I never realized that I‘d find it rude if nobody said „Gesundheit!“, but now that I think about it, you are so right! In most situations I would definitely think it‘s very rude. And it hardly ever happens here. Fun story: Just last week when I was grocery shopping, I gave someone a coin that he had left in the shopping cart. He replied that he left it there on purpose, because it had already been in the cart when he took it. So he thanked me, but he did not want to take the coin from me, because it was not his. And what did I do? I put it back into the cart. Just because it was not mine, too. Obviously it‘s true, (some) Germans are very honest. I think we want to live in a society where we can trust (and rely on) each other, so we make sure that all others can trust (and rely on) us. Not all Germans are like this, of course, but maybe you are right and it still is "typical German".
As a German I once was on a ride in a train and someone sneezed very loud and a few times from the other side of the train compartenment, far away and near my seat someone screamed totally loud "GESUNDHEIT". Then the whole train was in laughter.
I recently found a „Pfandbeleg“ on the floor in a supermarket and when i returned it saying it wasn‘t mine to cash in, the cashier opened a draw with a little box in it and said: we get a lot of these! We collect them and around christmasstime we cash them in and give it to the homeless. I asked: wich one (we have 3 in the inner city area) The Cashier nodded (totally understanding my problem) and said: of course we devide it equally between the 3 men 😂Even as a german this felt like a particulary german conversation to me 😅
@@hannagrace55 aber das sind immerhin trotzdem Fremde Menschen und kaum einer nimmt bei sich fremde Menschen auf. Ja man kann fremden Menschen helfen ohne sie bei sich aufzunehmen. Und wenn er/sie zum Beispiel noch Probleme hat, wie zum Beispiel Drogen und Alkohol Abhängigkeit, kann das für die aufnehmende Person zu Problemen führen, oder sogar gefährlich sein. Man kann Menschen nur vor den Kopf gucken. Besser wäre er/sie/es bekäme einen Ort zum wohnen für sich selbst. Zum Beispiel einen beheizten Kleingarten Häuschen mit Dusche und Klo. Oder direkt eine Wohnung wue in Finnland
2:15 Some Germans will say "Thank you" after sneezing, even if no one wished "Gesundheit" to them, which intentionally causes some awkward moment where the others realize that they forgot to wish good health.
Learning to open beer bottles with anything usually starts around drinking age, mostly beginning with lighters. Once you work it out, you can use anything.
German understatement speaking foreign languages: When it comes to perfection, the glass is always half empty for a German. And when we're asked if we can speak English, in our minds we are still sitting in school and are afraid of failing the test. 😅
I'd call it "humble" instead. I study English at the university, but my level of "Business English" isn't nearly as developed as my casual English and slang, so that's what I mean with "I speak a little", not my straight As at school.@@barbsmart7373
Wir sagen, wir sprechen nur ein bisschen Englisch, damit niemand ein Englisch auf Muttersprachlerniveau erwartet. Denn dann würden wir uns blamieren, wenn wir erst behaupten, etwas zu können und es sich im Anschluss als unperfekt herausstellt. Wir lieben Perfektion und wir können es nicht leiden, wenn Leute lügen oder Aufschneider sind (also Leute, die behaupten, besser in etwas zu sein als sie es in Wirklichkeit sind). Ich habe immer einen Flaschenöffner bei mir, wenn ich das Haus verlasse, denn das mit den Bierflaschen kann ich absolut nicht. Es liegt nicht automatisch in der deutschen DNS. 😀 Und oft freuen sich andere Leute über meinen Flaschenöffner, die das ebenfalls nicht können.
Englisch ist auch eine schwer zu erlernende Sprache, weil sie starke Einflüsse des Nordischen, des Französischen und des Keltischen hat. Nicht selten gibt es 2 und mehr Wörter mit derselben Bedeutung. Es ist deshalb auch kein Zufall, wenn Schüler nach 9 oder mehr Jahren Schulunterricht kaum einen englischen Satz von sich geben können.
Englisch ist tatsächlich eine sehr leicht zu lernende Sprache, eben weil es für Begriffe mehrere Übersetzungen gibt oder man deutsche Worte/Sätze auf verschiedene Art und Weise ausdrücken kann. Der einzige Grund, warum Schüler und Schülerinnen sich auch nach vielen Jahren nicht trauen zu sprechen, ist das deutsche Schulsystem und die Vorstellung den Satz perfekt sagen zu müssen, da man sofort korrigiert wird, wenn man z. B. eine falsche Satzstellung benutzt (im Deutschen kann man nämlich lustigerweise verschiedene Sstzstellungen benutzen, was das Gesagte aber für Nichtmuttersprachler schwerer verständlich macht und weswegen deutsch als schwer zu erlernen gilt, denn andere Sprachen wie z. B. Englisch funktionieren nach einem Schema F, das nicht 1 zu 1 ins Deutsche übersetzbar ist). Englisch lernt sich am besten, wenn ninder sehr jung sind oder wenn man aus der Schule raus ist und sich selbst durch Filme etc. die Sprache beibringt.
@@thomaslauterbach5404 Excuse you, das war vllt. in dern 1970ern so, aber heutzutage? Es liegt nicht daran, dass die meisten Leute kein Englisch könnten, wir Deutschen generieren uns eben nur sehr gerne, wenn es darum geht, keine perfekte Aussprache zu haben. Bspw. beim "th" u.Ä. Die heutige Jugendsprache quillt quasi über vor Denglisch.
Hmmm ... Ich habe als Kind von meinem Vater noch ein Coca Cola Öffner bekommen, da mein Vater damals noch Zündhölzer benutzte. Wie sollte man sonst unterwegs im Auto die Flaschen aufbekommen? Zufälligerweise ist der Öffner auch Bierflaschen-kompatibel, so benutze ich ihn noch heute! 😂
Yes, Germans underestimate their English skills. English is not my first but after living in Canada for over 20 years I consider my English close to advanced. Then a couple of years ago I spent almost a month in Munich. On my first day I went to a corner bakery early in the morning and these 2 cute old ladies were the only ones working behind the counter. They were easily 70 y.o. Then I asked if they spoke english and they said “Ja, a bit”. I spoke simple sentences and a bit slower than usual. Well, it turned out that their English was as good as mine. “Would you like some milk in your coffee?” Or “would you have 5 cents by any chance this way I will give you €1 back?” I left thinking they were making fun of me but after a few days I realized that it’s a natural answer from Germans no matter how well they speak. I think they are so perfectionist that they really think they don’t speak enough English because they are not native speakers.
When an american learns 5 words of a foreign language, many of them would say 'I speak ... (german, for example)". And they show this little knowledge very proud. That would never happened with a german, cause we really don't like to do stuff, which we are not accomplished in and able to show a decent result. That's why we like to lower the expatations so as not to disappoint anyone. Greetings from Berlin 😎
As a child in the USA--say 1950--I learned to say "Gesundheit," but only when I began to learn German (1964) did I learn that it was an everyday feminine noun meaning "health." In my county now (in Maryland USA) there was a rule that boxes must be flattened for recycling, then the rule was rescinded. I assume that the government realized that people may have arthritis or just lack box-flattening skills. A big theme today is to have a society that includes all kinds of people. I'm an old guy but try to put out recyclables that are as clean and neat as possible, with some help from my son. Then our boxes and bottles etc are accepted as being good enough. Some materials are excluded, then the whole batch is not taken. Besten Dank für ein interessantes Video.
In French, we maybe do not say "Gesundheit" as much as the Germans, but whenever somebody we know fairly well sneezes, we wisch this person "To your hope" with a "A vos souhaits" or "A tes souhaits". I believe it is something similar to "God bless you", which I have heard in English speaking Canada.
Saying "Gsundheit" (without the first "e") is an almost instinctive reaction as well in Switzerland, Liechtenstein and Austria. Whether one knows the sneezing person or not doesn't matter.
Wieder ein tolles Video, bei dem ich öfters schmunzeln mußte…besonders bei dem Thema Flaschen öffnen. Mir war garnicht bewußt, daß wir soviel Dinge machen, die so typisch Deutsch sind. Auf einen 2. oder sogar 3. Teil würde ich mich sehr freuen
Oh God, yes. And to be honest: there are also soda and water bottles in the canteen, for example, that are sealed with a crown cap, if this is the right word for Kronkorken - because they are, of course, returnable bottles. I myself am one of the rare people who have to pull their Swiss army knife (sic!) out of their pocket to do this, because I can't get the crown cap off without a special tool. But I remember with a shudder how I once forgot my knife and was left with a bottle that I couldn't open. I asked the person sitting next to me for help and he opened the bottle for me in a very German way: with his teeth! 😮
1:50 Back in my 5th-8th grade we had a very strict and (at the time already) rather old biology teacher who was completely *opposed* to the very idea to say "Gesundheit" to anyone. She actually expected us, as her students, to apologize whenever we "dared to interrupt" her lesson with a sneeze. To this day I often find myself saying "Sorry" after sneezing without realizing that I just did until people look at me weird and ask if everything is okay. Just your regular school trauma or something along those lines, I guess 😂
XD That sneezing thing is so true. And also, if you happen to sneeze louder than normal and people are startled or shocked by the volume of it... They won't mention it, instead they will say "Gesundheit" in a tone with slightly more attitude. Like "Gee-SUNDHEIT!!!" And then someone else might say "now we're awake." Especially if you sneeze loudly early in the morning at work. LOL
It is good that you think everyone in Germany always says Gesundheit. Actually Knigge went on a crusade and tried getting rid of this habit. Fortunately only a few people stopped saying it. It is a wholesome habit and I hope we will keep it up forever.
The years during this phase were really awkward. 🙄😂 It usually went like this: Person 1: *sneezes Person 2: Gesundheit! Person 3: „Gesundheit“ sagt man nicht mehr! Or Person 2 was just like: Ich weiß, das sagt man nicht mehr, aber trotzdem: Gesundheit!
In Switzerland (German-speaking part) it's also the custom to say "Gsundheit" and considered rather rude not to say anything. So we have this in common with the Germans and the Dutch. 😊
Ja! Ein Pappkarton muss richtig platt werden, bevor er in den Container kann! Nicht nur einfach nur platt, ich muss ihn auch mehrmals falten und wieder platt reden! Erst dann bin ich so richtig befriedigt! Lach! Danke für das Video! Und einen schönen zweiten Advent!❤😂
@@hypatian9093"wobei es hilft, die Dinger vorher zu zerlegen" Exactly. All cartons are glued together at a handful of edges. Best practices is to disassemble cartons at these edges and get a completely flat carton in the end.
Hab mich oft geärgert, wie man so rücksichtslos gegenüber seinen Nachbarn sein kann, die Papiertonnen mit 2-3 Kartons komplett zu blockieren, wenn die dann erst in 2 Wochen wieder abgeholt werden. Ich hab das für "common sense" gehalten, dass man sein Altpapier faltet bzw. so entsorgt, dass auch die anderen noch eine Chance haben ihren Müll loszuwerden 🤷♂️
Returning lost items: Well, everyone loves to get their lost stuff back... so, if everybody takes lost property to the lost-and-found office, it can come true 😊 This summer, my daughter and I were taking a walk in an other town when we found a smartphone with some cash (50€, iirc) on a park bench... of course we would look for the nearest police station and hand it in. Given how often I myself have left my phone, my keys or or even my wallet somewhere (mostly in the supermarket) and always got them back, with no money missing. 🙃
The "Gesundheit" wish comes from the time of the plague. This usually began with someone sneezing and usually ended in death. So it made sense to wish "Gesundheit" to someone who sneezed. This custom has survived, even after the plague was long gone. Perhaps it was appropriate again with Covid.
Kia ora! I wonder what the uniquely Kiwi traits are. I find the rangatahi, the young people are really respectful and extremely helpful towards older people. I am not particularly old, but when I got some grey hairs I noticed the helpfulness a lot. The Maori people react naturally and instantly when helping or giving to others. Before I had a dog to look after, I would take a bus down the line for my weekends in a woolshed by a river & native bush. I would take a bus into the city carrying 2 or 3 bags, a coat, reading glasses, bus ticket, phone, sunglasses etc. During covid, wearing a mask and having my long hair flying everywhere at the bus stop was a new experience and quite a struggle. While practising my new skill of catching buses on time I learned some unexpected things. One time I found I left my bag at the bus stop in town so quickly drove back and from a distance saw my bag still there, in full view of hundreds of people. I also lost my reading glasses once and found them a month or two later at my bus stop. The tikanga ways of the Maori are very beautiful. I thought you could put together some uniquely Kiwi stuff. The first things I think of is our sweet as thing here, but that's similar to the she'll be right thing that the Aussie's probably started. So then I thought of Chur Bro. Kiwis don't just call people "mate" like the Aussies, we are more into the whanau family thing, so everyone is "Bro", as per the family connectedness concept. I also thought about the "giving back" concept when I was watching the St Andrews kids in Christchurch who performed 'Stairway to Heaven" which went viral this week. Check it out, Sister... you must be so proud of our little country. If you did a little research you could do a podcast about Christchurch. Not just about the school kids going viral, but about resilient people going through the earthquake & shootings (Aussie white supremecist) in our once innocent peace-loving nation. Very interesting podcast, Antoinette. Keep warm, mate! Tena koutou: Come on people. Give back today and click "subscribe". People out here in the world are learning some awesome stuff about Germans. The recycling and honesty...Chur Bro! We are not as good at recycling or handing back coins... but we have other precious things to share. Giving back to help raise someone else up is a kind and simple step for ourselves, for our growth (mana).
Fun fact: At my wedding last year, we had a game where someone had to open beer bottles with as many random objects as possible 😁 (including stuff like a sheet of paper - surprisingly sturdy if you fold it a few times - and some gummy flip-flops ...)
During "Wehrdienst" (military Duty) I had a comrade which could open beer bottles just with his eye socket or teeth. Never try this at home. Just believe me, it hurts!
The beer bottle trick is the right grip with you left hand that holds the beer bottle. It has to be tight and as far at the top as possible so you can put in any lever. And the object with which you open is has to have an edge.
If a box refuses to be flattened properly, then you can also rip it apart 😉 I never take things lying around. The owner might be looking for them, retracing their steps. 🤷♀️ I open bottles with bottle openers because other things might get damaged, when you open bottles with them. But if there’s no opener around… well its not that difficult. 😅
Sorry for my bad English, but I have to commit I‘m a German what I‘d like to say is, that your husband is totally right concerning the paper recycling box. If the box is filled up and next emptying is far in future the whole process of paper recycling stucks. Have a nice day and god bless you😉
Some years ago it was announced by the „Deutsche Knigge-Rat“ that saying „Gesundheit“ is not appropriate anymore. Instead of that we should ignore it. I really tried to do that, although it was so difficult, but after some time I realized that most people didn’t know about the changed rules or didn’t care about them. So I started saying Gesundheit again. Coins: as your son said so rightly: if it is not his, it belongs to someone else. I also ask. Opening beer: I don’t drink beer. Maybe that’s the reason why I am like a foreigner in my own country and need a bottle opener (if that’s the word for it). Speaking english: Despite my shortcomings I usually say yes, when asked that question. Most people only try to find their way and don’t expect a scientific lecture or something like that. But when I was younger, I used to say „not so well“ or something like that. Paper bin: I assume all countries with a recycling system and paper bins fold boxes. At least, if they have to share the bins with their enraged neighbors 😎
Of course one can say „Gesundheit“, when someone sneezes. However - according to the „Deutsche Knigge-Gesellschaft“ - it is more stylish to silently ignore the loudly presented bodily function of the other person. The sneezing person is already in the foreground enough. And in addition to that, the sneezer is indirectly described as „sick“ by wishing them „Gesundheit“. It surely is acceptable to say „Gesundheit“ - especially in a more informal, private context, but it just doesn't make a particularly distinguished impression. Less informed people may find this rude - it's the same with „Mahlzeit“ …
About the thing with the coin & honesty in general: (sorry it got a bit long) If you see it falling down, or if there is someone around, you only pick it up to give it to someone. But if you are somewhere, with no one around who could have lost the coin (most of the time it will be a red one, so a 1, 2, or 5 Cent), then you can pick it up. There is even the "Glückspfennig", or "Glückscent" by now. It meany something like "lucky penny" and it's the luck of finding one and a small superstition it will/can bring you some luck. On new year you can see them together with the other lucky things. Sometimes you can even see such 1 cent coins with a small figure of a ladybug or a pig, or a four leaf clover glued to it for sale. (these are really cheap) So, if there is not really a chance the person who lost it will come back to pick it up, you can pick up coins. (At least everyone I know does it) But it's not rare to see people running after someone who dropped something. One time I saw an older lady packing her groceries in her car, when her portmonaie fell out of her pocket. She hadn't realized it, so I told her. I saw these situations often. And if you were shopping and you realize the cashier forgot to charge you for something, you go back into the store to pay for it. (At least when the cashier wasn't entirely rude) My mother once didn't pay for a six-pack of water. She told the cashier twice, that she needed to scan the water. She got shushed and cursed out both time. So she stopeed saying anything and got it for free. (Cashiers need to pay the mising money in their cash register out of their own pockets. At least it was so, when my mother still worked as one) It's normal to the tell someone their charged to little. But if the persone is extremely rude like in this case, even nice people get angry and just leave I once lost my portmonaie during a large convention. I got it back with all the cards, all money and everything in it. And another time a large bag was forgoten in the subway and it was brought the lost and found in the main train station. A worker there even stayed after hours, so we could get back our stuff (it was winter and all our winter jackets where in there. together with my portmonaie and house keys. So it would had been really bad to have lost them forever) The only lost item I never got back was a ring. I lost weight and it must had slipped of my finger (it was extremely loose). I called the Event afterwards, but they had nothing. I had no idea where the lost and found of that city was, so I couldn't ask there. So maybe it was found, but I don't know. It could have fallen into a gully as well, as I was walking around outside as well... Well: Of course not everyone is like this. I have seen people cutting flowers on a field without paying, and I believe not every portmonaie that's found will find it's way to it's owner. But it's common sense to not steal and be honest for most people.
About the recycling bins, as much as we Germans want to pack everything neat and tidy, I think noone keeps in mind, that a regular 240l recycling bin would weigh arround 120kg when packed chock-full with just neatly stacked sheetpaper, or magazines. Try to pull that one from where it's resting to the curb where it will be picked up. And not forgetting the old lady, who lived the longest in our house, who, whether it was her week to care for the bins to be moved for the pickup would go out around noon, brought the empty bins back to the resting place and would wash out the "Restmülltone" and the compostable bin. She has my greatest respect. And about "Gesundheit", no saying it usually results in an ironic "Gesundheit! Danke! Alles muss man selber sagen." from me 😂
My wife and I regularly drive from Germany to Italy to visit her relatives. We always have to go through Austria and because fuel is cheaper there, we fill up in a town called Langkampfen. There is a farm shop there, without staff. You go in, help yourself and pay with your card. You can also pay in cash and for this purpose there is a large, flat basket into which you throw the amount due. The money lies openly in the basket, so anyone could steal it. One fine day, when we were shopping, we met the farmer replenishing his stock and I asked him whether free access to cash might not be too much of a temptation for some people to help themselves. The farmer shook his head and said that in his experience he had no losses. My wife, who is Italian, said with a laugh: "In Italy, the shop would be emptied on the first night and the money would be gone." And in Germany too there are fields where you can harvest vegetables or flowers. At the edge of the field there is a sign showing the prices and a cash register for payment. This system has been in place for decades and it is evident that the business is profitable. It is a matter of fairness.
😂 Yeah, I'm German and I can open beer bottles with almost everything, I will say "Gesundheit", if you sneeze, I would look, who's coin it is and just take it, when there's no one around and I will recycle everything and I hate it, when people don't do it and of course I fold paper. 😅 Although I'm a foreign language secretary or correspondence clerk (I don't know the exact English translation) for English, I am reserved when I speak to native speakers. I actually don't know why. Writing is much easier to me than speaking. 😊
I am a Ukrainian refugee in Germany. I'm learning German, but I still start all conversations with the phrase „Entschuldigung, sprechen Sie Englisch?“. And they always answer "just a little" XD
Where most people fail opening a beer bottle is the grip. Tighten your grip so that your fingers get stiffer. So that way everything can used as a lever when it has somewhat of an edge.
Fun fact: There is an old book here, titled 'Über den Umgang mit Menschen' von Adolph Knigge, which is about to teach the people good manners, like holding the door open for women ... All germans know that at least partly and when it comes to the sneezing, this book says, you just have to ignore all kinds of unintentional sounds that people do. And this works for farting and burb. But with sneezing, I've never seen why it is considered to be rude or unpolite to wish someone good health. And as foreigners allways say about germans, we do like to follow rules, but only, if the rule make sense. And this rule make no sense to us, so we just ignore that. 😉
Just a bit of Klugscheißen: Knigges book is not at all about basic manners like holding the door etc. It's about how to get along with different types of people considering their personality, situation and social status. A bit like Dale Carnegie.
@@kleinweichkleinweich das ist laut Wikipedia tatsächlich nicht erwiesen, verarmter Adel. Auf seinem Grabstein steht wohl kein 'von'. Aber mir soll's wurscht sein 😉
the typical tool for a german craftsman to open a beer bottle is the folding ruler. the folding ruler it self is very german and much more prefered over the tape measure
Beer bottle opening 😂, so true. I hardly ever open a bottle of beer with an opener for bottles, but nearly everything else which is in a grabbable aproximity.
Using any tool or objects to open a beer bottle is not only a German thing. Most Danes learn that too, at least the young men. When I was a child I found it very difficult but after a few thousand bottles you get the hack of it. In the end using your cellphone or remote control as a bottle opener will ruin them, but of course you can use softer materials, like a rolled up newspaper to open your bottle. I am sure it has something to do with drinking culture, that you want to learn such a skill. At first you think you look cool, but later you find out it is just practical. I would use any knife, fork, spoon or hard object if a beer opener was not visible (not silvery though, because silver is too soft and you will scratch it). If I'm in the garden I would use any hand tool with an edge. For many years I always carried a bottle opener with my keys, but when the keys are not around you are able to help yourself 😂
Thank you for this nice video since a bit more than a year I'm living in Germany I'm from Belgium and it also wondered me what you are telling in the begining, but now I'm used to it, I met here a lot of friendly people.
We germans underestimate our english because we have so much different words with tiny different meanings for everything in german and I think sometimes when I talk english, what is the correct english word for a special meaning? Than I use a word which I think could fit too, but then I have the feeling, that I talk a very simple elementary english but sometimes when I google this missing word later which I couldn´t remember, than I see, that there is no other english word and I thought much to complicated in my german way And by the way I can open beer bottels with everything also, even with a paper sheet
Again you nailed it. I totally agree that all your points feel like spot on. Regarding the beer bottle opening: You ask how we do it. At least for me it was secretly training at home alone many decades ago to avoid to embarrass myself being public. True story. Btw We have a saying here if one wonders how we manage this beer bottle opening magic: The beer bottle that I cannot open is still to be invented 😆
6:18 We do paper recycling since over 200 years. In the old times we use old dirty book paper as toilet paper, specially in the many war times between the short peace times. Since we know use Newspapers to inform herself - in the old times three times on day have a news paper, one at morning, one at noon for the day, and at evening. After old news paper telling only yesterday news the fishermen use them to store the fish in it if you buy one from the Kutter or at marketplace. In the old times people use wood fire, do you make it on - right, old newspaper. Do you can put them on the wall for isolation materials too. Big press and magazine companies use it for print more fresh news papers the next day too. So we recycle paper since so long time that we most forget why we this do - what do you do with old news papers, magazines, and old wrapping paper in New Zealand?
That thing with being able to open a beer bottle with whatever you grab first is a typical men's ability - I'm a German woman and I never understood how they do it! 😂
1. We have a "Knigge"!!! Nevertheless very funny :D We even shout through the crowd to "wish health" to someone sneezing. 2. We train to open beers in our youth!!!
Being one of „them“, I can confirm everything you said 😅. Fun fact, just today I found a 10 yen coin in front of Tokyo station on the street and just took it😱. Last night a man snooze while waiting for a green light to go and I didn’t say Gesundheit. Do I have to surrender my German passport now?😂.
How to open a bottle: Just hook under the cap and yank 😁 The toughest device I used to open a bottle was actually a 5 cent coin. That really was a challenge.
The most important part when you open a beer bottle with any object as a lever, is the hand which holds the bottle. That needs to be rigid. If you allow those fingers to move, whilst applying pressure with your improvised lever, the force behind it is lost. That is, how most people fail. When you practise it, you should start with an object, which is not likely to slip or bend. And it is easier, if you use something, that is a bit wider, because narrow objects put a lot of pressure to a single spot on the hand that holds the bottle and makes you loosen your grip, because it feels as if it is about to get painful, just a second before the cap would come off. Also: Do not hold the bottle to low, the pressure from your lever should not be applied to the more sensitive outer parts of the finger. Don´t hold it to high either, because then you are forced to let go a little, before the leverage kicks in and opens the cap. There is no talent required, it is just a matter of practice.
(Recycling) bin services are very expensive, thats why we try to use the space as much as possible. Its forbidden to put trash out without bin e.g. next to it.
If I remember it corectly ,saying "Gesundheit" isn´t similar to "bless you" , it isn´t a wish for the person who sneezed , it is like breaking a curse spell for oneself so that oneself does not catch your illness!But that is mostly forgotten because it´s from a time when the plague raided the land. 😉
Fun to watch. I'm not shy about my english, anymore. But it took a while. Pronounciation is a huge thing. About the "Gesundheit"-thing: a few years ago, the "Knigge", the self-titled maker of rules, about how to behave in society decided, that it would be rude to say "Gesundheit", if someone sneezes. Hello? WHAT? Stick your rules where the sun don't shine! (Is that a fluent english reaction?) WE! Stay polite and say: "Gesundheit!"
Actually I heared that this Gesundheit-Thing comes from the fear of the plague and cevere pandemics. It means two things: Get well soon and Hope you just have a cold /and no plague)
We germans are perfectionists and unless we speak 100% accentfree english, we consider it imperfect and therefor we humbly say " i speak a little bit of english" when infact we can hold prolonged conversations in fluid english....how do you know your speaking to a german?....he corrects you in your own native toungh ^^
If noone says "Gesundheit" when i sneezed I sometimes say it myself with strong voice. When someone around sneezes very loud I say "You know that you have got to clen that up". 😂 About the beer, got me. But monney I would always take. Something else is a wallet. I would even send it by mail if the Address is in it. Of course using the monney in the wallet.😉 About the paper I would tear all boxes. Didn't know that I am so extremely German 😂😂😂
On the topic of “sneezing” the following: There are also people in Germany who see it the other way around when someone says “Gesundheit" They then say that they think I'm sick and are offended by that ;-))
This kind to open a beerbottle is a relative new thing, i think the younger generation does it, but in the older generation normal openers are still used.
I myself am a 34 year old German ... and I am not able to open a bottle of beer with anything else than a BOTTLE OPENER. Some colleagues and friends already tried to teach me, but maybe I am simply too clumsy for learning this 😂 I also really rarely drink beer at all ... ... ... ... Ok, I just realize ... Am I actually a true native German without drinking beer? 😂😂😂😂😂
What should I say, I'm wearing on the middle-finger my left hand a ring made of steel and with it I'm opening beer-bottles. And I can open a beer-bottle with e lighter, screwdriver, folding rule and many other things. The secret is to know how a lever works. When you know it and you can turn it into reality you will be able too to open a beer-bottle with everything. Try it. :-))
Regarding the level of english: I think it's two things: 1st Germans are quite understatement and not off showy in general, and 2nd I think they know it can always be better. Or rather if it's not perfect and you can not express all your thoughts, then it's not perfect, then it's "a bit". 😅 Regarding the coins on the floor etc.: I definitely know that for personal items like hats, mittens, scarfs etc. They get put up a tree or fence or sth. But coins you can pick up and keep, if no person is there that has likely lost it (like someone walking in front of you etc.)
Well, for 3+4+5 you're just lacking longlife training to be German LOL. I open a bottle with a bottle opener, but it's easy: just ask your husband for the concept how it works - then you can use everything but please not your smartphone LOL. For Gesundheit: A friend in Arizona came up with this and said it's not so unusual to say instead of bless you now Gesundheit (same pronounciation like in Germany) - so this word is also adapted to the US
How about to open a bottle: I think a lot of Germans are good at opening a bottle because not just beer bottles have that kind of bottle. So there are a lot of people who learn how to open them since they are a child/teenager. I only managed to open them with a spoon (once) and am otherwise always useing an opener for bottles. About a coin: I honestly never expirienced or heared that someone asks if that is your coin. (I am from Baden-Württemberg) ...
Wonderful video - thanks :-)) About the beer bottle thing: I can't do it and I'm German (female though) :-)) So, it's not something you are born with; it's something you have to train a lot. I think it is like someone else wrote further down: secret training at home, mostly as a teenager, so you are not embarrassed in front of your friends... I tried it some times but never got the hang of it. I think the angle plays a role but also how hard you can grab the item to form this angle. I always thought my bones are just to "soft" to provide the right grip or something.
"Gesundheit" after a sneezer is no longer compliant these days, the sneezer tends to apologise. That's how things have changed in the meantime. But of course the old way is still in people's mind. In the past, the expression "Gesundheit" was not directed at the sneezer, but at oneself.This ritual dates back to the days of The Plague.
I am one of those Germans who can't open a beer bottle that way. Probably due to: I might drink one or two beer PER YEAR, and then usually in a restaurant with their own brew,
Mein Favorit beim Bier öffnen auf der Baustelle war immer der Zollstock. Seitlich parallel dranhalten, eins der beiden seitlich kürzeren Enden direkt unter den Kronkorken, Flasche und Zollstock mit einer Hand halten und mit der anderen Hand von unten einen Schlag gegen den Zollstock. Das war noch in den 80ern, ich glaube heute ist Bier auf den Baustellen verboten.
I live in Philadelphia, just about everybody says Gesundheit or G_d Bless you. I cannot remember the last time someone sneezed that someone didn't say something.
Beer bottle opening skills are starting with 13,14,15 year old kid's. Drinking age starts with 16. Therefore Teens will learn to open beer bottles in many ways.
As a German, I absolutely use a proper bottle opener for beer bottles. And I take and keep coins that I find on the walkway. But coins aren't exactly something unique belonging to a certain person. Clothes are. So I also put lost hats or gloves up somewhere. But your carton folding issues... come on! You are kidding, right?
2:20 I was taught as a kid to say 'Gesundheit' if someone sneezes. We had a french teacher in secondary school (5th grade) and when she sneezed we said 'Gesundheit' and she said how rude it is to say 'Gesundheit'. I as a rather cheeky brat asked her then if I should have said 'Vereck du Aas.' ('go to hell you carrion') - It lead to a visit with the principal, but no other consequences when it was explained what she said and my comment was just seen as a sarcastic reaction to her uncommon and rude reaction. You say thank you if someone wishes you 'Gesundheit' and do not say it's rude to do that.
I remember attempts to make people apologize for sneezing as polite and saying "Gesundheit" as rude. That went exactly nowhere, and I only ever met a few people who took that serious.
You are right saying Germans don´t trust in their english skills. My answer always is: "just a little bit", because I know, you will notice every little mistake.
It's absolutely not rude to not say anything if someone was sneezing. It does become more common to not say anything since "Gesundheit" does not mean "Bless you" but more like "Bless me." Also the coin thing only does happen if you are standing right next to it. As soon as no owner can be seen most people will keep it... The English thing is more about beeing safe. If we say we are not good at it no one can blame us if we in fact are not good at it. 😂 Almost all Germans can speak English on high levels.
I know people who habitually say "Danke" after they sneezed because the "Gesundheit" is so sure to be said. It's so hard to squeeze in the "Gesundheit" that most of the times it'll come after the "Danke" which leaves me confused every single time... Btw: point 2 made me laugh so hard :)
Regarding Germans speaking English: Yes, Germans are eager to learn foreign languages, because we think it will help us in our strive to become perfect Europeans. But as hard as we try, we won't make it. We only become more perfect Germans.
Additional to this ... English is a kind of a simplified German. Lots of words are very similar, while the English grammar is simplified compared to German. ... Especially if you´re from the north of Germany (, where the Saxons lived,) learning a language from Anglo-Saxon ancestory is an easy task. (It´s very similar to "Plattdeutsch", which is old-style language of Germany´s north.)
I don't know about others, but the reason why I learned English was, because I played a lot of online multiplayer computer games and speaking English was very useful to communicate with people who didn't speak German.
7:43 Moin! Wir sind hier in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland oder BR Deutschland, wir können im ganzen Land sehr gut Deutsch sprechen und lesen. Sollen das die Ausländer doch mal üben - oder sprechen alle Neuseeländer auch perfekt Deutsch in Neuseeland oder sollte ich eher NZ-Englisch nutzen? 🤔 Das war übrigens auch hart für deutsche Flüchtlinge aus den überseeischen Kolonien und Siedlungsgebieten, egal nach welchen der letzten dreißig Kriege in der Vergangenheit - man hat sie immer an der (Aus)Sprache erkannt! 😂 Ganz schlimm gerade für die Kinder, da Sie Schulpflicht hatten, die älteren Leute gingen halt zum Kaufmann, der selber Flüchtling war, denn dieser versteht Sie ja. Ganz so, wie das später mit den Gastarbeitern hier war. Hier oben in Hamburg helfe ich natürlich gerne bei dem Übersetzen von allerlei Sachen, die deutsche Sprache ist ja sehr umfangreich. Gerade die "Fachwörter" der Deutschen Bahn bzw. deren Übersetzungen sind ja nicht einfach. But why I should talk in English after we learn only Oxford-English in school times and nobody teach me what be Haka or why New Zealanders talk so a queetchy accents. Most "English" I learn later on the streets, from my different travel trips and my long holidays in Thailand where do you found near one hundred English-speaking persons but all talked it differently. Funny to say that Chinese people use English as inter linguistic language between them after they talk so many different Chinese language dialects? 😂
Nowadays you are supposed to say sorry when you sneeze as it is considered not very polite to spread your germs. . I don‘t think anybody would even realize they have lost 10 cents. As we do not have the possibility to burn paper or cardboard we try to squeeze every bit into the bin for recycling. It just makes sense.
Ich musste es auch erst spät erlernen ;-)) Flaschen bspw. mit einem Besteckteil zu öffnen. Ebenso, als Nichtraucher, mit einem Einweg Feuerzeug. Bei meinem Nachbarn bekomme ich immer eine Flasche Bier hin gestellt und meist ist kein normaler Flaschenöffner zur Hand.
Hi from Germany. I don't agree with the bottle opening items in general. In my opinion it's a men thing. Younger ones see it as a challenge when a bottle opener isn't available.
I never realized that I‘d find it rude if nobody said „Gesundheit!“, but now that I think about it, you are so right! In most situations I would definitely think it‘s very rude. And it hardly ever happens here.
Fun story: Just last week when I was grocery shopping, I gave someone a coin that he had left in the shopping cart. He replied that he left it there on purpose, because it had already been in the cart when he took it. So he thanked me, but he did not want to take the coin from me, because it was not his. And what did I do? I put it back into the cart. Just because it was not mine, too. Obviously it‘s true, (some) Germans are very honest. I think we want to live in a society where we can trust (and rely on) each other, so we make sure that all others can trust (and rely on) us.
Not all Germans are like this, of course, but maybe you are right and it still is "typical German".
That's why the system with the Trams work where you get in without a turnstile. We could of course get in without a ticket but most of us don't.
As a German I once was on a ride in a train and someone sneezed very loud and a few times from the other side of the train compartenment, far away and near my seat someone screamed totally loud "GESUNDHEIT". Then the whole train was in laughter.
I recently found a „Pfandbeleg“ on the floor in a supermarket and when i returned it saying it wasn‘t mine to cash in, the cashier opened a draw with a little box in it and said: we get a lot of these! We collect them and around christmasstime we cash them in and give it to the homeless. I asked: wich one (we have 3 in the inner city area)
The Cashier nodded (totally understanding my problem) and said: of course we devide it equally between the 3 men 😂Even as a german this felt like a particulary german conversation to me 😅
So cute❤ they do something nice to the homeless🥰 insted using it for themselves
hoch anständig, Respekt!
@@kleinweichkleinweich stimme zu👍🏼
Es wäre doch viel cooler den Obdachlosen bei sich aufzunehmen oder? Würde in manch anderen Kulturen bestimmt schon längst geschehen sein :)
@@hannagrace55 aber das sind immerhin trotzdem Fremde Menschen und kaum einer nimmt bei sich fremde Menschen auf. Ja man kann fremden Menschen helfen ohne sie bei sich aufzunehmen. Und wenn er/sie zum Beispiel noch Probleme hat, wie zum Beispiel Drogen und Alkohol Abhängigkeit, kann das für die aufnehmende Person zu Problemen führen, oder sogar gefährlich sein. Man kann Menschen nur vor den Kopf gucken. Besser wäre er/sie/es bekäme einen Ort zum wohnen für sich selbst. Zum Beispiel einen beheizten Kleingarten Häuschen mit Dusche und Klo. Oder direkt eine Wohnung wue in Finnland
2:15 Some Germans will say "Thank you" after sneezing, even if no one wished "Gesundheit" to them, which intentionally causes some awkward moment where the others realize that they forgot to wish good health.
Learning to open beer bottles with anything usually starts around drinking age, mostly beginning with lighters. Once you work it out, you can use anything.
I thought what you already posted. This is 100 % true 😝
German understatement speaking foreign languages: When it comes to perfection, the glass is always half empty for a German. And when we're asked if we can speak English, in our minds we are still sitting in school and are afraid of failing the test. 😅
I found this to be true for a LOT of nationalities and people.
If I hear someone speaking English, it is often so bad😀
How very sad.
I'd call it "humble" instead. I study English at the university, but my level of "Business English" isn't nearly as developed as my casual English and slang, so that's what I mean with "I speak a little", not my straight As at school.@@barbsmart7373
So true 😅
Wir sagen, wir sprechen nur ein bisschen Englisch, damit niemand ein Englisch auf Muttersprachlerniveau erwartet. Denn dann würden wir uns blamieren, wenn wir erst behaupten, etwas zu können und es sich im Anschluss als unperfekt herausstellt. Wir lieben Perfektion und wir können es nicht leiden, wenn Leute lügen oder Aufschneider sind (also Leute, die behaupten, besser in etwas zu sein als sie es in Wirklichkeit sind).
Ich habe immer einen Flaschenöffner bei mir, wenn ich das Haus verlasse, denn das mit den Bierflaschen kann ich absolut nicht. Es liegt nicht automatisch in der deutschen DNS. 😀 Und oft freuen sich andere Leute über meinen Flaschenöffner, die das ebenfalls nicht können.
Englisch ist auch eine schwer zu erlernende Sprache, weil sie starke Einflüsse des Nordischen, des Französischen und des Keltischen hat. Nicht selten gibt es 2 und mehr Wörter mit derselben Bedeutung. Es ist deshalb auch kein Zufall, wenn Schüler nach 9 oder mehr Jahren Schulunterricht kaum einen englischen Satz von sich geben können.
Englisch ist tatsächlich eine sehr leicht zu lernende Sprache, eben weil es für Begriffe mehrere Übersetzungen gibt oder man deutsche Worte/Sätze auf verschiedene Art und Weise ausdrücken kann. Der einzige Grund, warum Schüler und Schülerinnen sich auch nach vielen Jahren nicht trauen zu sprechen, ist das deutsche Schulsystem und die Vorstellung den Satz perfekt sagen zu müssen, da man sofort korrigiert wird, wenn man z. B. eine falsche Satzstellung benutzt (im Deutschen kann man nämlich lustigerweise verschiedene Sstzstellungen benutzen, was das Gesagte aber für Nichtmuttersprachler schwerer verständlich macht und weswegen deutsch als schwer zu erlernen gilt, denn andere Sprachen wie z. B. Englisch funktionieren nach einem Schema F, das nicht 1 zu 1 ins Deutsche übersetzbar ist). Englisch lernt sich am besten, wenn ninder sehr jung sind oder wenn man aus der Schule raus ist und sich selbst durch Filme etc. die Sprache beibringt.
Ich hab auch nen Flaschenöffner am schlüsselbund, nur für alle Fälle 😉
Liebe Grüße aus Köln
@@thomaslauterbach5404 Excuse you, das war vllt. in dern 1970ern so, aber heutzutage? Es liegt nicht daran, dass die meisten Leute kein Englisch könnten, wir Deutschen generieren uns eben nur sehr gerne, wenn es darum geht, keine perfekte Aussprache zu haben. Bspw. beim "th" u.Ä. Die heutige Jugendsprache quillt quasi über vor Denglisch.
Hmmm ... Ich habe als Kind von meinem Vater noch ein Coca Cola Öffner bekommen, da mein Vater damals noch Zündhölzer benutzte. Wie sollte man sonst unterwegs im Auto die Flaschen aufbekommen? Zufälligerweise ist der Öffner auch Bierflaschen-kompatibel, so benutze ich ihn noch heute! 😂
Yes, Germans underestimate their English skills. English is not my first but after living in Canada for over 20 years I consider my English close to advanced. Then a couple of years ago I spent almost a month in Munich. On my first day I went to a corner bakery early in the morning and these 2 cute old ladies were the only ones working behind the counter. They were easily 70 y.o. Then I asked if they spoke english and they said “Ja, a bit”. I spoke simple sentences and a bit slower than usual. Well, it turned out that their English was as good as mine. “Would you like some milk in your coffee?” Or “would you have 5 cents by any chance this way I will give you €1 back?” I left thinking they were making fun of me but after a few days I realized that it’s a natural answer from Germans no matter how well they speak. I think they are so perfectionist that they really think they don’t speak enough English because they are not native speakers.
When an american learns 5 words of a foreign language, many of them would say 'I speak ... (german, for example)". And they show this little knowledge very proud. That would never happened with a german, cause we really don't like to do stuff, which we are not accomplished in and able to show a decent result. That's why we like to lower the expatations so as not to disappoint anyone.
Greetings from Berlin 😎
Ausnahme, Karl May: "Ich spreche und schreibe: Französisch, englisch, italienisch, spanisch, griechisch, lateinisch, hebräisch, rumänisch, arabisch 6 Dialekte, persisch, kurdisch 2 Dialekte, chinesisch 2 Dialekte, malayisch, Namaqua, einige Sunda-Idiome, Suaheli, Hindostanisch, türkisch und die Indianersprachen der Sioux, Apachen, Komantschen, Snakes, Uthas, Kiowas nebst dem Ketschumany 3 südamerikanische Dialekte. Lappländisch will ich nicht mitzählen."
@@Overcrook65
Hahaha und ich habe alle Orte an denen meine Romane spielen selber besucht.
Thats funny because sometimes someone sneezes three times in a row and I'll be saying three times Gesundheit 😂
I am German. Someone asked me who wrote the opera La Boheme. I said Puccini. He answered Gesundheit !
Me, as a German, was very astonished by our unique behavior. It was very funny! Thanks for agood lough in a positive way.
Du solltest auch mal das Land verlassen, wenn du denkst das ist nur bei euch so..
As a child in the USA--say 1950--I learned to say "Gesundheit," but only when I began to learn German (1964) did I learn that it was an everyday feminine noun meaning "health." In my county now (in Maryland USA) there was a rule that boxes must be flattened for recycling, then the rule was rescinded. I assume that the government realized that people may have arthritis or just lack box-flattening skills. A big theme today is to have a society that includes all kinds of people. I'm an old guy but try to put out recyclables that are as clean and neat as possible, with some help from my son. Then our boxes and bottles etc are accepted as being good enough. Some materials are excluded, then the whole batch is not taken. Besten Dank für ein interessantes Video.
God loves you Jim ❤
In French, we maybe do not say "Gesundheit" as much as the Germans, but whenever somebody we know fairly well sneezes, we wisch this person "To your hope" with a "A vos souhaits" or "A tes souhaits". I believe it is something similar to "God bless you", which I have heard in English speaking Canada.
Saying "Gsundheit" (without the first "e") is an almost instinctive reaction as well in Switzerland, Liechtenstein and Austria. Whether one knows the sneezing person or not doesn't matter.
Wieder ein tolles Video, bei dem ich öfters schmunzeln mußte…besonders bei dem Thema Flaschen öffnen.
Mir war garnicht bewußt, daß wir soviel Dinge machen, die so typisch Deutsch sind.
Auf einen 2. oder sogar 3. Teil würde ich mich sehr freuen
I saw my Dad open beer bottles in his shed
Oh God, yes. And to be honest: there are also soda and water bottles in the canteen, for example, that are sealed with a crown cap, if this is the right word for Kronkorken - because they are, of course, returnable bottles. I myself am one of the rare people who have to pull their Swiss army knife (sic!) out of their pocket to do this, because I can't get the crown cap off without a special tool.
But I remember with a shudder how I once forgot my knife and was left with a bottle that I couldn't open. I asked the person sitting next to me for help and he opened the bottle for me in a very German way: with his teeth! 😮
Wir in ö machen das auch alles. Da is nix typisch deutsch.
1:50 Back in my 5th-8th grade we had a very strict and (at the time already) rather old biology teacher who was completely *opposed* to the very idea to say "Gesundheit" to anyone. She actually expected us, as her students, to apologize whenever we "dared to interrupt" her lesson with a sneeze. To this day I often find myself saying "Sorry" after sneezing without realizing that I just did until people look at me weird and ask if everything is okay. Just your regular school trauma or something along those lines, I guess 😂
XD That sneezing thing is so true.
And also, if you happen to sneeze louder than normal and people are startled or shocked by the volume of it... They won't mention it, instead they will say "Gesundheit" in a tone with slightly more attitude. Like "Gee-SUNDHEIT!!!" And then someone else might say "now we're awake." Especially if you sneeze loudly early in the morning at work. LOL
It is good that you think everyone in Germany always says Gesundheit. Actually Knigge went on a crusade and tried getting rid of this habit. Fortunately only a few people stopped saying it. It is a wholesome habit and I hope we will keep it up forever.
The years during this phase were really awkward. 🙄😂 It usually went like this:
Person 1: *sneezes
Person 2: Gesundheit!
Person 3: „Gesundheit“ sagt man nicht mehr!
Or Person 2 was just like: Ich weiß, das sagt man nicht mehr, aber trotzdem: Gesundheit!
In The Netherlands we say: Gezondheid (Gesungheit in Dutch)
In Switzerland (German-speaking part) it's also the custom to say "Gsundheit" and considered rather rude not to say anything. So we have this in common with the Germans and the Dutch. 😊
Ich habe mich in allen Dingen wieder gefunden. Das war lustig!
Gerne einen zweiten Teil 😊
Ging mir auch so und ich bin keine Deutsche. 😂🤣
@@JaM22113ich auch, nur deutsche denken scheinbar alles is typisch deutsch. Manche sollten mal das Land verlassen..
same😊
Ja! Ein Pappkarton muss richtig platt werden, bevor er in den Container kann! Nicht nur einfach nur platt, ich muss ihn auch mehrmals falten und wieder platt reden! Erst dann bin ich so richtig befriedigt! Lach! Danke für das Video! Und einen schönen zweiten Advent!❤😂
"Flachgelegt gehöre ich zum Altpapier" - steht ja schon drauf ;)
(wobei es hilft, die Dinger vorher zu zerlegen)
@@hypatian9093 😉
@@hypatian9093"wobei es hilft, die Dinger vorher zu zerlegen"
Exactly. All cartons are glued together at a handful of edges. Best practices is to disassemble cartons at these edges and get a completely flat carton in the end.
Hab mich oft geärgert, wie man so rücksichtslos gegenüber seinen Nachbarn sein kann, die Papiertonnen mit 2-3 Kartons komplett zu blockieren, wenn die dann erst in 2 Wochen wieder abgeholt werden. Ich hab das für "common sense" gehalten, dass man sein Altpapier faltet bzw. so entsorgt, dass auch die anderen noch eine Chance haben ihren Müll loszuwerden 🤷♂️
Returning lost items: Well, everyone loves to get their lost stuff back... so, if everybody takes lost property to the lost-and-found office, it can come true 😊
This summer, my daughter and I were taking a walk in an other town when we found a smartphone with some cash (50€, iirc) on a park bench... of course we would look for the nearest police station and hand it in. Given how often I myself have left my phone, my keys or or even my wallet somewhere (mostly in the supermarket) and always got them back, with no money missing. 🙃
The "Gesundheit" wish comes from the time of the plague. This usually began with someone sneezing and usually ended in death. So it made sense to wish "Gesundheit" to someone who sneezed. This custom has survived, even after the plague was long gone. Perhaps it was appropriate again with Covid.
Kia ora!
I wonder what the uniquely Kiwi traits are.
I find the rangatahi, the young people are really respectful and extremely helpful towards older people.
I am not particularly old, but when I got some grey hairs I noticed the helpfulness a lot.
The Maori people react naturally and instantly when helping or giving to others.
Before I had a dog to look after, I would take a bus down the line for my weekends in a woolshed by a river & native bush.
I would take a bus into the city carrying 2 or 3 bags, a coat, reading glasses, bus ticket, phone, sunglasses etc. During covid, wearing a mask and having my long hair flying everywhere at the bus stop was a new experience and quite a struggle.
While practising my new skill of catching buses on time I learned some unexpected things.
One time I found I left my bag at the bus stop in town so quickly drove back and from a distance saw my bag still there, in full view of hundreds of people. I also lost my reading glasses once and found them a month or two later at my bus stop.
The tikanga ways of the Maori are very beautiful.
I thought you could put together some uniquely Kiwi stuff. The first things I think of is our sweet as thing here, but that's similar to the she'll be right thing that the Aussie's probably started. So then I thought of Chur Bro. Kiwis don't just call people "mate" like the Aussies, we are more into the whanau family thing, so everyone is "Bro", as per the family connectedness concept.
I also thought about the "giving back" concept when I was watching the St Andrews kids in Christchurch who performed 'Stairway to Heaven" which went viral this week. Check it out, Sister... you must be so proud of our little country.
If you did a little research you could do a podcast about Christchurch. Not just about the school kids going viral, but about resilient people going through the earthquake & shootings (Aussie white supremecist) in our once innocent peace-loving nation.
Very interesting podcast, Antoinette. Keep warm, mate!
Tena koutou:
Come on people. Give back today and click "subscribe".
People out here in the world are learning some awesome stuff about Germans. The recycling and honesty...Chur Bro! We are not as good at recycling or handing back coins... but we have other precious things to share. Giving back to help raise someone else up is a kind and simple step for ourselves, for our growth (mana).
Fun fact: At my wedding last year, we had a game where someone had to open beer bottles with as many random objects as possible 😁 (including stuff like a sheet of paper - surprisingly sturdy if you fold it a few times - and some gummy flip-flops ...)
During "Wehrdienst" (military Duty) I had a comrade which could open beer bottles just with his eye socket or teeth.
Never try this at home. Just believe me, it hurts!
The beer bottle trick is the right grip with you left hand that holds the beer bottle. It has to be tight and as far at the top as possible so you can put in any lever. And the object with which you open is has to have an edge.
That was really funny and sweet, thank you!
Hi, Grüße an den Bodensee und einen schönen zweiten Advent!❤
@@tasminoben686 Hi, wünsche ich dir auch, Ben!
If a box refuses to be flattened properly, then you can also rip it apart 😉
I never take things lying around. The owner might be looking for them, retracing their steps. 🤷♀️
I open bottles with bottle openers because other things might get damaged, when you open bottles with them. But if there’s no opener around… well its not that difficult. 😅
Thank you for being so nice and kind to us
Sorry for my bad English, but I have to commit I‘m a German what I‘d like to say is, that your husband is totally right concerning the paper recycling box. If the box is filled up and next emptying is far in future the whole process of paper recycling stucks. Have a nice day and god bless you😉
Some years ago it was announced by the „Deutsche Knigge-Rat“ that saying „Gesundheit“ is not appropriate anymore. Instead of that we should ignore it.
I really tried to do that, although it was so difficult, but after some time I realized that most people didn’t know about the changed rules or didn’t care about them. So I started saying Gesundheit again.
Coins: as your son said so rightly: if it is not his, it belongs to someone else. I also ask.
Opening beer: I don’t drink beer. Maybe that’s the reason why I am like a foreigner in my own country and need a bottle opener (if that’s the word for it).
Speaking english: Despite my shortcomings I usually say yes, when asked that question. Most people only try to find their way and don’t expect a scientific lecture or something like that. But when I was younger, I used to say „not so well“ or something like that.
Paper bin: I assume all countries with a recycling system and paper bins fold boxes. At least, if they have to share the bins with their enraged neighbors 😎
Of course one can say „Gesundheit“, when someone sneezes. However - according to the „Deutsche Knigge-Gesellschaft“ - it is more stylish to silently ignore the loudly presented bodily function of the other person. The sneezing person is already in the foreground enough. And in addition to that, the sneezer is indirectly described as „sick“ by wishing them „Gesundheit“.
It surely is acceptable to say „Gesundheit“ - especially in a more informal, private context, but it just doesn't make a particularly distinguished impression.
Less informed people may find this rude - it's the same with „Mahlzeit“ …
About the thing with the coin & honesty in general: (sorry it got a bit long)
If you see it falling down, or if there is someone around, you only pick it up to give it to someone. But if you are somewhere, with no one around who could have lost the coin (most of the time it will be a red one, so a 1, 2, or 5 Cent), then you can pick it up. There is even the "Glückspfennig", or "Glückscent" by now. It meany something like "lucky penny" and it's the luck of finding one and a small superstition it will/can bring you some luck. On new year you can see them together with the other lucky things. Sometimes you can even see such 1 cent coins with a small figure of a ladybug or a pig, or a four leaf clover glued to it for sale. (these are really cheap)
So, if there is not really a chance the person who lost it will come back to pick it up, you can pick up coins. (At least everyone I know does it)
But it's not rare to see people running after someone who dropped something. One time I saw an older lady packing her groceries in her car, when her portmonaie fell out of her pocket. She hadn't realized it, so I told her. I saw these situations often.
And if you were shopping and you realize the cashier forgot to charge you for something, you go back into the store to pay for it. (At least when the cashier wasn't entirely rude)
My mother once didn't pay for a six-pack of water. She told the cashier twice, that she needed to scan the water. She got shushed and cursed out both time. So she stopeed saying anything and got it for free. (Cashiers need to pay the mising money in their cash register out of their own pockets. At least it was so, when my mother still worked as one) It's normal to the tell someone their charged to little. But if the persone is extremely rude like in this case, even nice people get angry and just leave
I once lost my portmonaie during a large convention. I got it back with all the cards, all money and everything in it. And another time a large bag was forgoten in the subway and it was brought the lost and found in the main train station. A worker there even stayed after hours, so we could get back our stuff (it was winter and all our winter jackets where in there. together with my portmonaie and house keys. So it would had been really bad to have lost them forever)
The only lost item I never got back was a ring. I lost weight and it must had slipped of my finger (it was extremely loose). I called the Event afterwards, but they had nothing. I had no idea where the lost and found of that city was, so I couldn't ask there. So maybe it was found, but I don't know. It could have fallen into a gully as well, as I was walking around outside as well...
Well: Of course not everyone is like this. I have seen people cutting flowers on a field without paying, and I believe not every portmonaie that's found will find it's way to it's owner. But it's common sense to not steal and be honest for most people.
and "Wer den Pfennig nicht ehrt, ist des Talers nicht wert."
@@hansmeiser32
Other version "Wer den Pfennig nicht ehrt, hat einen Hang zum Großgeld" ;-)
Btw. we don't flatten cartons for fun because we pay per volume.
About the recycling bins, as much as we Germans want to pack everything neat and tidy, I think noone keeps in mind, that a regular 240l recycling bin would weigh arround 120kg when packed chock-full with just neatly stacked sheetpaper, or magazines. Try to pull that one from where it's resting to the curb where it will be picked up. And not forgetting the old lady, who lived the longest in our house, who, whether it was her week to care for the bins to be moved for the pickup would go out around noon, brought the empty bins back to the resting place and would wash out the "Restmülltone" and the compostable bin. She has my greatest respect.
And about "Gesundheit", no saying it usually results in an ironic "Gesundheit! Danke! Alles muss man selber sagen." from me 😂
My wife and I regularly drive from Germany to Italy to visit her relatives. We always have to go through Austria and because fuel is cheaper there, we fill up in a town called Langkampfen. There is a farm shop there, without staff. You go in, help yourself and pay with your card. You can also pay in cash and for this purpose there is a large, flat basket into which you throw the amount due. The money lies openly in the basket, so anyone could steal it. One fine day, when we were shopping, we met the farmer replenishing his stock and I asked him whether free access to cash might not be too much of a temptation for some people to help themselves. The farmer shook his head and said that in his experience he had no losses.
My wife, who is Italian, said with a laugh: "In Italy, the shop would be emptied on the first night and the money would be gone."
And in Germany too there are fields where you can harvest vegetables or flowers. At the edge of the field there is a sign showing the prices and a cash register for payment. This system has been in place for decades and it is evident that the business is profitable.
It is a matter of fairness.
Thank you Emilily! 🥰
😂 Yeah, I'm German and I can open beer bottles with almost everything, I will say "Gesundheit", if you sneeze, I would look, who's coin it is and just take it, when there's no one around and I will recycle everything and I hate it, when people don't do it and of course I fold paper. 😅
Although I'm a foreign language secretary or correspondence clerk (I don't know the exact English translation) for English, I am reserved when I speak to native speakers. I actually don't know why. Writing is much easier to me than speaking. 😊
I am a Ukrainian refugee in Germany. I'm learning German, but I still start all conversations with the phrase „Entschuldigung, sprechen Sie Englisch?“. And they always answer "just a little" XD
Alles Gute und viel Erfolg!
@@kleinweichkleinweich vielen Dank :)
A very enjoyable video, thank you 👍
Glad you enjoyed it
Where most people fail opening a beer bottle is the grip. Tighten your grip so that your fingers get stiffer. So that way everything can used as a lever when it has somewhat of an edge.
Fun fact: There is an old book here, titled 'Über den Umgang mit Menschen' von Adolph Knigge, which is about to teach the people good manners, like holding the door open for women ... All germans know that at least partly and when it comes to the sneezing, this book says, you just have to ignore all kinds of unintentional sounds that people do. And this works for farting and burb. But with sneezing, I've never seen why it is considered to be rude or unpolite to wish someone good health.
And as foreigners allways say about germans, we do like to follow rules, but only, if the rule make sense. And this rule make no sense to us, so we just ignore that. 😉
Just a bit of Klugscheißen: Knigges book is not at all about basic manners like holding the door etc. It's about how to get along with different types of people considering their personality, situation and social status. A bit like Dale Carnegie.
Freiherr von Knigge!
soviel Zeit muss sein
@@kleinweichkleinweich das ist laut Wikipedia tatsächlich nicht erwiesen, verarmter Adel. Auf seinem Grabstein steht wohl kein 'von'. Aber mir soll's wurscht sein 😉
the typical tool for a german craftsman to open a beer bottle is the folding ruler. the folding ruler it self is very german and much more prefered over the tape measure
oder ein feuerzeug
oder ein schraubenschlüssel
oder eine andere bierflasche
Mit einem Maßband kann man auch Bierflaschen öffnen! Aber mit dem Zollstock geht es am besten.
Ein Metermaß ist einem Zollstock jederzeit vorzuziehen, seit der Zoll außer Usus ist.
@@jrgptr935 da der offizielle Begriff Gliedermaßstab ist und meinem Beitrag niemals Bezug zum Zoll genommen wird, verstehe ich Ihren Beitrag nicht.
@@nikomangelmann6054 Da ist jedesmal mit Zollstock übersetzt worden.
Beer bottle opening 😂, so true. I hardly ever open a bottle of beer with an opener for bottles, but nearly everything else which is in a grabbable aproximity.
Using any tool or objects to open a beer bottle is not only a German thing. Most Danes learn that too, at least the young men. When I was a child I found it very difficult but after a few thousand bottles you get the hack of it. In the end using your cellphone or remote control as a bottle opener will ruin them, but of course you can use softer materials, like a rolled up newspaper to open your bottle.
I am sure it has something to do with drinking culture, that you want to learn such a skill. At first you think you look cool, but later you find out it is just practical. I would use any knife, fork, spoon or hard object if a beer opener was not visible (not silvery though, because silver is too soft and you will scratch it). If I'm in the garden I would use any hand tool with an edge.
For many years I always carried a bottle opener with my keys, but when the keys are not around you are able to help yourself 😂
Thank you for this nice video since a bit more than a year I'm living in Germany I'm from Belgium and it also wondered me what you are telling in the begining, but now I'm used to it, I met here a lot of friendly people.
I've been living in Germany for 50 years and have never had the feeling that I must say "Gesundheit"!!
We germans underestimate our english because we have so much different words with tiny different meanings for everything in german and I think sometimes when I talk english, what is the correct english word for a special meaning? Than I use a word which I think could fit too, but then I have the feeling, that I talk a very simple elementary english
but sometimes when I google this missing word later which I couldn´t remember, than I see, that there is no other english word and I thought much to complicated in my german way
And by the way I can open beer bottels with everything also, even with a paper sheet
Again you nailed it. I totally agree that all your points feel like spot on. Regarding the beer bottle opening: You ask how we do it. At least for me it was secretly training at home alone many decades ago to avoid to embarrass myself being public. True story.
Btw
We have a saying here if one wonders how we manage this beer bottle opening magic:
The beer bottle that I cannot open is still to be invented 😆
6:18 We do paper recycling since over 200 years. In the old times we use old dirty book paper as toilet paper, specially in the many war times between the short peace times. Since we know use Newspapers to inform herself - in the old times three times on day have a news paper, one at morning, one at noon for the day, and at evening. After old news paper telling only yesterday news the fishermen use them to store the fish in it if you buy one from the Kutter or at marketplace. In the old times people use wood fire, do you make it on - right, old newspaper. Do you can put them on the wall for isolation materials too. Big press and magazine companies use it for print more fresh news papers the next day too.
So we recycle paper since so long time that we most forget why we this do - what do you do with old news papers, magazines, and old wrapping paper in New Zealand?
My first time opening a bottle with toilet paper(not the best paper for this task)made me smile.
That thing with being able to open a beer bottle with whatever you grab first is a typical men's ability - I'm a German woman and I never understood how they do it! 😂
With the beer bottles it's like with anything else. You have to believe you can do it.
When you're a smoker, you usually take your lighter to open a bottle of beer!
1. We have a "Knigge"!!! Nevertheless very funny :D We even shout through the crowd to "wish health" to someone sneezing. 2. We train to open beers in our youth!!!
Once i opend a bier with an old cd-rom drive! It was called "De Bier aufmach Laufwerk" or "the Beer openingdrive"😅
Being one of „them“, I can confirm everything you said 😅. Fun fact, just today I found a 10 yen coin in front of Tokyo station on the street and just took it😱. Last night a man snooze while waiting for a green light to go and I didn’t say Gesundheit. Do I have to surrender my German passport now?😂.
How to open a bottle: Just hook under the cap and yank 😁
The toughest device I used to open a bottle was actually a 5 cent coin. That really was a challenge.
I can open a bottle with a folded piece of paper.
@@TheRexHo54 Jup, me too :)
All you need to open a crown cap/bottle cap is a firm edge and some leverage and/or impluse. Everybody can learn it... 😄
The most important part when you open a beer bottle with any object as a lever, is the hand which holds the bottle. That needs to be rigid. If you allow those fingers to move, whilst applying pressure with your improvised lever, the force behind it is lost. That is, how most people fail. When you practise it, you should start with an object, which is not likely to slip or bend. And it is easier, if you use something, that is a bit wider, because narrow objects put a lot of pressure to a single spot on the hand that holds the bottle and makes you loosen your grip, because it feels as if it is about to get painful, just a second before the cap would come off. Also: Do not hold the bottle to low, the pressure from your lever should not be applied to the more sensitive outer parts of the finger. Don´t hold it to high either, because then you are forced to let go a little, before the leverage kicks in and opens the cap.
There is no talent required, it is just a matter of practice.
(Recycling) bin services are very expensive, thats why we try to use the space as much as possible. Its forbidden to put trash out without bin e.g. next to it.
People in the U.S say "gesundheit" as well.
If I remember it corectly ,saying "Gesundheit" isn´t similar to "bless you" , it isn´t a wish for the person who sneezed , it is like breaking a curse spell for oneself so that oneself does not catch your illness!But that is mostly forgotten because it´s from a time when the plague raided the land.
😉
Fun to watch. I'm not shy about my english, anymore. But it took a while. Pronounciation is a huge thing.
About the "Gesundheit"-thing: a few years ago, the "Knigge", the self-titled maker of rules, about how to behave in society decided, that it would be rude to say "Gesundheit", if someone sneezes. Hello? WHAT? Stick your rules where the sun don't shine! (Is that a fluent english reaction?)
WE! Stay polite and say: "Gesundheit!"
Actually I heared that this Gesundheit-Thing comes from the fear of the plague and cevere pandemics. It means two things: Get well soon and Hope you just have a cold /and no plague)
I had a collegue who shouted ‚Aufwischen!‘ after somedy loud sneeze
We germans are perfectionists and unless we speak 100% accentfree english, we consider it imperfect and therefor we humbly say " i speak a little bit of english" when infact we can hold prolonged conversations in fluid english....how do you know your speaking to a german?....he corrects you in your own native toungh ^^
If noone says "Gesundheit" when i sneezed I sometimes say it myself with strong voice. When someone around sneezes very loud I say "You know that you have got to clen that up". 😂
About the beer, got me. But monney I would always take. Something else is a wallet. I would even send it by mail if the Address is in it. Of course using the monney in the wallet.😉
About the paper I would tear all boxes. Didn't know that I am so extremely German 😂😂😂
Saying "Gesundheit" means I wish you a good health assuming that a cold could be the reason for sneezing.
On the topic of “sneezing” the following: There are also people in Germany who see it the other way around when someone says “Gesundheit" They then say that they think I'm sick and are offended by that ;-))
This kind to open a beerbottle is a relative new thing, i think the younger generation does it, but in the older generation normal openers are still used.
Love this video ❤
I myself am a 34 year old German ... and I am not able to open a bottle of beer with anything else than a BOTTLE OPENER. Some colleagues and friends already tried to teach me, but maybe I am simply too clumsy for learning this 😂
I also really rarely drink beer at all ...
...
...
...
Ok, I just realize ... Am I actually a true native German without drinking beer?
😂😂😂😂😂
Saying "Gesundheit" after sneezing is like saying "thank you" after getting something from someone. It might considered rude if you don't do it.
What should I say, I'm wearing on the middle-finger my left hand a ring made of steel and with it I'm opening beer-bottles. And I can open a beer-bottle with e lighter, screwdriver, folding rule and many other things. The secret is to know how a lever works. When you know it and you can turn it into reality you will be able too to open a beer-bottle with everything. Try it. :-))
Regarding the level of english:
I think it's two things:
1st Germans are quite understatement and not off showy in general,
and 2nd I think they know it can always be better. Or rather if it's not perfect and you can not express all your thoughts, then it's not perfect, then it's "a bit".
😅
Regarding the coins on the floor etc.:
I definitely know that for personal items like hats, mittens, scarfs etc. They get put up a tree or fence or sth.
But coins you can pick up and keep, if no person is there that has likely lost it (like someone walking in front of you etc.)
Well, for 3+4+5 you're just lacking longlife training to be German LOL.
I open a bottle with a bottle opener, but it's easy: just ask your husband for the concept how it works - then you can use everything but please not your smartphone LOL.
For Gesundheit: A friend in Arizona came up with this and said it's not so unusual to say instead of bless you now Gesundheit (same pronounciation like in Germany) - so this word is also adapted to the US
I heard it since I was little and I’m old now.
How about to open a bottle: I think a lot of Germans are good at opening a bottle because not just beer bottles have that kind of bottle. So there are a lot of people who learn how to open them since they are a child/teenager. I only managed to open them with a spoon (once) and am otherwise always useing an opener for bottles.
About a coin: I honestly never expirienced or heared that someone asks if that is your coin. (I am from Baden-Württemberg) ...
Wonderful video - thanks :-)) About the beer bottle thing: I can't do it and I'm German (female though) :-)) So, it's not something you are born with; it's something you have to train a lot. I think it is like someone else wrote further down: secret training at home, mostly as a teenager, so you are not embarrassed in front of your friends... I tried it some times but never got the hang of it. I think the angle plays a role but also how hard you can grab the item to form this angle. I always thought my bones are just to "soft" to provide the right grip or something.
"Gesundheit" after a sneezer is no longer compliant these days, the sneezer tends to apologise. That's how things have changed in the meantime. But of course the old way is still in people's mind. In the past, the expression "Gesundheit" was not directed at the sneezer, but at oneself.This ritual dates back to the days of The Plague.
I am one of those Germans who can't open a beer bottle that way. Probably due to: I might drink one or two beer PER YEAR, and then usually in a restaurant with their own brew,
Originally, saying "Gesundheit" was ment as a protection for yourself from the illness of the sneezer.
Mein Favorit beim Bier öffnen auf der Baustelle war immer der Zollstock. Seitlich parallel dranhalten, eins der beiden seitlich kürzeren Enden direkt unter den Kronkorken, Flasche und Zollstock mit einer Hand halten und mit der anderen Hand von unten einen Schlag gegen den Zollstock. Das war noch in den 80ern, ich glaube heute ist Bier auf den Baustellen verboten.
I live in Philadelphia, just about everybody says Gesundheit or G_d Bless you. I cannot remember the last time someone sneezed that someone didn't say something.
Is it prohibited to write the word 'God'? 🤔
Couldn't stop laughing. True, true, and true again.
Beer bottle opening skills are starting with 13,14,15 year old kid's. Drinking age starts with 16. Therefore Teens will learn to open beer bottles in many ways.
As a German, I absolutely use a proper bottle opener for beer bottles. And I take and keep coins that I find on the walkway. But coins aren't exactly something unique belonging to a certain person. Clothes are. So I also put lost hats or gloves up somewhere. But your carton folding issues... come on! You are kidding, right?
2:20 I was taught as a kid to say 'Gesundheit' if someone sneezes. We had a french teacher in secondary school (5th grade) and when she sneezed we said 'Gesundheit' and she said how rude it is to say 'Gesundheit'. I as a rather cheeky brat asked her then if I should have said 'Vereck du Aas.' ('go to hell you carrion') - It lead to a visit with the principal, but no other consequences when it was explained what she said and my comment was just seen as a sarcastic reaction to her uncommon and rude reaction. You say thank you if someone wishes you 'Gesundheit' and do not say it's rude to do that.
I remember attempts to make people apologize for sneezing as polite and saying "Gesundheit" as rude. That went exactly nowhere, and I only ever met a few people who took that serious.
I really love your videos 🤗🤗🤗
You are right saying Germans don´t trust in their english skills. My answer always is: "just a little bit", because I know, you will notice every little mistake.
It's absolutely not rude to not say anything if someone was sneezing. It does become more common to not say anything since "Gesundheit" does not mean "Bless you" but more like "Bless me."
Also the coin thing only does happen if you are standing right next to it. As soon as no owner can be seen most people will keep it...
The English thing is more about beeing safe. If we say we are not good at it no one can blame us if we in fact are not good at it. 😂
Almost all Germans can speak English on high levels.
I know people who habitually say "Danke" after they sneezed because the "Gesundheit" is so sure to be said. It's so hard to squeeze in the "Gesundheit" that most of the times it'll come after the "Danke" which leaves me confused every single time...
Btw: point 2 made me laugh so hard :)
Regarding Germans speaking English: Yes, Germans are eager to learn foreign languages, because we think it will help us in our strive to become perfect Europeans. But as hard as we try, we won't make it. We only become more perfect Germans.
Thats funny
Additional to this ... English is a kind of a simplified German. Lots of words are very similar, while the English grammar is simplified compared to German.
... Especially if you´re from the north of Germany (, where the Saxons lived,) learning a language from Anglo-Saxon ancestory is an easy task. (It´s very similar to "Plattdeutsch", which is old-style language of Germany´s north.)
Interesting explanation approach which I disagree with. But it's indeed kinda funny
Perfect Europeans... idk about that. I think it's just about seeming smart.
I don't know about others, but the reason why I learned English was, because I played a lot of online multiplayer computer games and speaking English was very useful to communicate with people who didn't speak German.
Nationalsport Bieröffnen :D Sehr interessantes Video!
7:43 Moin! Wir sind hier in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland oder BR Deutschland, wir können im ganzen Land sehr gut Deutsch sprechen und lesen. Sollen das die Ausländer doch mal üben - oder sprechen alle Neuseeländer auch perfekt Deutsch in Neuseeland oder sollte ich eher NZ-Englisch nutzen? 🤔
Das war übrigens auch hart für deutsche Flüchtlinge aus den überseeischen Kolonien und Siedlungsgebieten, egal nach welchen der letzten dreißig Kriege in der Vergangenheit - man hat sie immer an der (Aus)Sprache erkannt! 😂 Ganz schlimm gerade für die Kinder, da Sie Schulpflicht hatten, die älteren Leute gingen halt zum Kaufmann, der selber Flüchtling war, denn dieser versteht Sie ja. Ganz so, wie das später mit den Gastarbeitern hier war.
Hier oben in Hamburg helfe ich natürlich gerne bei dem Übersetzen von allerlei Sachen, die deutsche Sprache ist ja sehr umfangreich. Gerade die "Fachwörter" der Deutschen Bahn bzw. deren Übersetzungen sind ja nicht einfach. But why I should talk in English after we learn only Oxford-English in school times and nobody teach me what be Haka or why New Zealanders talk so a queetchy accents. Most "English" I learn later on the streets, from my different travel trips and my long holidays in Thailand where do you found near one hundred English-speaking persons but all talked it differently. Funny to say that Chinese people use English as inter linguistic language between them after they talk so many different Chinese language dialects? 😂
Nowadays you are supposed to say sorry when you sneeze as it is considered not very polite to spread your germs.
. I don‘t think anybody would even realize they have lost 10 cents.
As we do not have the possibility to burn paper or cardboard we try to squeeze every bit into the bin for recycling. It just makes sense.
Ich musste es auch erst spät erlernen ;-)) Flaschen bspw. mit einem Besteckteil zu öffnen. Ebenso, als Nichtraucher, mit einem Einweg Feuerzeug. Bei meinem Nachbarn bekomme ich immer eine Flasche Bier hin gestellt und meist ist kein normaler Flaschenöffner zur Hand.
Hi from Germany. I don't agree with the bottle opening items in general. In my opinion it's a men thing. Younger ones see it as a challenge when a bottle opener isn't available.