Genius GERMAN Things That Should Exist Everywhere

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  • Опубліковано 5 лип 2024
  • After moving to Germany and living in Germany for 4 years, there were quite a few things we learned about life in Germany that were culture shocks at first, then we realized they are actually GENIUS! 😊
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    ❤️Aubrey was a Speech-Language Pathologist and Donnie was a graphic designer, but we both had a dream to #travel the world and experience cultures. After three years of being married and dreaming about if something like this great adventure would be possible, we decided to quit the rat race and take on the world. We sold everything we had, quit our jobs, and took off! After 9 months of aimless and nonstop travel, we now get to fulfill our dreams of #LivingAbroad as #expats as we move to #Germany!
    00:00 - Do you think Bernd is genius?
    1:10 - Genius Thing 1
    4:14 - Genius Thing 2
    9:03 - Genius Thing 3
    12:55 - Genius Thing 4
    16:25 - Bloopers

КОМЕНТАРІ • 452

  • @PassportTwo
    @PassportTwo  10 місяців тому +17

    Know of any other genius things I should include in a part 2?? 😃

    • @germankitty
      @germankitty 10 місяців тому +7

      In the spirit of being eco-conscious, how about those extremely lightweight fabric shopping bags that can be folded up to palm size and tucked into an attached pouch that'll fit into a back pocket or any handbag to bring to the grocery store instead of paying for new plastic or paper bags? Good to have in reserve if you buy more stuff than planned, or fall prey to the dreaded impulse buy! (Oh, fun fact: One of our neighbors produces the thin cellophane bags in the produce aisle for stores; he told me that the oh-so-eco-friendly brown paper bags are dyed that color to make them look more "natural". The paper from which they're made actually comes out of the mill in a somewhat dirty-looking white.)
      I even use a bigger version as a beach bag because it takes up hardly any room and weighs mere grams, plus you can tuck room key cards into the fold-into baggie if it doesn't have an extra pocket that's zippered or buttoned.

    • @michamcv.1846
      @michamcv.1846 10 місяців тому +1

      How do you know If U have blood in your fecies?
      INCLUDE GERMAN TOILETTs 😂

    • @Muck006
      @Muck006 10 місяців тому +1

      English USED TO do numbers like german ... which you can easily find in Jane Austen's "Pride & Prejudice", where the heroine describes her age as "I am not yet one-and-twenty".

    • @germankitty
      @germankitty 10 місяців тому

      @@michamcv.1846 Actually, I think you can get some kind of paper insert/catching layer at a pharmacy if you have to provide a stool sample for a lab. Have never tried it myself, but that's what my doctor told me when the subject came up once during a physical. 🤭😅

    • @MrLogo73
      @MrLogo73 10 місяців тому +3

      You should focus on that 'Germans are better in bed' topic. 😆😆

  • @mao_miror
    @mao_miror 10 місяців тому +109

    Als Deutscher ist es für mich immer unterhaltsam Ausländischen Leuten zuzusehen die über Deutschland reden. Thx 👍👍😁😁

    • @KFrancisPower
      @KFrancisPower 10 місяців тому +9

      Wahrscheinlich hast der Kanal mehr deutsche Zuschauer als alles andere 🤣

    • @Laurasophiesmith
      @Laurasophiesmith 7 місяців тому +3

      @@KFrancisPowerhier zum Beispiel eine Britin 🫡

    • @clairelevasseur9434
      @clairelevasseur9434 6 місяців тому +4

      Et moi je suis du Québec, Canada !!!

    • @bazzjumpa1984
      @bazzjumpa1984 3 місяці тому +4

      deswegen sehen wir uns das doch alle an, oder? Weil wir wissen wollen wie uns andere sehen und ob das so korrekt ist. Und wenn das nich korrekt ist dann korrigieren wir die. Wir sind schon nen komisches Völckchen! LOL

    • @eligerus2622
      @eligerus2622 3 місяці тому

      Da kickt bei allen gleich wieder der Nationalismus richtig rein.

  • @Orochimarufan1900
    @Orochimarufan1900 10 місяців тому +243

    The 'Besucherritze' is probably called that because when a third person sleeps over, they will end up sleeping on the divide. It's not uncommon for children to sleep with their parents here, especially when not feeling well or having nightmares. On that note, they usually also bring along their pillow and blankets so everyone is covered without any fights :)

    • @franhunne8929
      @franhunne8929 10 місяців тому +27

      Trust me, there still are fights - as kids do not stay in the normal sleeping direction and suddenly they occupy the bed in its width ..

    • @Orochimarufan1900
      @Orochimarufan1900 10 місяців тому +8

      ​@@franhunne8929 True enough; I'm sure there's also plenty of kids that decide that mom's blanket is just so much softer than their own, even though it's literally the same. Kids are gonna be kids after all. I still think it's probably worse with just one blanket for everyone

    • @joh1006
      @joh1006 10 місяців тому +13

      I never taken my stuff with. I robed everything from my father. Sometimes he left and slept in my bed😅 I'm sleeping in my son's bed now.😂

    • @aceteek5002
      @aceteek5002 10 місяців тому +3

      Hehe indeed untill the kid dreams of being a Starfish.. -.-

    • @TheKilaby
      @TheKilaby 10 місяців тому

      not me i have always stuck my feet and hands in the divide like a dog xD@@franhunne8929

  • @calise8783
    @calise8783 10 місяців тому +112

    I agree with you on the separate duvets. We just returned from vacationing in Italy where we had to share the American style bedding. I didn’t sleep so well. Then we moved north to the Dolomites and German style bedding….so much better. As for the mattresses…my husband’s is too hard for me. And I love sticking my foot in the gap when I sleep. 😂
    I agree when I first moved to Germany, I thought the two duvets was not romantic. Well after 23 years married and 29 together…give me my own duvet!!! I know where to find you when I need/want you! 😊

    • @AlexTheGerman
      @AlexTheGerman 10 місяців тому +4

      Actually, my mom told us children last Christmas (when the entire family comes together for a couple of days once a year) that she started to stick her right foot into that gap in 1980. My sisters both laughed .... since they do the same. We have never ever spoken about this habit before and found it very funny.

    • @GoleoGohlix
      @GoleoGohlix 10 місяців тому +1

      ❤ you can live together without sharing everything 😊 perfect example for that! ❤

    • @saraa.4295
      @saraa.4295 10 місяців тому +4

      In very cold winters i actually loved the combination...
      Each one gets one fluffy blanket for themselves, and one big heavy blanket over both

  • @piffpuffpeng
    @piffpuffpeng 10 місяців тому +124

    One thing that was intimidating for me when I worked in TX were the names of medical specialists. See, we Germans just use the compound words instead of the Latin words. Augenarzt literally means Eye doctor, Zahnarzt means Tooth Doctor and Hals, Nasen und Ohrenarzt (or short HNO-Arzt) means Throat, nose and Ear Doctor. You don't have to know (or learn by heart) the Latin words before you can seek out the doc you need. Ophthalmologist, Dentist, Otolaryngologists. OMG!

    • @EyMannMachHin
      @EyMannMachHin 10 місяців тому +16

      Not exactly true. As soon as you leave the path of doctors everyone goes to, you are landing at Latin names quickly, Kardiologe, Gastroenterologe, etc.

    • @i_can_c_u_2295
      @i_can_c_u_2295 10 місяців тому +8

      Stimmt schon - warum einfach, wenn’s auch kompliziert geht.

    • @jjinwien9054
      @jjinwien9054 10 місяців тому +2

      Being born in the USA, you grow up learning the types of doctors by their Latin-based designations - its really no problem.

    • @aurelije
      @aurelije 10 місяців тому +2

      I think they even think you are the King if you know Latin/Greek names: otorinolaringologist, stomatologists, cardiologists... If you even know names body parts and illnesses then you are the God. I guess most people from Serbia are in that status even if they didn't finish Gymnasium or medical school (where you naturally learn Latin) you just know medical names

    • @Ugly_German_Truths
      @Ugly_German_Truths 10 місяців тому +4

      @@EyMannMachHin die man normalerweise im Krankenhaus trifft... in ther INNEREN Medizin? ;)

  • @elisabethcaruso3629
    @elisabethcaruso3629 10 місяців тому +23

    There are wonderful German compound words: I call them Wohlfühlwörter like Augenweide, Fingerspitzengefühl, Hoffnungsschimmer, Engelsgeduld, Herzallerliebster, Schlummertrunk etc .

    • @i_can_c_u_2295
      @i_can_c_u_2295 10 місяців тому +6

      Gaumenschmaus, Sternenstunde, Traumtänzer, Herzensdank, Himmelszelt, mucksmäuschenstill,…
      Hast da nen Punkt👍

    • @thorstenjaspert9394
      @thorstenjaspert9394 10 місяців тому

      English should adapt rules to create compound words. German is very flexible, accurate and versitile language. English a bit less. For example the verb to put. In the dictionary is is translated with setzen, stellen oder legen. It depends on the way and direction you move the object. In some cases English is over simplified.

  • @Alias_Anybody
    @Alias_Anybody 10 місяців тому +28

    The different blankets and stuff can be debated, but mattresses? The right hardness depends on your weight, which will nearly always be different in a couple.

  • @katherinedesmarais4673
    @katherinedesmarais4673 10 місяців тому +35

    I come from a 50% Canadian/50% German family and I used to work in Oklahoma for years! Your videos always put a smile on my face because I understand both sides! So happy to see that there are several of us!.

  • @petrahausl523
    @petrahausl523 10 місяців тому +13

    Wenn Children are small and maybe scared at night they are sometimes allowed to sleep in the „Besucherritze“

  • @maja-kehn9130
    @maja-kehn9130 10 місяців тому +15

    The "Besucherritze" between the matrasses is called that because little kids sometimes climb into their parent's bed and during the night end up in the "Besucherritze".

  • @jjosz9565
    @jjosz9565 10 місяців тому +36

    Everyone just makes fun of the shelf toilet - til you actually need it.
    It saved me from having a surgery as child to get the appendix taken out.
    I had strong pains and it was either the appendix - or some sort of food poisoning. Only way to figure out the difference was to get a poop sample for the doc.
    And that's what the shelf toilet is for. Easy access is only given with it, not the other types of toilet.
    You could call them a rare use medical tool with just one purpose, or something like that.
    Quote my mother: "If we live somewhere with more than one toilet, one will always be a shelf. Just in case." - she had a point.

    • @Anson_AKB
      @Anson_AKB 10 місяців тому +6

      After there were some renovations in our rented appartment, we had one of these "new modern" toilets. It got clogged at least once per month and i had the ugly work to unclog it, sometimes by fishing in it with my arm and a stick. thus i payed to get it replaced with a shelf toilet like we had before, and had no single clogging for 10+ years now. the reason : the "new modern" toilets have only a tiny hole and the internal piping also is much smaller in diameter and more curved. thus it passes the extensive factory tests they do with a few simultaneous small "standard test objects" according to some industry norm. Too bad that my digestion doesn't agree with their amount and/or size of "standard test objects" ...

    • @sonkeschluter3654
      @sonkeschluter3654 10 місяців тому +1

      Absolutly right. i have to use that "feature" once a year as i am working in the food industrie for my Salmonela test.

    • @tubekrake
      @tubekrake 10 місяців тому

      I just did a home stool test and they come with a paper that can be sticked to the lid and used to catch your stool and it also disolves in the toilet.

    • @penelopegoldberry8305
      @penelopegoldberry8305 10 місяців тому

      @@tubekrake Yes, these sticky paper-thingies are nice...until you happen to p... a lot. Then, when you lift your - ah - rear end from the seat, the glue is not enough to hold it there and the whole thing slides gracefully into the abyss below... And you longingly start reminiscing the thrones of your childhood...

  • @emjayay
    @emjayay 7 місяців тому +5

    The European thing of having two mattresses also probably has to do with the difficulty or impossibility of getting a huge mattress into the room through narrow stairways.

  • @charis6311
    @charis6311 10 місяців тому +14

    Not sure but maybe the German preference for seperate duvets is due to a lot of Germans sleeping with their windows open, meaning it is rather cold in their bedroom, especially in winter. So, when you use just one duvet, inevitably there will form a gap, where it stretches from one back/ shoulder to the other, and thus the cold air gets under the duvet and the sleepers get cold. Whereas with only one person under the duvet, the latter fits snugly and keeps people warm.

  • @stef987
    @stef987 10 місяців тому +23

    I feel like soft ice cream is a relatively new thing in German supermarkets. I am probably old enough to feel that way and to remember ice cream being quite solid and how the first companies started to advertise their new 'ready-to-spoon' products.😅 My grandma still puts a mug of hot water on the table whenever she serves ice cream for dessert, to dip the spoon inside in order to heat it up (some brands may still be quite hard, or the freezer maybe too cold). Letting ice cream sit for a while can make people anxious, though, because of salmonella. At least where I am from. Although you're actually supposed to do exactly that with the products of certain American brands, according to the text on their packages.

  • @draculf96
    @draculf96 10 місяців тому +2

    my favorite sentence in german:
    Eifersucht ist eine Leidenschaft, die mit Eifer sucht, was Leiden schafft.
    (Jealousy is a grievous passion that jealously seeks what causes grief.)
    -Franz Grillpanzer

  • @ulrikeg2639
    @ulrikeg2639 10 місяців тому +10

    The „Besucherritze“ is exactly what it describes: its the gap in which the visitor falls, when attempting to visit the other side 😂
    It is also the reason why German couples actually prefer the 180cm matresses. Until they get back pain. Then the Besucherritze suddenly is bearable😉

  • @retropixelshow
    @retropixelshow 10 місяців тому +4

    The Zipper Merge in Germany does only work well when the Drivers are capable of forgetting their Egos to always be first and we have many of those here.
    The Ice Cream, especially the Houses Brands (the brand that the supermarket chain hosts itself) contains much more air and thus is of course more scoopable. but let the same weight of ice creams melt, blue bell and gut&gunstig, and you will see that there is actually more melted ice in the blue bell.

  • @berndwaltrapp22
    @berndwaltrapp22 10 місяців тому +13

    During the production of ice cream, the liquid ice mass is whipped with air during the freezing process. This prevents large ice crystals from forming during freezing. If, on the other hand, you would only freeze the ice mass, you would get a hard block of ice with a consistency comparable to that of an ice cube. The light, creamy consistency that is typical of ice cream is only created when the air is introduced, which makes the ice cream melt so pleasantly on the tongue.
    The basic rule is: the smaller the ice crystals, the creamier the ice cream. Everyone knows this method of air whipping from their own kitchen: There would be no whipped cream without air whipping and no meringue without previously whipped egg whites. Just think of the difference in taste between whipped cream and liquid cream, between egg whites and beaten egg whites. The same applies to the ice cream. The manufacturers of branded ice cream produce ice cream with different creaminess levels for the different taste preferences of consumers.

    • @arnolsi
      @arnolsi 10 місяців тому +1

      But it also means you buy 1l but only get 550 gr.

  • @an-an
    @an-an 10 місяців тому +8

    Maybe you wash your jeans only once or twice a year an then daily lüften!! 😂

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  10 місяців тому

      Woah! I certainly wash more than twice a year but I hate that right freshly washed feeling 😂

    • @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl
      @MichaelBurggraf-gm8vl 10 місяців тому

      @@PassportTwo... exactly. They're stiffer and they're scratchy.

  • @martinbruhn5274
    @martinbruhn5274 10 місяців тому +6

    Here in Baden, the gab between the matresses is called "s'Gräble", which means "the small ditch"

  • @spitefulwar
    @spitefulwar 10 місяців тому +9

    If the jeans can stand on it's own, it's past due time.

  • @Opa_Andre
    @Opa_Andre 10 місяців тому +6

    You got me at 5:45 vs. 5:55 with the background sounds to scooping American vs. German icecream. Just hilarious! 😂

  • @schneeroseful
    @schneeroseful 10 місяців тому +2

    My favorite compound words are the ones with -zeug (stuff).
    Flugzeug (airplane): Stuff that flies
    Spielzeug (toy): stuff to play with
    Werkzeug (tool): stuff to craft with
    Feuerzeug (lighter): Thing that makes fire

  • @kimisundberg9007
    @kimisundberg9007 2 місяці тому +1

    Its pretty cute how you explain the things you love in Germany ❤

  • @worldhello1234
    @worldhello1234 10 місяців тому +2

    @5:16 Gelato is the Italian word for icecream, just look it up. That doesn't mean what is referred to as Gelato is the same thing as German icecream. 😊

  • @somersaultcurse
    @somersaultcurse 10 місяців тому +8

    as always i really enjoyed your video! and a big thanks for the first "foreigner" (in quotes bcs you are probably 85% germanized ^^) in videos like this understanding the system behind these "unlearnable long words" and getting the pro's of this (like not to have to invent new words again and again). for example "Verkehrsregeln" is the same in english "traffic rules", only difference is we get rid of the space and you guys don't. not that complicated to wrap the head around, but still you are the first i ever witnessed! so again, big thanks for that :)

    • @PassportTwo
      @PassportTwo  10 місяців тому +4

      Danke für die netten Wörter 😊

    • @Anson_AKB
      @Anson_AKB 10 місяців тому +2

      @@PassportTwo plural in german can be quite difficult sometimes ...
      in a dictionary you have lots of single _words_ *(Wörter)* while a comment, saying, or speech are nice _words_ *(Worte)*

  • @axelackens2157
    @axelackens2157 10 місяців тому +4

    This toilet isn't the one and only standard, the other one with poop get direct in water also in use in many apartments, in my toilet also.

  • @dansattah
    @dansattah 10 місяців тому +7

    "No, the air isn't better..."
    Speak for yourself! You can taste the difference between the dry, stale air in Saxony and the refreshing, iodine filled air on the Baltic Coast within seconds!
    Also, you could drive the point about compound words even further with a "Kofferwort" (suitcase word), such as "satanarchälogügenialkohöllisch" which is a famous word from Michael Ende's novel "Der satanarchälogügenialkohöllische Wunschpunsch".
    Concerning jeans, washing once a week or every other week feels appropriate.

    • @peggydemolli
      @peggydemolli 10 місяців тому

      satanarchäolügenialkohöllische

  • @nellitheretrogamer8666
    @nellitheretrogamer8666 8 місяців тому +1

    In Finnish it is also easy to form new compound words. One that I recently learned is "hirvikilpi", literally "moose shield". It means another car driving right in front of you; if a moose suddenly jumps on the road, the other car will hit it and you don't. More realistically, it means a car in front of you that is driving a bit too slowly considering the speed limit, but it is not possible to overtake it for a reason or another.

  • @20windfisch11
    @20windfisch11 10 місяців тому +7

    If you get the chance, try the Schwedenbecher (Swedes Cup). It is an ice cream dessert invented in the East during Socialist times. It is vanilla ice cream with apple mash (Apfelmus), Eierlikör (a German variant of eggnog), whipped cream and chocolate sauce and sprinkles.

    • @i_can_c_u_2295
      @i_can_c_u_2295 10 місяців тому +2

      Just by the description- I don’t like it.

    • @winfin5995
      @winfin5995 3 місяці тому

      Not quite eggnog. Eierlikör is the German word for advocaat, the main difference being that Eierlikör only uses the yolks while eggnog uses the whole egg.

  • @dirkschwartz1689
    @dirkschwartz1689 10 місяців тому +2

    I wash my jeans the day they start standing upright on their own.

  • @RustyDust101
    @RustyDust101 10 місяців тому +19

    I don't know who first compared German to the Lego of languages but I find that description genius. While there are quite a few words that crept into German from other languages, the number of original German words is still the majority. Yet the total number of short words with few syllables is far smaller than in many other languages. Because you can build the required compound words for a new concept right on the fly when it is required. While that compound word may not be completely exact it will still convey the general gist of the concept in such a way that anyone able to understand each individual word in the compound word will understand the whole compound word as well. Whereas other languages often resort to latin or greek versions, such as agoraphobia when talking about the fear of wide open spaces with crowds of people . Which in German is literally called Platzangst, or square-fear, as in fear of the town square. However that is the medical term and definition. It was misued for so long and so often that many Germans often misuse it for claustrophobia, the fear of tight, enclosed spaces in colloquial German.
    Random question:
    Jeans need washing?😂
    Nah, just kidding.
    When visibly dirty, stiff, smelly, or shiny.

    • @HalfEye79
      @HalfEye79 10 місяців тому

      I once heard that some americans laughed about the german word "Doppelkupplungsgetriebe". The english translation is "dual-clutch transmission". The english word is only three letters shorter, if I not miscounted. I think they have sesquipedalophobia (fear for long words)

    • @achimdemus-holzhaeuser1233
      @achimdemus-holzhaeuser1233 10 місяців тому

      Its called Klemmbaustein :)

    • @horstguntherludolf6357
      @horstguntherludolf6357 10 місяців тому

      "Platz" does not only translate to "Plaza", it also means "spaces" so "Platzangst" also means "spaces" "anxiety".

  • @chrisk5651
    @chrisk5651 10 місяців тому +5

    I grew up thinking that all clothing should be washed after each wearing including jeans. While at university, I started thinking that jeans may not need washing as often as underwear or tee shirts. Then later heard that you aren’t supposed to wash jeans as often or maybe not at all - and even heard about storing them in the freezer. I couldn’t do that. But also heard that the No Washing them or storing them in the freezer was actually referring to Salvaged Jeans - which I don’t love anyway.

  • @TrangleC
    @TrangleC 10 місяців тому +9

    The Gelato vs Ice Cream thing confounds me, because apparently Gelato is supposed to be more rich and creamy and Ice Cream is supposed to be more watery, but I always perceived it the other way around. Compared to the Gelato I know from Italian cafes in Germany, American Ice Cream from Hagen Dasz or Ben & Jerry's always seemed very dense and heavy, while Gelato seems more airy, light and refreshing.
    Frankly, while I appreciate the creativity of Ben & Jerry with their many different toppings, I never really liked their ice cream. It always seemed like sugary, frozen deep fryer lard to me.

    • @finfirun
      @finfirun 10 місяців тому +2

      You can't compare ice cream from the store with ice cream from an italian cafe, especially when they make the ice cream themselves (which becomes more and more uncommon in germany). Also ice cream in german stores often contains up to 50% air. Some cafes also tumble their ice cream longer so it contains more air, so they make more profit.

    • @emjayay
      @emjayay 7 місяців тому +1

      Gelato: lower fat, more sugar, less air than standard ice cream. So the flavors are stronger and cleaner tasting with gelato, but it's less creamy. And more expensive.

  • @HalfEye79
    @HalfEye79 10 місяців тому +4

    I had ice cream american style a few weeks ago. I had to mine that ice before eating it.
    The term "Besucherritze" is known because, when you have little kids, it can be, that you have a visitor between both of you. But that is the position of the gap between matrasses, so the visitor is in the gap. So it is called visitors gap.
    How often I wash my jeans? Normally I should wash it once a month. But that is, when I'm wearing it every day. But as I only wear it twice a week, I have to wash it rarer.

  • @dirkschwartz1689
    @dirkschwartz1689 10 місяців тому +2

    Poop shelf toilets are disappearing, I think. I don't have one in my 1998 apartment. It's a trend that's ending, alas ;)

  • @godkillmeplease
    @godkillmeplease 10 місяців тому +4

    We call the Eierschalensollbruchstellenverursacher simply "Klack"

    • @Cau_No
      @Cau_No 10 місяців тому

      "Eierpicker" is the name I think is used for it.

    • @godkillmeplease
      @godkillmeplease 10 місяців тому

      @@Cau_No Is der Eierpicker nich das Sing mit dem man vor dem Kochen ein Loch ins Ei piekst?

    • @Cau_No
      @Cau_No 10 місяців тому +1

      @@godkillmeplease Stimmt, das ist ein anderes Hilfsmittel.
      Das hier genante Teil heißt "Eierköpfer". (egg decapitator/beheader). Hatte nie so einen, bei mir funktionierte das immer mit dem Messer.

  • @alexanderroth1427
    @alexanderroth1427 10 місяців тому +2

    German Hack for Icecream get a coffee mug or something simular put hot water in it take the spoon let it rest some 1 or 2 minutes in the hot water.
    that way it will be way easier to get the icecream out of the box nice side effect the icecream will not stick on the spoon....reapet the process until you are done with the icecream-

  • @TheBlackob
    @TheBlackob 10 місяців тому +3

    I never had any "soft" icecream. I even bend a steel spoon once or twice. Tho tbf I buy at Lidl not Edeka, maybe theirs is just softer by default.

  • @CDP1861
    @CDP1861 10 місяців тому +3

    Don't wash your Jeans until they get up on their own and do it themselves.

  • @xwormwood
    @xwormwood 10 місяців тому +1

    I really love these old Audrey clips, like as in the egg hammering scene. A true classic!

  • @Viridian43
    @Viridian43 10 місяців тому +1

    I understood "Bazooka-Ritze" and I was like what?? made my day

    • @sandrakoch3705
      @sandrakoch3705 12 днів тому

      Besucherritze. Visitor‘s gap. You’re welcome.

  • @fredcomparin1
    @fredcomparin1 10 місяців тому +2

    haha love the slow-mo of the ice cream. Well done 👏

  • @michaela4470
    @michaela4470 10 місяців тому +1

    Nice Video!
    I am german and also live in germany and for my experience, the icecream isn't always saft when you take it out of the freezer. I think it is very diffrent for diffrent Brands, probably because they doesn't all put so much air in the ice Cream. And like you said, it also depends on the temperature

  • @aynstahh415
    @aynstahh415 10 місяців тому

    schönes Video, danke👍

  • @pielmeierdieter
    @pielmeierdieter 10 місяців тому +1

    About Ice-Cream in Germany, the big trick with the air is:
    Ice-Cream is sold by volume in liter, not by weight in gramms or kilogramms. Air give a nice volume and is free for the producer, but not free for the customer.

    • @TarikDaniel
      @TarikDaniel 10 місяців тому

      Actually, not true. You'll find both number on the package. You could also say, you get more volume for the same amount, therefore it takes longer to eat it all.

    • @pielmeierdieter
      @pielmeierdieter 10 місяців тому

      @@TarikDaniel You're right, both numbers are on the package, but have you ever seen an advertisement or a commercial were they mention the weight?

  • @faultier1158
    @faultier1158 10 місяців тому

    I approve of the Faultier example. Well done.

  • @tinabrauer7781
    @tinabrauer7781 10 місяців тому +1

    I also find it normal to have two mattresses in a large bed. My ex and I had different preferences about the softness of the mattress. I’m female, I often sleep on the side so a soft mattress is how I sleep better. He slept better on a hard mattress. The German way: no problem. Different mattresses with just the same height.
    My new partner is Filipino, he insisted on the American way of having one mattress. That was the first time I ever made this experience to have one big mattress.

  • @fairphoneuser9009
    @fairphoneuser9009 10 місяців тому +1

    I love the short cameo appearance of Aubrey! ❤️

  • @realulli
    @realulli 10 місяців тому

    The ice cream thing is also a way for the manufacturer to make more money. That's why they advertise "a three liter bucket of ice cream". That bucket in the hard variant would probably come in around 2.7 kg. The ready to spoon one will probably come in around 1.9 kg (10% vs. 30%+ of air). So, the manufacturer sells "new and improved, ready to spoon" ice cream, possibly for even a higher price and saves 25% of raw ice cream mix.
    That's also why all the fastfood places that don't have free refills (and possibly even those) are always trying to add ice to you coke...

  • @christianvorwerk8551
    @christianvorwerk8551 10 місяців тому +6

    as for compund words (being German myself): when I was back in school I had a text in my German textbook, that I found outstandingly hilarious: the story of the "hottentottenstottermutter". Someone had tried to put as many words with double "t" in a text, and since the rule of putting words together the final "hottentottenstottermutterwetterkottenbeutelrattenatttentäterfangprämie" amazes me to this day. Meanwhile other people came up with similar texts with playing the same game with elongated "e" (the Schneeseekleerehfeedrehzehwehtee) (and kids in school might curse on that because certain words spell with "eh" versus "ee", so it's great for spelling tests..), or someone else tried to put as many words as possible with the ending "anz" together with is a tongue twister in it's own right. (see Finanzbilanzfranztoleranztanz), or the famous Rhabarberbarbara, which doesn't quite follow the rule of the ones mentioned before but still goes in the same direction.
    To all mentioned texts there are nice youtube videos, some even have english subtitles...

    • @Anson_AKB
      @Anson_AKB 10 місяців тому +1

      yes, those youtube videos about the Drehzeh and Rhabarberbarbara are amazing and amazingly funny.
      and then we make jokes about creating such words by intentionally misspelling them, eg a word with 4 "tz": Atzventzkrantzkertze (Adventskranzkerze)

    • @user-ki3fu6nb8p
      @user-ki3fu6nb8p 10 місяців тому

      Rhabarbarbarbarabarbarbarenbartbarbierbier

    • @christianvorwerk8551
      @christianvorwerk8551 5 місяців тому

      @@Anson_AKB you forgot about the beauty of the glow emitted by the Atzventzkrantzkertze, the Atzventzkrantzkertzenglantz.....

  • @jakobgauert3803
    @jakobgauert3803 10 місяців тому

    Oh dude... 0:43 the flat splatter shelf is the best construction 😂
    It has only advantages - you safe water, toilet paper, the use of the brush and avoid "Poseidon's kiss", which is really gross.

  • @magmalin
    @magmalin 10 місяців тому +3

    Nobody really uses the word Bundesausbildungsförderungsgesetz. We just talk about Bafög. I wash my Levis when they are dirty.

  • @gehtdichnixan3200
    @gehtdichnixan3200 10 місяців тому +2

    those poopshelves are outdated but they made a lot of sense when they where not

  • @pascalwandert
    @pascalwandert 10 місяців тому

    2 matrazes is a good thing some people like to sleep on a softer one and some people sleep on harder ones so you can easely fit 2 1x2m next to each other that does mean that you can also fit a big 2x2m single one in the same frame sometimes even a water one 😅

  • @j.b.5422
    @j.b.5422 10 місяців тому +1

    Americans: Bread can describe buns, toast etc
    Deutsche: Eis kann Sorbet, Gelato usw. sein

  • @liquidminds
    @liquidminds 10 місяців тому +1

    I wash jeans, or pants in general, when they have stains or start smelling.

  • @maxbarko8717
    @maxbarko8717 10 місяців тому +2

    Rule in German: 1 thing - 1 word.

  • @McGhinch
    @McGhinch 10 місяців тому +1

    How often do I wash my jeans? I have never counted the cycles from buying to discarding them. I do have, however, some 30 jeans, some ot them being up to 30 years old.

  • @AdZS848
    @AdZS848 10 місяців тому

    In Germany, the packaging on American ice cream actually says to allow to thaw for 5-10 minutes before serving.

  • @str.77
    @str.77 6 місяців тому

    The thing is the Eierschalensollbruchstellenverursacher is a tool you do not actually need.

  • @maruhto3508
    @maruhto3508 8 місяців тому

    The part with the compoung nouns is one thing I always convey to my students in my German lessons. While they do look scary, you can 1) understand words you have never seen before and 2) reference to something you have no word for and people are still likely to understand

  • @LetsPokeHD
    @LetsPokeHD 7 місяців тому +1

    Another genius thing in Germany is how we keep six packs of cans together. In the USA they are held together by plastic rings. These rings are bad for the environment and animals often get caught in them. There were never such rings in Germany. Here cans are held together by plastic film or cardboard. In the USA they are researching dissolvable plastic rings, while a better solution is in Germany. And the deposit system is also a genius thing in Germany. Every plastic drink bottle and every drink can has a deposit. You can recycle plastic and metal and get 25 cents for each bottle or can. So I was able to get 4.75€ recently.

  • @Pronwan
    @Pronwan 10 місяців тому +1

    You got something wrong with Ice cream here. To explain it simply: Vanille-Eiscreme is the proper ice cream, made with cream, egg, milk etc. On the other hand, you have "Vanille Eis", which is the cheap version which can come with air and cheaper ingredients. What you show what you buy for home, is the cheap version. If you let it melt, the pot will basically be empty, because it's made of 80% thin air.
    If you buy proper Eiscreme, it can freeze quite hard indeed. That's why you heat up the spoon with hot water. But you can't compare those two things with each other. Eiscreme is ofc also significantly more expensive if you compare the cup sizes. Not so much if you compare the price per kilogram or liter, which is mandatory on each price tag.
    So next time check the cheap version for "real" Ice Cream and make a blind folded taste test. You will never buy the air-sugar-milkpowder-aroma mixture again ;)

  • @Alexander-dt2eq
    @Alexander-dt2eq 10 місяців тому +2

    well in the 90s i did only get the US hard version of ice-cream (vanilla cheap brand) but then Mövenpick invented this creamy style which is more soft out of the freezer. Since then many adopted this style. So i think US and german style was not that different in the near past

  • @Astrofrank
    @Astrofrank 10 місяців тому +1

    Das Video ist zum Teil einfach geil.

  • @kessas.489
    @kessas.489 10 місяців тому +1

    Bei Ben and Jerry's hab ich auch das Problem! Da muss ich das Eis erstmal eine halbe Stunde anwärmen lassen, bevor ich es portionieren kann!

  • @Stinkbatz
    @Stinkbatz 10 місяців тому +1

    I let the german icecream at the counter for a time to scoop it, because for me it is still too hard when it comes out of the freezer...

  • @Zaburac
    @Zaburac 10 місяців тому

    I waited in vain for the spaghetti ice cream that your thumbnail announced

  • @M-M-EXTRA
    @M-M-EXTRA 10 місяців тому

    yeah the zipper merch even doesn’t work in germany most times. as drivers don’t let other drivers in or drive to the very end of the lane that’s closing to then try to break in

  • @ravenmindartist9388
    @ravenmindartist9388 Місяць тому

    i hope, you know, the platform toilet is for that the water dosent spatter against your butt,
    the water will also not splatt out of the toilet wen you make it on
    and you can see how the poop locks like wen you are sick or just want to check if its helthy.
    i personaly really like this typ of toilet

  • @emjayay
    @emjayay 7 місяців тому

    Hardness of ice cream is mainly due to the freezer temperature. In the US supermarket ice cream comes in many versions but not so much in the EU. If you want stuff in it you mostly have to add your own.

  • @dagmarszemeitzke
    @dagmarszemeitzke 10 місяців тому

    The "Besucherritze" we called "Ehestandsgräble" (marial trench)

  • @frombelow6715
    @frombelow6715 8 місяців тому

    "car engine insurance policy" is a compound word that means exactly the same as "Automotorversicherungspolice" and works the same way, i.e. the part on the left influences the meaning of the part on the right. The only difference is that English is the only Germanic language, where the orthographic convention is to make spaces inbetween the parts of a compound word.

  • @Osmone_Everony
    @Osmone_Everony 10 місяців тому

    Here is another compound word for you. Kühlschranktürgummidichtung. That's "Refrigerator door gasket" for the viewers outside Germany.😁

  • @Merrsharr
    @Merrsharr 3 місяці тому

    I appreciate the inclusion of Bernd D. Brot in the images of German geniuses.

  • @Why-D
    @Why-D 10 місяців тому

    When kids come to their parents, they often lay in the middle, between the two mattresses in the "Besucherritze".

  • @cjedgerly
    @cjedgerly 10 місяців тому

    Nice Jack Wolfskin Shirt! I have a similar one! My comments: Ice Cream!! I live in the Ice Cream Consumption capital of the US - Boston. I hosted a German/English language student in High School in 1989 - he loved our local ice cream and wished he could have it in Germany. I went to Germany that summer and fell in love with Spaghetti Eis and wished I had that here (we always want what the other one has!). My wife and I went full-German on our beds after our 2018 trip to Germany. We now have a queen "sleep number" bed, where we can set our own firmness, and we have our own duvets with only a top sheet. We love it!!!
    Question of the week! - I usually wash my jeans after 2 or three days of wear. I work overnight and sleep during the day, so I usually only wear them for 4-5 hours at a time.

  • @chrisk5651
    @chrisk5651 10 місяців тому +1

    If I buy ice cream it is usually a pint of Ben & Jerry’s or Häagen-Dazs (which was invented by an American from the Bronx, NY who made up the name to seem fancy and sophisticated). And I don’t buy it at the supermarket but rather from a convenience store which may be stored at a less frigid temperature.

  • @arnoldkegebein2147
    @arnoldkegebein2147 10 місяців тому +1

    Besucherritze: When a third person (your child) joins you in bed in the middle, there is a chance that it partial gets stuck in the Besucherritze, perhaps just a leg or - if the mattresses have slide apart - the whole body.

  • @MichaEl-rh1kv
    @MichaEl-rh1kv 10 місяців тому +1

    0:43 It is a flat flusher ("Flachspüler"), not a "flat platter shelf" or something like that. Afaik it was invented to be better able to hide the syphon within the corpus of a standing toilet, but they later found additional benefits of it. While it was replaced in most private and public toilets by "deep flushers" (Tiefspüler") without any "shelf" since the 1990s, it is still used in some hospitals to facilitate the taking of stool samples (and you can still order it with companies like Villeroy & Boch, who also advertise it for avoiding the "splash").
    12:45 Having two smaller mattresses instead of a large one makes it also easier to handle the mattress e.g. if you want to turn it or for cleaning/maintenance of the bed base. (That's the main reason why I've switched back.)

  • @tosa2522
    @tosa2522 10 місяців тому +1

    Eierschalensollbruchstellenverursacher😁

  • @Drag_on_king
    @Drag_on_king 10 місяців тому

    Honesty yes the air makes it softer, but also cheaper. It esencecially reduces the amount of actuall ice cream you are getting.

  • @hape7539
    @hape7539 10 місяців тому

    hard ice cream depends on the fridge and on what level u have running it . if i have 2 pizza , one lay on top of the other , the upper isnt frozen ,because my fridge is old and runs on low lvl so my other food like cheese ( what is not in the freezing area of my fridge) isnt too cold when i get it out

  • @fionafiona1146
    @fionafiona1146 10 місяців тому

    11:00 i appreciate your comments but the approach amount of blankets/comforters per bed is (n+1) so one more of those than people in a given bed.
    If a child (in their own sleeping bag) joins a bed that number is maintained but it allso mittigates blanket hording in the burtio style

  • @berndhoffmann7703
    @berndhoffmann7703 10 місяців тому

    If one has separate mattrasses and is worried about the "Ritze" - just place a 1,80 by 2,00 topper over it. I had the problem that I was able to find a mattress of 1,80 by 2,00 m, but not the slat frame, they are separate which helps with the individual height adjustment and hardness of the bed, but if one lands in the middle one can feel the frame of slat frame clearly through the mattress and topper. When one is edging over the invincible "border" for longer, one can clearly feel it the next day.....

  • @lutzderlurch7877
    @lutzderlurch7877 10 місяців тому

    Compound words do have one advantage: online searching. When searching for very specific things, the precise words often are basically a heap of super general words and pre or suffixes. If you seach them as a lose pile of linguistic gravel as in english, search results will include a lot of crap and few if any hits. If the words are properly welded together, though, like in german, chances of finding results are much better

  • @j.b.5422
    @j.b.5422 10 місяців тому

    Yeah, those Milka Ice cream buckets they now sell at my local Swimming pool have really hard ice cream that you definetly can't eat with that Wood piece that's supposed to act as a spoon, but is more closely shaped like a Popsicle stick.
    Now I know that the production has been americanized! (or the freezer was too cold)

  • @peterdonecker6924
    @peterdonecker6924 10 місяців тому +2

    When they stand in the room by their own, yepp I guess it's time to put them into the laundry😂

  • @holger_p
    @holger_p 10 місяців тому

    Secret of icecream is stir while it freezes, so it doesn't become an icecube. That's why you need a machine inside the freezer or a special ice cream machine.
    You can also sit in the freezer yourself, and stir for 4 hours.

  • @GamingPiper
    @GamingPiper 10 місяців тому

    The Besucherritze is called "Gräbele" here in swabia, never in my life have i heard someone call it Besucherritze 🤣

  • @MusikCassette
    @MusikCassette 10 місяців тому

    about thing 3: the "Besucherritze" is where children usually end up when they crawl into there parents bed.

  • @chronischgeheilt
    @chronischgeheilt 10 місяців тому

    We actually Made Up Our own traveling Game where we basically create new compound words. Every Person has to add a Word when it is their Turn in Order to lengthen the compound. For an extra Challenge, you can Play a la "packing a suitcase" where everybody has to repeat the whole Thing before lengthening it

  • @stefanwolosin550
    @stefanwolosin550 10 місяців тому

    To cover the "Besucherritze" we have the "Liebesbrücke" 😉

  • @tramper42
    @tramper42 10 місяців тому

    16:15 „How often do you wash your Jeans 👖?“ @Ryan: a) when they are dirty or gotten into rain / smell b) without any reason, ABOUT once very two weeks, surly not daily (unlike t-Shirts, don’t ask my why)

  • @Aine197
    @Aine197 10 місяців тому +10

    I don‘t think German married couples ever slept in separate twin beds. Even in the Middle Ages, the beds were much smaller than today, but there was only one bed for couples.

  • @mb6
    @mb6 10 місяців тому

    It makes sense to be able to check your poop visually.

  • @Alias_Anybody
    @Alias_Anybody 10 місяців тому +1

    Funfact: "Tier" in compound words is misleading. Originally, the word was only used for furry critters (broadly mammals in modern speech) in the woods and fields. Not birds, fish or reptiles. In English, the meaning got narrowed down - deer. In German, it got broader - animal.
    However, most of these compounds predate that change being final. So, for example , "Schnabeltier" (Platypus) shouldn't be translated as the super vague "beaked animal" (which birds are as well, aren't they?) but "beaked MAMMAL", which is indeed pretty descriptive for what a Platypus is.

    • @Naanhanyrazzu
      @Naanhanyrazzu 10 місяців тому

      It is then still a little more complex.
      In Old High German, the word Tior (later Dier->Tier) described everything that was not domesticated. Domesticated animals were called Fihu (later Vihe->Vieh). Until the 19th century, there was simply a distinction between humans, animals, livestock and plants. The more exact division is realtiv new. Therefore also Vogeltier (bird animal), Meerestier (sea animal), etc.

  • @RobstarTS
    @RobstarTS 10 місяців тому +4

    For fact two I would say its definitely the air. You can see the difference if you look at the weight and the filling capacity. Soft ice cream should be much lighter then the american one at same filling capacity. I think for the most time the people like the soft ice cream straight out the freezer but in some tv shows about casual groceries its seen as a lack of quality to have somewhat around 50% of air in your ice cream.

    • @Anson_AKB
      @Anson_AKB 10 місяців тому

      the Edeka icecream they showed in the video has exactly only half a kilogram for one liter (500g for 1000ml), thus 50% air, while american style (eg Häagen-Dasz or Ben&Jerry) has around 400g for 460ml (for comparison: 500g for 575ml), and pure water with no air should have a ratio of 1:1 ... in another comment i have listed lots more of different icecreams.
      about the quality: imho, having softer icecream than the hard american style is good, but having too much air in it looks like a scam (big packages with no contents, and this often goes along with low quality of ingredients to make it even cheaper) and also allows it to completely melt to some (non-ice) cream soup while you eat a serving directly from the freezer.
      ps: you also have this "smelting problem" with the harder icecream: you need to let it sit for some time first and then have the center still frozen while the outer volume is almost liquid.

  • @languageatworkinh.r.-b.kip8043
    @languageatworkinh.r.-b.kip8043 10 місяців тому

    I always thought it was called a "Besucherritze" because that's where any "visitors" to the bed (pets, children, the occasional third person in a "thruple" [hey, no judging!]) slip between the mattresses.
    My great-grandmother called it the "Schloßgraben" or "Wassergraben" ("moat") because it keeps any unwanted visitors to your territory at a distance.
    As for the jeans question, I tend to wash a pair of jeans after five times being worn or sooner if required.