EUROPEANS Things That Asian Find Weird!! (Belgium, Swiss, Latvia, Ukraine, Germany, Sweden)
Вставка
- Опубліковано 17 чер 2024
- Asian surprised at European things!
Today, we invited a Korean and Europeans
And talk about the things that weird in Korea
🇰🇷 @mykoreandic
🇪🇸 @fonso_work
🇱🇻 @ay.alise
🇦🇱 @sveawedis
🇧🇪 @micsimonique
🇫🇷 @flave_garn
🇺🇦 @rosina_0313
🇨🇭 @dilaraarda_
🇸🇪 @sofia_ljungstorm - Розваги
I am from Ukraine and I very adore Sweden! Ukraine and Sweden forever!🇺🇦💞🇸🇪
I Love Both from georgia 😂❤
yass real 🐟🐟🐟
Love from Sweden!❤
Vänner för altid 🇸🇪❤🇺🇦!
Jag är från Sverige?❤
Well it was nice to see a Latvian person in these types of videos, it's not often that happens, very proud of my country 🇱🇻💪
Me too im latvian 😁
Like to see you guys too in these videos. I'm from Estonia.
Sveiki!
How sad that people from lithuania it's to rare for this. But still proud of my sister' Latvia.😄
Ukrainian here. So, in Ukraine:
1. The way you greet people really depends on the level of your relathionship. You may give a handshake, just say hi, hug, kiss etc.
2. Cold drinks are popular when the weather is hot, at least in the cities, and we drink all possible kinds of coffee. But even espresso is rarely served with a glass of water.
3. Markets are really usually closed on Monday (or at least most of sellers will have a day off on Monday). Some small shops and cafees are closed on weekends, but mostly they work every day. We have supermarkets that used to be 24/7/365 before the war started
4. About paying for public restrooms it really depends. But I prefer the ones that are not free because it`s usually much more clean, and you really see what you payed for
5. Never tried any doft drink made out of milk whey))) and we also put literally everithing to pizza
6. We usually don`t drink tap water, so if you ask for water at the reaturant, they will bring you bottled unless you specify. And you`ll have to pay for it
Yeah, never greeted anyone in my life with a cheek kiss, and hug for me was something I would do only with family friends only.
Took me a while to get used to hugging people who I know, but don't have close relationship with. And I still don't like doing that
согласен, девушка на видео что-то выдумала трошки ;)
I am from the western part of Ukraine. And here we kiss friends and relatives on the cheek, hugging at the same time, we hug acquaintances. But of course we don't do this with strangers or work colleagues.
in the west of Ukraine, everything will be closed on Sunday, except for large chain stores and restaurants
as Ukrainian may say for sure the girl was wrong about kisses and hugs it is only between girls who are besties, probably she has a lot of female friends and "in her world" there are lots of kisses and hugs.
Notice how Sofia (Sweden) is squirming uncomfortably and staying quiet when everyone starts talking about kissing on the cheek. 😂
Yeah in Sweden we might hug you in public if you're family or bff but that's it. Kissing as a greeting is only done by grandmas or if you're in a relationship.
its also kinda rare in germany
@@DeutscheDemokratischeRepublik richtig! no emotions allowed here
@@DeutscheDemokratischeRepublik I think it really depends. Just watch some old Wetten, dass episodes and you constantly see Gottschalk kiss the female guests on the cheeks. Also I remember my parents when I was a kid and visiting their friends (like 20 years ago) they would always kiss. But in my generation it has become quite uncommon and we have become a bit more reserved (I am 23)
@@DeutscheDemokratischeRepublik I'd say it's quite common among female friends, but not between male and female.
Hugging is also weird for the most part, even if you've known the person for a long time, even if you are family. Can't even recall ever getting kissed by grandma. I damn near puked seeing a guy kiss his daughter on the lips.
As a Ukrainian I can say that restaurants are open on Sunday and many shops are open as well but close earlier.
Also I would not say that greet with cheek kiss is very common in Ukraine. Usually girls do that but it depends. Boys greet with a handshake.
In France, we usually greet with a handshake (girls and boys)
@@missjuju-j idk where you live but that's not true, in most places in France you always cheek kiss girls, hand shake boys; in the south and other regions you might cheek kiss every close friends, boys as well
@@temalagova2663 I live in the north and everyone around me greet with a handshake
@@temalagova2663occitan culture
In Germany we greet with a hug (girl to girl, girl to boy, depends on closeness level but boy to boy sometimes) and give handshake (boy to boy) and the same with saying goodbye. When you're not close you just say "hi" and "bye" haha. Cheek kissing is not really a thing, I guess older women might be the only ones who would do that.
The hug and kiss on the cheek aren't common just in Europe , in Latin America is pretty common , some African countries as well , but yeah could be weird
In Islam its not just weird but absolutely prohibited and HARAM
For Arabs everything is HaRaM!!!
@@jeremyemilio9378 Well most normal things in any democratic free country with equality and human rights IS HARAM! Think about that for a second!
Well that’s because America was colonized by Europeans…
Is it common in Europe though? As a Swede I have never once in my life seen it done.
Latvian here.
1) Alice was right. Kissing as a greeting is uncommon.
2) In hot weather iced americanos are advertised on many coffeeshops. So in these days it's not uncommon.
3) Sundays are a time where offices, post and banks are closed. Some restaurants are closed too, but everything else works, however they close earlier than usual.
4) In capital city we have free restrooms in supermarkets etc, but in other places in capital city it's paid. Once you're out of capital city it varies a lot. In gas stations restroom is usually free all around the country.
5) Our national soft drink is not made of milk whey.
6) You have to pay for water. Fun fact - the tap water in capital city is not drinkable, but outside of it it can be or can not. Best to always ask locals about the quality of it.
Another Latvian here and about the tap water i would not neccesarily say that thats true. I at least work at a hedgehog in the fog, bar/restaurant and if someone asks for a glass of tap water we give it for free, but indeed if you do not specify we will give you a bottled water which does cost. But even in other places i just always ask for tap water and i havent had to pay for it. At bars at least the tap water is clean, because we use it for coctails as well, so it cannot be undrinkable. And the tap water in Riga is not undrinkable everywhere, in the city center yes, but outside of it it can be fine. Depends on the location.
@@tomsrudzitis4942 what do you mean undrinkable? like dirty or disease ridden making people sick after? sometimes i even drink in bathrooms in center and i dont know if that has affected me badly in any way
@@dreamthedream8929 well by undrinkable i meant should not be drinked. Yeah probably if you drink it once or twice nothing will happen, but it is not clean and has some diseases in it. A few years back there was this legionare sickness in the centre water etc
@@dreamthedream8929 you know when you open water in your flat and then open tap and water comes out brown?
Also, a beer in a bar can be served till the bar is closing. That is all over Europe. In most EU countries You have a time when it is prohibited to sell alcohol in shops.
In Ukraine, particularly in Odesa, before the war:
Everything works from 10.00 -22.00 every day. There is no rest and breaks. Maybe 1 day a year 1 January, because people are simply too drunk.
Restaurants and clubs used to work till the last customer.
We adore cold coffee. There is a lot of coffee spots with broad menus of cold coffee beverages. But yes, we drink hot tea whole year.
We kiss on cheeks with sb who we like ))) And smile towards them too. There is no polite smile in Ua. When ukrainians try to make a polite smile it is miserable and little scary😂 We weren't taught to do that.
Restrooms are not enough. So when you find one in your needy moment you usually do not pay attention on the price 😅
Weird thing for foreigners is salo, ofc. It's those white part of bacon but not cooked and very, very fat))
Milk kakao is yammi.
In Odesa you have to pay for everything, but if you are a pretty girl you are an always ask for an exception, just for you and the waiter does them thousands during the day 😂
Odesa привіт!🙌♥️
I got this video recommended and was surprised to see mykoreandic in it, I've been following him for months!
It's nice to see "My Korean Dictionary" here! 😄 Just him with all these girls huh? Wonder if we'll see them in his next shorts. 😊
He is my favorite content creator. İ am so happy for seeing him here 😍
Love Dilara whose way of speaking is so gentle for my ears
They are so friendly and explainable for European people🎉❤.
Can we just take a moment out to appreciate how calm the voice was of the girl from Switzerland 😊
no
no
@@temalagova2663what is your problem dude
Yes, so soothing.
FR dude
Haha, so funny to see Mykoreandic as a guest on this channel.
The Oka Oka man😂
Swedish person here:
1. We usually don't greet with a kiss, if you did most people would probably be surprised. But if it's an older person you've known since before, you might get a kiss on the cheek.
2. We don't particularly drink iced americanos, but we do drink cold drinks when it's hot. We love coffee though, so we buy anything that contains coffee all year round.
3. Things usually aren't closed on Sundays, it's exactly as the swedish girl said.
4. In a lot of places you do have to pay for the bathroom. But sometimes in shopping malls you can go for free. And at gass stations it's free. At cafés, if you're a customer you can go for free and sometimes even if you aren't a costumer.
5. Never tried a soft drink with milk whey, not sure if we have anything like that? But we probably do
6. Tap water is always free and even other drinks come with the meal a lot of the time
det är oatly typ, uppfanns i sverige
@@pippen1001milk whey is "vassle" in swedish. Havremjölk (oatly) is oat milk.
@@Xzazashake tack!
Veldig likt som i Norge, men her er de fleste butikker stengt på søndager.
Dilara has a heavenly voice 👌🏻
"Not in Germany."
That made me laugh
Thats actually not true, in some states you cant buy alcohol after 10 p.m, except bars and restaurants.
German chef here: whether the tap water costs money is up to the owner. Most of the time, the cost is justified by the associated service. A waiter has to take and deliver the order, the bartender has to make the drink, and a waiter has to serve it.
The waiter also has to get the glass back and then the glass has to be cleaned before it can be used again. Not something you would do for free.
@@sebasstein7014 Water is life, threatening someones survival while you sit on a full well can get your house burned down. At least that's how it's been throughout history.
@@gunganisepoksids9866 Good joke. Don`t know if you have ever been in Germany or from what country you are from, but in Germany no one here is going to die from thirst no matter if the restaurant owner charges momey for it or not. And if you crawl on al fours into a restaurant, half dehydrated and near death, believe me when I say you will get your water for free still, probably even bottled one...
@@sebasstein7014 You are looking at it from surface level. I know that no matter where you go in Europe, you wont die from thirst. Well, some people will deny you water up until you have to crawl on all fours, it's too much to wash a glass, as you say, then you get luxury treatment in a form of bottled water. Who is joking here? You really think that denying people a glass of water, which costs basically nothing, it leads to someone crawling on all four and begging, if you think it can't come back at you because we are "modern" and wealthy, etc. Haha who is jokin here?
@@gunganisepoksids9866 as a German I would also prefer if it was like in France for example where you always get free water but as far as I know you also usually don't get free water here in Germany because the food when going out is relatively cheap with lower margins and many places make their main profits through selling drinks
i was gonna say that we do have lots of shops closed on sundays in sweden but yeah she might be right about that only being a thing in larger cities. i've never lived in a big city and most shops (except a couple grocery stores) were always closed on sundays.
OMG GUYS LATVIA LATVIA AS LATVIAN IM SHOCKED I SEE LATVIA SOMEWHERE
why is that shocking for you?
@@dreamthedream8929 i never see Latvia anywhere
@@kopua1390 what do you mean by anywhere? anything in particular?
@@kopua1390
I always forget Latvia exists
@@ninototo1 :'(
It's so good to see you here,@mykoreandic👋🏻
We definitely don't greet with a kiss in Germany :D And pretty sure Sweden is same. People will be weirded out if you do that.
I am not Swedish but Norwegian, so there is cultural similarity. It's not really common to give kisses when greeting. But we know what it means and usually just go along with it if people with other background do it. Even if we find it slightly uncomfortable (when you are not used to it) because we are 'trained' to be tolerant and polite almost no matter what😅.
Also in Norway pretty much everything is closed on sundays (and it closes earlier on saturday). There are regulations deciding if you are allowed to keep stores etc open on sundays. So that seems to be a difference between Sweden and Norway here. But the rest seems to be quite similar in both countries.
Most stores were closed on sundays in Sweden too, and closed earlier on saturday.
This was the normal case all the way into the early 1980s, when it started to change (yes, I'm old).
As a Belgian I can say that the 3 kisses are ONLY for special occasions such as a birthday or on New Year’s Eve. Me personally I greet close friends with a hug and even then only when I feel like it. If it’s someone I just met I just nod. That’s for the Dutch part btw, Belgium has also a part where they speak French and also a small part that speaks German. We Flemish (our Dutch accent) people are naturally reserved so we will not quickly touch someone when we don’t know the person. :3
i find that flemish people do 1 kis on normal occassions and 3 on special, the french however do three.
groeten van een vlaming
As a Belgian from the French speaking part I can say that I've never done 3 kisses, it's only one (maybe the older people do it)
I find the whole kissing a stranger on the cheek depends on what people you meet, the friends you are with, the type of people they are. I used to go out with this friend group, and when a stranger was introduced, it was cheek kisses all around. For some, however, it's still weird, for example it is never really done in the work place.
Funny, because as a Dutch person, 3 kisses is hugely common, though I would say only for the older generation. But at any family gathering or something like that; be prepared for your family to require 3 kisses per person
In Finland I think the law changed a few years back that you're actually allowed to charge for tap water if it's all they drink. But if they order any other drink with their meal then the tap water will be free. And still not all places charge for tap water even if that's legal now.
In my 47 Swedish years I’ve only been greeted with a kiss once; in Czechia of all places.
Which is and Incredible thing to Read, as we often greet eachother with a kiss in BE :)
As a german, for me it was from an older argentinian man lmao
Latvian Man Here,
1} Kissing as a greeting is uncommon to Strangers and Men, me personally i greet everyone with a handshake... even Women since its a formal way of greeting someone, but i notice that alot of girls who are friends greet eachother with kisses in hugs so i think thats more of a girls type thing, i have never kissed someone as greeting, only like hugged family as greeting.
4) In About every city... in Stores and Public places the rest room is free, you can just walk in and use restroom, i believe that only on like Border theres pay toilets, but besides that ive never seen a pay toilet in latvia, only in germany, and its very human to go out and take a piss in the bushes or forest or somewhere private where no one can see. (dont piss on someone elses property)
5) Our National Drink is Balsam, who wouldve guessed that our national drink is alcohol.... knowing that we are the heaviest drinkers in the world (x2 more and heavy than the irish)
6) If you went into a Resturant just for water... some give you water, some dont (the more luxury ones dont)... but if you are Ordering something and ask for water, its free & you can go into like Gyms and some other public places and they will give you good water for free (non-tap water), and you can bring your own water to resturants... so if you cant get water in a resturant for free, just go to like a Gym, ask for water and then return to that resturant.
I am Asian, and I once received a hand kiss from a French coworker. I was freaked out fr, but I think that's so wholesome and very sweet. Nice experiences from other cultures
Exactly! Even if it's a gesture you're not used to, your mindset and thought is in a good place cause you saw it from their point of view and that they meant well. There are people that easily take offense on gestures foreign to them, even if the gesture is well-meaning.
I live in north europe and everything is open on sundays. Its just shortened hours. Usually from 12-18.00 things are opened, whereas in the work week it might be opened from 10-22.
Spain and Italia are different! And maybe Portugal and Greece too... it's interesting to know all this, but we are Europe too, and we should be answering too...
Is this guy who allways said: you want some…???😂😂😂😂
Ukrainian here!
First time i see that our greeting is kissing on cheeks. Like yea, it’s common around close siblings, as well as hugs, but when it’s friends usually the handshake takes place, but the most common are non-touchable greetings, just hello for informal, and good /any day part/ for formal.
Each conutry changes much, and depend witch zone your live, and winter/summer change much.
The swiss girl has such a soothing voice wth man
I'm wondering where the belgian girl is from. I'm belgian and commonly, it's just one kiss on the cheek. Three is only for like "happy new year" or stuff like that, so on very rare occasions.
In France you have to find out how many it is in the specific region you're in as it varies a lot. When I meet a french person, I just ask them how many it is for them.
As for the shops... Not all shops are closed on Sunday. Some are open a half day, like Sunday morning, some are closed on another day. It depends. I think the only obligation is that there is at least one day closed each week.
For the water thing... I know in Sweden, anywhere where they sell alcohol, they have to give free water. I think that's a very good thing. For Belgium and Germany, I think if one asks for water to like take some medication or because someone is feeling bad, mostly people will give some. But otherwise, I think you have to pay for water.
Dilara is just amazing
She is 😮
We also use milk to prepare "ayran" instead of water.
yeah I’m from the uk and everything is closed on Sunday all of these are true it’s so cool :)
im fron Croatia and the thing with kissing we just do it if we really know to person. From the part where i come from you see people drink iced amercano, it's just not that often and usually in summer. The stores are open at Sundays. They just work one hours to 5 or 6 hours less than on other days.
This thumbnail, omg , funny and weird at the same time , seems like a place that just women go out and he is totally lost , anyway , i loved the video
Bank holiday is a particular british thing that continentals don ' t understand. It s actually always used for a free monday.
Bank holidays are public holidays 😂 They are usually set by law, that's why shops are closed.
Mykoreandic ❤️❤️
in greece we drink called coffeee and we call it frappe
This ,girl from Switzerland is 😮❤
Interesting info, in Iran we also kiss on cheeks 3 times 😅 but fortunately we don’t have to pay for public restrooms and tap water
Restaurants aint closed on sunday, at least in Germany Restaurants are open on sunday, only stores are closed on sunday and public holidays and as far as i know its the same in Spain, Portugal and France.
A kiss on the cheek isn’t the norm in all of Europe. Europe is a continent and not one country! I live and grew up in Norway, northern Europe Scandinavia, and that is not the norm here. Some would even find it too intimate and uncomfortable. Some do it, but it’s imported from either US shows or to seem fancy like the French do, snobbish. A hug is more acceptable or normal of someone you know and are close with. 1st time I heard of the word “skinship” was due to Kdrama🤣🤣🤣
i agree, Swedish here :)
Yeah, and you could see the swedish girl shaking her head during that part of the video cause we don't really do that here.
I think in the US is not the norm, only in the South of Europe and South America its common to greet with a kiss, in some countries even between men.
There is no link with the us wtf
as a norwegian i’ve experienced it with older family members, but i think the norm have died out. i only experience it with my romanian friends and my friend from serbia
I am belgian and for the cheek kiss greeting it has always been one where I am, I wonder where she is from in belgium
Dutch Quarter
Hii, I am from Ghent and 3 has been the custom! But yes lately many start doing only 1 :)
@@Inthemics i´m from the german speaking part, BTW Micah on Sunday our delhaize is open til 13:00 hour;) just saying
@@pascalmerschaudio Hi! Oh that is so useful!😄
Im from west flanders and its 3 here
dilara is a queen and that's on periodttt
Wow i too from Latvia❤
Me too
We Italians give kisses too when we get to know someone, informally. The fact is, I always forgot how many kisses I should give and I'm a native Italian 😂
As a Norwegian I love ayran!!. Tasted it first when I visited Tyrkia and did not like it right away, but then it grew on me and now I pick some up everytime I visit a foreign-grocery store here ❤.
I'm half Norwegian, half Swiss. I don't like Ayran. Ist's a matter of Taste🇧🇻
as a german, i fucking love the mango variant of it
@@DeutscheDemokratischeRepublik mango ayran?? ive never seen that
@@Jonas-tf3im its fucking amazing
Happi !!
Wow, I think I'm going to immigrate to Switzerland.
srsly, ukrainian girl mentioned pizza while turkish girl was talking about ayran?what about smetana, kefir, kvas?:))shkvarki (roasted fat)?there is A LOT of weird (yet yummy) food in slavic kitchen
holy Mykoreandic is here
In Indonesia 🇮🇩 we do :
1. Greet with Cheek Kiss : ✅
2. We Do Drinking Iced Americano : ✅
3. Everything is close in Sunday : It depends
(For Government affairs is closed)
4. Have to Pay for Restroom in Public places : It depends
(In the mall all restrooms are free, but at the gas station in the toll rest area there are some to pay )
5. National Soft Drink is Made Out of Milk Whey : ❎
6. Have to Pay for Water at Restaurants : ✅ no free water here in Indonesia 😢
In most proper sit-down restaurants, a glass of water is usually chargeable but in many casual eateries it’s free and they’d even give you free (hot, unsweetened) tea.
in Latvia a lot of shops are open 24/7, almost no shops are closed on Sunday
Bank holidays are the paid days off stipulated by law that can be religious or non religious events. For example lndependence Day, or Christmas day, or New Eve's day, etc. In corporate language they are all called bank holidays.
The cheek to cheek kiss is also common in Filipino culture
The smell in England, especially London is defo true, I was shocked and I’m Swedish 😂
Nothing is closed in Latvia on Saturday or Sunday. All shops and markets are open.
Here in Portugal we don't have to pay to go to the restroom, if we had to pay I am pretty sure everyone would just do their business in the streets. Nobody should have to pay to go to the bathroom.
Lmao the idea of paying to use the restroom as an American breaks my brain
Thank God that tap water is also free in Croatia XD
those girls do not even know what a bank holiday is
Mykoreandic😍선생님🎉
In Switzerland I just really needed to pee and 2 CH at the train station was just so much for my Brazilian currency, i was so mad at that at this point cause in Brazil we would never! cut for when I actually met my Swiss bf and he just sneakily jumped over it 🤡
I see Yu Dilara! 😁
Agree with the swiss girl. The public bathroom in Zurich's train station is the cleanest public bathroom I've ever seen. First and only time I dared to sit on the toilet to take a shit.
🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗
Man the girl from Switzerland should open an asmr channel
Where are they filming? Because they are referring to ”here”?
i hate Sundays because everything is closed so my days off are during the weekday
In Romania we kiss on the cheek as greeting, we do not hug. Hugging is lot more personal than kissing.
Hii wow nice
@mykoreandic seems like such a sweet and polite guy ❤ but my dude, did no one give you a tip about that name choice before you chose it? 😉🍆
HR 🇭🇷 - 1. In Croatia it is normal for people to greet with cheek kiss 2 times and 3 times if it's orthodox family, although it is becoming rarer and rarer.
2. Never saw an iced Americano here in Croatia, doesn't mean that there isn't any.
3. Same as Latvia, Almost everything is closed on Sundays and most places have a shorter working schedule on Saturdays.
4. Only places where you need to pay for restrooms is where tourist attractions are, if you are randomly somewhere in the middle of Croatia restrooms are going to be free.
5. Never saw Rivella nor Ayran, we do have kaymak tho'. National drink for Croatia would be rakija lol.
6. Same as Sweden, tap water is free everywhere, you can ask for tap water even in bakery.
6. Kefir would be the closest to Ayran, KAymak is different (more like butter with salt) I really like it.
Sweden have Systembolaget the only stores where you can buy alcohol and they are owned by the goverment and they are closed on sundays and they close early on saturdays.
yeah, but Asia is big, even if people in eastern Asia don't kiss each other, in central Asian and Middle East we do kiss and hug to greet
Maybe it's just my Finnish brain, but I love drinking and eating cold stuff in the winter. One of my favorite things to is to eat an ice-cream while outside in the winter, it's just so refreshing :)
In Korea we eat burning hot food and soup in 38 Celsius weather…
@@oceansapphire1311 oh my god. I would melt. Legit a puddle
Newcastle? Bonnie lad!
1. The Finns would rather respect social distance than kiss on the cheek. You just wave your arm and say something like "hei", "moi", "terve" or "päivää". I could kiss a nice girl if I feel romantic.
2. A typical Finnish coffee is a hot brewed coffee with milk or cream in all seasons.
3. Finland is a very secular society and nowdays practically all the shops can be open on Sundays, Christmas and Easter if it is economically profitable for shop keepers. There's no law against it and the last restrictions were removed in 2009.
I don't think being closed on the weekends have anything to do with religion. It's more about respecting peoples needs of a break from work. We already work long enough weeks as it is.
1. You call it the respect for socisl distance, some would call it just distance, individualism, cold attitude, fear of physical contact... It's a matter of perspective.
3. My country is more secular than Finland (even religious education does not exist in schools) and all shops are closed on Sunday.
@@withoutshadowww I don't think it's a cold attitude or fear at all. We are close... With people we actually know. We just reserve that for people who have earned that level of closeness, not random people on the street. That's just a waste of time and effort.
@@Ragedaonenlonely Right. And in some countries (such as the Mediterranean and Balkan ones) people are not so reserved, suspicious, and they are more open with people they don't know... It's not that one thing is better over the another, although the psychological effects could be discussed and depression and sociopathy could be brought into the topic...
And sure, in those countries that "waste their time" they actually don't look through a spyhole while waiting for a neighbor to get into apartment - in order not to come across them... And they don't do their best not to cross their eyes with other passengers on the tram during the day which they would compensate later during the weekend by getting highly intoxicated by beer and vodka, and suddenly becoming "very friendly and loud".
Been around, got some impressions.
@@Ragedaonenlonely How does being open in weekend mean longer work weeks? The staff gets day offs just might not be weekend, doesn't really matter which day is off.
Americano is a rebrand of bad American coffee, lol.
Many times at supermarkets in Spain I've seen people on the queue to pay, at 9:59 PM, and when it was their turn to pay, it was already 10 PM so the cashier told them "sorry, I'm not allowed to sell that, it's 10 o'clock" and the costumers' faces "what!!! You kidding!?" "Not kidding, it's just the law"
In Russia, 10 PM is the time limit to buy alcohol.
if your are in before 22:00 you can buy, if you cant enter in 21:58-21:59 yo cant buy.
@@kame9 Not true generally. At 10 PM you CANNOT buy alcohol in Spain, even if you were there before 10 PM. Maybe you were lucky one day, but that was against the law. I've seen myself what I told several times in different supermarket chains (Carrefour, Mercadona, Consum...)
Latvia represent!!!
Never heard about pizza with salmon and avocado in Ukraine, maybe it's just a local thing for that girl. We do have everything closed on Sunday, but cafes and grocery shops are open
Salmon pizza is really common in Kharkiv, not sure about avocado, It's really tasty - you should try :)
Omgggg the collab I didn't know I needed!!! 😊
In Spain we don't pay in restaurants for toilet. It is non sense. It is true that Spain is very oriented for service economy. But still, you are eating there and you are paying and you receive a service that it should of course include if you need to go to the toilet. I have never understood this in Northern Europe.
I wonder if its just an European thing paying to use a public restroom 🚻? We don't in Australia. Same with tap water in cafés and restaurants. Some places when you sit down, the waiter will bring a bottle of chilled water with glasses to your table without asking for it. The kiss and hug greeting isn't really a thing, girls may do it with their close friends upon greeting and saying goodbye.
Hello Nathan,how are you doing today.
She's wrong about tap water in sweden. Restaurants charge you for water, tap water or not, but sometimes it's included in the "serving fee".
Dilara should create her own channel ❤
One for the algorythm.
What a lucky bastard!
wait! dilara is a pretty common name in turkiye, I didn't know people from Switzerland used this name too
She has Turkish roots; parents most likely
@@linusfotograf ohh didn't know that, thank you for the information!
@@foxylady5 if you actually watched the video, you would have heard it.
Finally Belgium!
I am Swedish and I even feel uncomfortable to hug people that is not like family. 😂 I remember when you grow up in the early teens and everyone started to hug when they greet each other. And I was like "hi".
How do you do with the kiss greeting when there is like a ugly stinky one in front of you? 🤔😂
Yea a quick hug is like the standard greeting between friends now in Sweden, for everyone but I've never done the kiss thing or even seen it lol.
Finland here. We definitely do not kiss as a greeting 😮😮😂
Do Finns even greet each other? You might have to talk if you did. ;)
@@kentvesser9484 If we cant avoid a greeting, we will nod quietly to each other like civilized people.
Same in Estonia