Rüdiger", also the surname of the German player seen here, is flying an rc plane and makes the owner crazy because of his dangerous maneuvers and ao he says "Nicht so tief Rüdiger, keine Kapriolen!" Memes like this have exploded since Rüdiger shot the own goal against Scotland at the EM
30+°C is a problem in germany, since most of the time it's very humid. Combine this with bad insulation and no A/C, the building just never cools off, so you're tired from the heat AND can't sleep at night. Also when you shower, sometimes you just can't get dry due to the humidity.
People explained 30 degrees and humidity already.
Also keep in mind that most Americans sit in cars and houses all day long, having an AC. They barely experience weather as it is.
86 Degrees F is not much for you, right? But remember, we don't have AC 😭
still nice temp in our home.
You just need to do good temperature management with opening windows in the morning, and closing Rolladen all day.
OR LIVE IN A FREAKING DIFF CONTENT;> U know we have Celsius not fahrenheit thats a huge differentces😊
@@neutronenstern.My stuff is open for 4-5 months at a time. Nothing is touched and fans are running everywhere and that's still way too hot for most people to want to be in. Spain in June and July seems fine to me, but Denmark is way warmer to me. Even Americans living here say Denmark is unbearable compared to the US. It's a humidity thing. We don't care about USA heat, it's Denmark that's the problem. We even have a reality show about a summer hotel, and the lady says Americans can't handle the danish rooms as they're way too much for them and the AC stuff the hotel buys are not good enough for the Americans. My place is almost 90 square meters and I feel like it's tiny room at the y in London.
@@Fuzzy8804content, what's this about. We all know we're Celsius even Ryan, that doesn't mean it's pleasant. 😊
Currently it is not only the heat, but the heat in combination with the moist air.
Your pronounciation gets better and better, Ryan! - Deine Aussprache wird besser und besser, Ryan!
Your german interpretations(adhoc translation) is improving as well, which makes us really happy :)
For the weather in germany:
Radiohosts try to overly optimistically sell the heat as "comfortable"(angenehm), which goes against the usual german pessimistic mindset of workers, who hear radio while to and fro work.
On that note 86F here in germany are quite humid which makes it less beareable.
Love you ryan
it was not only a draw between Germany vs. Switzerland. It was a draw between Germany vs. (Switzerland + Referee)
Germany is just not that strong. They only won against Denmark because they got the penalty and later were in good spirit for the next goal. The Swiss are a good team. Germany won't reach the semi final.
@@Leenapantheri agree that our team is nowhere near where we were in 2014 or prior and i also agree that we will most likely lose to spain, but that referee was some bullshit. Go watch the game.
I wouldnt even say he was biased, as he made a lot of bullshit decisions against switzerland as well. He was just really really bad.
the whole point about the heat complaints is, that we don’t have AC in our houses. That’s the hard part, outside you get cooked, inside you have a sauna. The few ways to cool down are going to the public swimming pool, Go shopping in malls (which have mostly AC), take a cold shower, or drive your car with AC on (which is really bad for the environment in the long run, but still sometimes you have to )
or buy an ac as i did last year. best decision so far
A Mobile one that you can connect to the Window Shutters
What you're not getting is the humidity here. We had 28 degrees Celsius here 2 nights ago and I was dying. Opened both windows next to me and had doors to the balcony open too, and sleep with nothing touching me apart from a wet towel all night. Had to do that for most summers in the last 10 years. I don't mind 30 if I'm outside, but don't want it inside..
I was a bit embarrassed to fall ill on vacation. But I also took sick leave because I was just lying in bed for a week. I must have fallen ill on the previous business trip.
I honestly must comment you, your German is getting better!
*commend
School grades in Germany are reverse to those in the US. Here 1 is the best grade, and 6 is the worst. So a 4 is kinda meh - but not too bad if you expected a 5... :)
A,B,C,D,E,F that is the same in German! What are you talking? 1,2,3,4,5,6
still amazed at the beautiful playground you provide your kid with. Really nice. 👍
12:28 In germany, there is no GPA, the average is calculated from the actual grades, which goes from 1 (like english A) to 6 (english F). + grades are 0.3 points better (like 0.7 = 1+, 1.7 = 2+), - grades are 0.3 points worse (1.3 = 1-), think of it as one or two thirds. In higher education the grade is shown in a different number system ranging from 15,14,13 points for a 1+, 1, 1- all the way to 0 which is a grade 6, but its the same grade just in a different format. 5 points (grade 4) is the minimum required to pass a class. Hence, the 2nd place in the picture barely passed at all, while the 3rd place definitely failed, since 4.7 is too low of a grade.
german grades 1-6 have their own names too: 1 = "sehr gut" / "very good", 2 = "gut" / "good", 3 = "befriedigend" / "satisfactory", 4 = "ausreichend" / "sufficient", 5 = "mangelhaft" / "lacking", 6 = "ungenügend" / "insufficient"
side note: technically it is possible to graduate with an average of 0.7, if you get 1+ or A+ in every class.
7:08 the game at the soccer euro between the czech and turkish team ended with 5 yellow and 2 red cards for the czechs and 11 yellow cards for the turks.
12:06 - Lehrer Lämpel in Max und Moritz by Wilhelm Busch.
Kuh in German means cow....
I also love heat.
However today it was hot and humid. Humidity peaked today at 98%.
When it was like at 85% outside, we brought some empty glass bottles outside (not cooled bottles)
And then instantly water condensed. This i never ever saw before.
It feels like being in a greenhouse if you go outside right now.
I guess this is because it rained a lot in the last days and now it evaporates.
"Get an AC"
Sure... if you pay the electricity bill for me...
Meine Klimaanlage braucht zum Entfeuchten 200 Watt. Wenn die 5 Stunden läuft, sind das 1 kWh = 30 Cent pro Tag. Dank Balkonkraftwerk ganz genau 0 Cent.
Germans aren't really used to hot weather they are used to the cold so
30C or 86F is pretty warm for them .
Nah it has something to do with our air. I've been to florida in the middle of summer where it was over 40°C and it was way easier to handle than 30°C in europe. Florida is way more humid so this doesnt make sense, but its what i experienced
so Ente - means both duck - the animal, and canard - the fake story, mostly in print media... and of course refers to Donald Duck...
and Enten schnattern ... so quack - but also gaggle, chatter, gibber, babble
2:55 The German word for vehicle is "Fahrzeug" which literally means driving stuff. The sign on her construction says "Gehzeug" which means walking stuff. It's supposed to demonstrate how much more space a person driving a car takes up compared to a pedestrian. I guess she's protesting for less cars and more pedestrian zones in the city.
Also this is in Austria, not Germany.
Kuh=cow..yes they can be dangerous even though they look sweet
14:10 Sanifair is the "pay per sh*t" company running a big part of the bathrooms at german rest stations on the Autobahn...
15:17 "Ente" is also a word for news or a message that turns out to be untrue...
The meme about Rüdiger is a reference to a famous old video of some man and his son Rüdiger flying an RC plane. The man let's his son Rüdiger have the controls and for the whole video yells at Rüdiger to be careful, not fly too low and so on. It's quite funny how anxious he is. Also the football player in the photo is a German defender, who scored an own-goal in the first game of the European championship.
Yes, in Germany you get your vacation days back if you where sick during it.
But we don't have sick days, so, there's no limit per se, when your sick, you're sick. (After 6 weeks though you have to visit a different doctor and get a bit less money, for as long an youre sick. But your job is save.)
10:51 This refers to the German meme of the RC guy who has his friend Rüdiger fly his brandnew model airplane and constantly yells at him because he flies too deep, too near to the haybales, a road sign or does loopings and corkscrew maneuvers.
To learn about an effective method to heat your home, cook, and bake with one wood fire, check out German Kachelofen. In English it is called Masonry stove or Ceramic stove
Compare same with same: in Germany, 30° it feels so more warm because of the high humidity; after rain comes sun, and at a minimum, temperatures of 30°C.
the celebration was not about the draw. It was about winning the group phase
30 degrees in Spain is, as far as I have heard, something completely different than 30 degrees in Germany, so I would be interested to know how 30 degrees in Indiana compares to 30 degrees in Germany. Has something to do with humidity, among other things
8:53 Germany & France: Eurocopter Tiger / Russia: Ka-52 Alligator / Korea: Cow-1 XD
12:05 That's Teacher Lempel from Max & Moritz. A german Children's book
As it's getting hotter, A/C sales are rocketing around the world. A/Cs pump out tons of C02 emissions, so because of A/Cs, the future will be so hot A/Cs won't be good enough!
Where do you get this informations?
Sehr gut, er geht schon in den Keller zum lachen wie ein echter Deutscher 7:20 😆
As a young dad he just let himself out ...
In Germany, 30°C often come with a lot of humidity like yesterday. Here in southern Germany it was 33°C at the afternoon with a relativ humidity of about 85% which make it more or less comapreable to e.g. Miami. It wasn't fun at all. This is what it makes it annoying, not the 30-33°C itself. And ofc due to the lack of AC I had 30°C in my living room still at 11 p.m (living under the roof). The thing is, I would like to install an AC I even ask the landlord but while renting the apartment he did not allow it to me even thou I would pay it myself
Hol dir eine mobile Klimaanlage, aber eine mit 2 Schläuchen. Und dazu ein Kit um die Schläuche beim Fenster raus zu hängen und die Lücke abzudichten. Gibt's zb beim Pearl Versand.
Der Channel Technology Connections hat dazu mal ein Video gemacht (vor paar Jahren), wo er erklärt warum das System mit den 2 Schläuchen so viel besser ist. Hab mir darum genau so eine gekauft. Die Schläuche dann noch isolieren und dann ist fein und du musst den Vermieter nicht fragen und kannst sie in die nächste Wohnung mitnehmen. Hab rund 600 für meine gezahlt. Ist nicht ganz so gut wie eine Splitanlage, aber DEUTLICH besser als die Anlagen mit nur 1 Schlauch.
As a US girl living in Germany, it is sooo funny to see how you discover the German language.
If you ever need help with the "insiders"; I'm here 😅
Translation is not localization....
Love your videos ❤
EM is Europäische Meisterschaft (European Championship)
3:55 well in south germany, czech and austria the temperatures are higher than in spain, portugal or turkey right now
13:54 Sanifair is a provider for public toilets. Many people claim without the privatisation of Autobahn rest stations - most went to Sanifair's parent company Tank&Rast - the toilet use would still be free of charge. Which in the eyes of someone in desperate need of a pee rummaging in their wallet for a 1 Euro coin to unlock the turnstile may look like utopia.
Ryan, your German prononciation is improving steadily! A few small tips to tweak it:
• The double vowel "ei" is usually pronounced like the English i
• The double vowel "ie" is like an English "ee"
• "eu" is usually a sound like "oy".
4:00 AC is the exception in residential homes in germany. anything above mid-20°C is unbearable, because of the fact the most buildings are build with bricks over here and store heat quite long. It's nothing special to have days after days of 25°C indoors. And if it rains.. you just add humidity to the already miserable situation.
9:51 It doesn't say movie but move. So they're moving and realise that the date is already next week and they haven't packed or asked their friends for help or booked a transporter or something like that.
I'm not sure, if Ryan reacted to the "Rüdiger! Nicht so tief!" meme. And yeah "running a 5k" sounds way more dramatic, than going jogging for half an hour. Been there done that 🤣
Ente or "duck" often means a false/inaccurate story in German, i.e. fake news
7:10 - No. That was the last group match at the EURO and the referee gave 18 yellow and 2 red cards.The winner was in next round, the loser was out of Euro. Every card referee gave was correct, but he didnt show enough.
8:50 - KUH-1 ; Kuh is german for cow.
13:30 - Abischerz: Pupil passed the last class of highschool get their "Abitur" short: Abi. And than they do party and some jokes called "Abistreich" or "Abischerz" (Abi-jokes). If I remember correctly we placed bale of hay in front of every door. On the photo it obvis went wrong.
sth to consider about the complains about temperature: how hot it feels to you does not only depend on how hot it is but also on how humid it is. Germany tipically is very humid and 30°+ temperatures feel way hotter in germany compared to other countries.
A friend of mine was in egypt for example (very dry air) and told me that 45°-50°C in egypt felt like 35°C in germany
3:41 Fun fact: what actually helps is drinking warm salvia tea. Sounds weird, but your body is getting warmer by eating ice cream, similar goes for cold showering. Your body temperature should be way above 30°C and cooling it down from the inside just makes your body work harder to compensate for that. Drinking something warm on the other hand lowers the heat production of your body so it has to get rid of less heat and you feel colder. Salvia also helps by reducing the amount you sweat, by tightening the sweat glands.
agree on the warm drink, but sweating is how the body regulates temperature, so shutting that off will make heat worse, no?
@@ownageDan First of all: I am not a doctor, i might be wrong. But second: I never had issues with heat with such a treatment.
*As far as i know*, heat is mostly "felt" not necessary needed to cool down. Especially at 30°C. It is still way cooler than the normal body temperature. So why would you need to cool it down? Or asked the other way around: How many people do you think died on using deodorant(correctly)? Because it does basically the same.
So back to the 30°C - this is not a deadly temperature. In the opposite, this is basically the temperature we are meant to live in. Of course we don't feel that comfortable anymore if we grew up in northern hemispheres like europe or northern america or something like that, but always thing of it that way: There are people that don't die and live in deserts at 50°C.
On the other hand there are people dying on heat stroke. But even they don't die because it is 30°C, they die because their body temperature overcame 40°C. But 30°C outside cannot be responsible for 40°C inside.(It can, but it is pretty uncommon - like one in a centillion, thermodynamics is more statistical than most of the people think...)
So they usually die because they do hard work while it is hot outside or they are unable to transfer heat from the inside.Or there are other effects that accumulate the heat. But physically there is no way known to me to die because of a 30°C temperature outside, without other stuff complicating it. If you know some - let me know. 🙂
So you are right: Turning it off would be very, very bad. But Salvia doesn't turn it off. It just tightens the channels, it tells the body to spare stuff. I don't know or understand the full process, but it doesn't sound like you cannot adopt to it, if it is really, really necessary.
71 Fahrenheit is perfect Summer Weather
Im curious about the Farin Urlaub thing... Brings back memories to see his name. 😅.
Nicht so tiiiieef Rüüüdigeeer! Nicht so tiiiieeef! 😂
Constantin Film movies are usually German productions, and a lot of them are really mid. They are either about the Holocaust in some way, or they feature the same 4 German actors playing the same role everytime. Sometimes both.
About the air conditioner: a lot of Germans don't use one cause they think it makes them sick. (At least I and some people I know get headaches and feel dizzy from them)
6:2x: Quite close, it's Germany's national Football (soccer) coach and his assistant.
12:20. You saw that guy when you reacted to "Max & Moritz", the teacher whose pipe they blew up.
depends on 30° dry heat or 30° "trying to breathe through a wet towel"-heat ;) :D Love your reactions! :D
4:05 and to make it worse the way your typical German house is build the thick walls heat up after a couple of days and radiate off the heat even when it's colder outside leading to a 'fun game' of trying to keep the heat outside as long as possible. Depending on how you live of course. Ground floor with a couple of stories above you it's fine but any person who ever lived in an attic apartment (worst case, dark non-reflective tiles on the roof and old or no isolation) will understand the agony.
1.0 -> best grad you can get
4.0 -> worst grade where you still pass
5.0 -> worst grade you can get
4.7 --> he failed, but not as hard as he expected
We can use our sick leave when we're on holidays in Sydney, but it has to be at least a week long. Any shorter than that, bad luck.
Right now it'S 30° where I life with a humidity of 68%. The humiditi will go up to 90% in the night.
It's not nice when everything you touch feels damp, your cloths don't dry and breathing is hard.
I can't tolerate heat at all. I'm happy with 18-20°C Maybe 22° if it's a rainy/cloudy day.
When it's hot, I always get migranes, have trouble breathing (Asthma) and feel ill altogether. Like being nauseous or dizzy.
And yes. I stay in the shade (as sun for long periods on my skins feels like a burn - without having a sunburn. Just the feeling of a really hot coffee cup against your skin. Burning and unpleasent), I always carry water with me and drink lots. Doesn't help ^^°
Summer is my least favourite season due to the heat. I love winter, as it's not hot then (and there are less spiders XD), even though my joints hurt a lot when they get to cold xD
You haven't checked out Wilhelm Busch yet, hm?
You saw this guy the other day in "Max und Moritz".
He's the teacher.
Getting AC in Germany is an expensive comodity (0,3 Euro/kwh) ,unless you have an PV plant on the roof.
12:10 the image is from "Max and Moritz"
Ryan should visit germany and stay in a german appartment with 30°C outside and then revisit that meme I am sure he will change his mind
10:10 "Gentlemen! Synchronize your death-watches!"
7:15 Why is Ryan, as an American, so pissed off that he has to leave the room and I, as a German,
can almost laugh myself to death about it and don't even know what his problem is?
"Who thinks it's for millions?" You wouldn't believe...
Schleswig Holstein , big region bordering denmark, was alo in past part of denmark as a country under danish royalty, danish royalty is one big branch if european royalty. , the region is now under german teritory, has now danish subculture and even a political party with danes for the subculture. The football match could lead to new and old ideas 😂😂😂 Summer in germany is 'best weekend" of the year, its short, houses are well isolated, no need for a/c lol.
When it's 30° outside In a house made of stone it's easily just 20° without any ac. Just keep the windows closed over the day and open them when the air outside is cooling down. No energy, perfect temperature.
Exactly. Although I admit, it feels a bit strange to put your pullover *off* before going outside with the dog...
Is that Freddie Mercury on your wall? Cool!
8:01 nah bro they didn't do my boy Werner dirty like this, that's a crime against the fatherland at the very least
You prefer 100 degrees? Would you still say that, if you didn't have AC at home and at the office? If you went by bike or train (again without AC) and if you usually walk to the grocery store? Just wondering 😅
Mayonnaise in a Döner kebab is high treason, fellows xd
12:15: Some Germans say something like "The house must cost a mille", meaning "a million". In fact, "mille" means "thousand" in Italian or, even better, Latin. Such people want to say something cool, but only prove their low level of education.
sometimes we get over 40°C here which is 104 fahrenheit
Criminal vs old man
Meanwhile the criminal is also old. It's really a shitshow.
Or The Godfather vs The Mummy :)
You mean "Criminal old man vs Slightly older man"
Not all Houses are allowed to have AC's, for example: Old Buildings that are under Monument protection/Historic preservation. Even if you have to renovate your Roof, for example, they dictate, WHICH TILES you are allowed to use and which not! We had that problem and had to choose MORE EXPENSIVE ones. So Installing a AC could destroy "The overall Picture of the House" which wouldn't be allowed. On the Other site: Germany wants us to renovate and build climate friendly and save energy which is EXTREMELY HARD with all the stipulations you have to look out for. You even could get FINED if you install something that isn't allowed AND you have to Unistall it on your own costs. So the only Solution would be a Mobile AC... which are mostly only for small Rooms, therefore you have to buy around 2-3 of those, depending on the size of your home. And those are expensive to maintain...
Many buildings we live in are historical and there is no way we will get a permit to install an AC 💁🏼♀️
This always seemed so, so strange to me. I didn'T look to much into this (i.e. the justification) but why some random house in some random villiage in rural saxony or something is "historical" and needs to be perseved is beyond me.
Don'T get me wrong, I get a couple of them, I get why we keep castles and churches and maybe, sometimes, a Fachwerkhaus. But just some random house? Really strange to me.
Oh boy...
ch is hard H
z is ts
tz (die Katze) is harder ts
i+e is long i (misspelled in English as "double e" like "keep",
S when it is followed by a vowel is pronounced as Z (for example "sie" is pronounced as Z + long i)
S at the end of the word is S
double S is a longer S
ß (scharfes s) = longer "s" too. (archaic)
"s" before p or T is "sh"
"Sch" is always "sh"
Okay but immagine 87° F (or even 100° F) without AC 😅 would you still prefer that over wearing a sweater in winter?
You could simply translate EM with "European Masters", although yes, Championships would be the more accurate translation.