The Dumbest Questions Americans Ask Germans REACTION

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Who Is Mert?

Who Is Mert?

Күн бұрын

The Dumbest Questions Americans Ask Germans REACTION
This is my reaction to The Dumbest Questions Americans Ask Germans from Feli from Germany
In this video I react to Feli From Germany's video called "The DUMBEST questions I’ve been asked by Americans!" in which she describes some of the dumbest questions she has been asked by people from America while living there.
Original Video - • The DUMBEST questions ...

Пікірлер: 345
@itsmebatman
@itsmebatman 11 ай бұрын
A friend of mine went to such an exchange year in the US just like Feli. And he was asked if we had cars in Germany. Like, no, we just invented them for your pleasure, lol.
@Rakurai999
@Rakurai999 10 ай бұрын
Well, I was asked if we all ride our own horses to school or if we share carriages... and if we had electricity...
@liosscip
@liosscip 10 ай бұрын
yeah, same. a friend of mine did an exchange year in the US and the first question he was asked by the family he stayed at was: "do you have electricity in germany?"
@saschathinius7082
@saschathinius7082 10 ай бұрын
I was a german exchange student in the US in 1992 (Age ~17), beeing asked all of those question... the worst was how I liked "Hiltlerjugend" ... but what annoyed me the most was that for most US people... Germany = Bavaria and Lederhosen
@christianlenik5307
@christianlenik5307 10 ай бұрын
"Had Cars in Germany" - BMW, Mercedes, Audi, VW, Opel, Porsche, etc. "You forgot US?!"
@christianlenik5307
@christianlenik5307 10 ай бұрын
​@@liosscipFor Gods Sake No 😂
@YezaOutcast
@YezaOutcast Жыл бұрын
someone once said: "not all americans are stupid. but when they do it, they excell at it."
@Delibro
@Delibro Жыл бұрын
This is so good :D
@christianlenik5307
@christianlenik5307 10 ай бұрын
Facts, Jeremy, Facts... So true
@thomaskruse6004
@thomaskruse6004 10 ай бұрын
😂
@schwarzeVenus
@schwarzeVenus 11 ай бұрын
Mein Neffe wurde in Amerika geboren und als er das erste Mal Schloss Neuschwanstein sah, dachte er, wir hätten es bei Walt Disney gestohlen. Leider lernen amerikanische Kinder sehr wenig über Europa und andere Länder.
@thestype
@thestype 11 ай бұрын
There are no fridges in germany. In winter we put dairy products on the balcony or terrace. But when it gets warmer, keeping these at dry and cold places is also not a problem. Like right next to our humour and emotions.
@MartinPrinzler
@MartinPrinzler 10 ай бұрын
wow, german myself, an that got me hard :D Nice one!
@achimwokeschtla7582
@achimwokeschtla7582 10 ай бұрын
In summer we keep the food deep in the caves we still live in
@christianlenik5307
@christianlenik5307 10 ай бұрын
Actually that Balcony Thing was a good Idea Last Winter when my Fridge was Broken
@christianlenik5307
@christianlenik5307 10 ай бұрын
​@@achimwokeschtla7582You have to admit People really behave Like they were Cavemen
@anunearthlychild8569
@anunearthlychild8569 10 ай бұрын
The biggest joke about the whole thing is actually that although the electric refrigerator was invented by General Motors, the compressor technology in it was already used in the refrigeration machine that had previously been used industrially. And this was created by Carl von Linde in Germany. 😉
@MrWalter2202
@MrWalter2202 11 ай бұрын
In the early 80´s I met an American couple in Munich. They had hired a very fast car to spend some time on the German Autobahn (highway) which often has no speed limits. So talking about their trip planning she told me, that they are a bit afraid to visit the city of Bayreuth and asked me, if that isn't a bit too dangerous? It was, because they had Beirut/Libanon in their mind, which wasn't a very safe place at that time. That, by far, was the most dumb or stupid question I ever heard!
@christianlenik5307
@christianlenik5307 10 ай бұрын
😂😂😂 Lets Hope they didnt visited the Arab Parts (yes, even in the 80's they already lived Here)
@aislingsturbridge1105
@aislingsturbridge1105 11 ай бұрын
German here. Couple years back. One of my German friends, female, married an American and moved there. So, a bit later, he had to ask us (because she couldn't convince him that he's wrong) Seriously asked if we got diapers. You know, since we lost the war. If we even could buy stuff like that, because, he could bring it... He was dead-serious. Don't know if they're still together. I'd have left him. Not so much for not knowing that, though that is a kind of dumb I find hard to ignore, but because he was so alpha male he chose not to believe her. Makes him a walking red flag to me.
@fenrin6311
@fenrin6311 10 ай бұрын
Why she doesn't take him to a Drugstore like DM or Rossmann to show him that we can buy diapers here xD
@d-man8294
@d-man8294 10 ай бұрын
Um fair zu bleiben, ich denke unsere heutige Jugend ist auch nicht mehr die Schlauste. Wenn ich daran denke, wie pfiffig wir damals waren... und heute sind die Kiddies ohne Hilfe des Smartphones völlig aufgeschmissen. Kleines 1x1 - braucht man gar nicht mehr nach zu fragen... Uhren lesen mit analoger Anzeige - können auch viele nicht mehr... Und wenn das noch nicht genug ist, kommt die Dummheit nur so aus denen rausgeschossen, indem sie jeden Satz mit "Digga" beginnen und mit "Digga" beenden, wofür sie sich eigentlich jedes Mal eine Backpfeife verdient hätten. Und ja, die Mädels lieben es für jedes ach so banale Ereignis "Oh mein Gott" zu schreien, wo ich auch nur mit dem Kopf schütteln kann... Wir können jetzt über die Amis lachen, wie dumm sie sind, aber sind selbst auf dem besten Wege, es ihnen gleich zu tun.
@JohnHazelwood58
@JohnHazelwood58 Жыл бұрын
Me, german, once was asked in an online chatroom by an american if we have internet in Germany?! ... I was confused and told him like "yeah!? how do you think I am able to chat with you?" ... He didn't believed me and called me a liar! I shouldn't tell him, that germans have internet, when they don't ... that was really a strange conversation! ^^+gg And I am pretty sure, that he was serious! XD
@Anthyrion
@Anthyrion Жыл бұрын
A friend was once asked in a chatroom, if Hitler is still our chancellor. When he told the american, that he is dead for over 60 years, he condolenced with "Oh man. I'm so sorry to hear that."
@JohnHazelwood58
@JohnHazelwood58 Жыл бұрын
@@Anthyrion lol
@fenrin6311
@fenrin6311 10 ай бұрын
I read a similar thing yesterday with cars xD An american guy ask a german guy as we do have cars in germany... and he called the german guy a liar, as the german guy mentioned that brands like Audi, Merceds, BMW, Ford etc. are all from germany xD
@gi0nbecell
@gi0nbecell 10 ай бұрын
@@fenrin6311 besides, Ford is American. Yes, they do produce cars in Germany (Cologne, Ford-Werke GmbH with facilities in Cologne, Saarlouis and in Lommel, Belgium as well as Valencia, Spain), but the company is still American. Detroit, or rather Dearborn, Michigan. Opel would have been the better example.
@christianlenik5307
@christianlenik5307 10 ай бұрын
You have to admit though, that Out Internet is Garbage - but yes, we have it
@coellnbrueder8879
@coellnbrueder8879 11 ай бұрын
My English teacher´s daughter went for an exchange year to the USA. She was asked whether she came from West Germany, East Germany or Nazi Deutschland. I doubt that anyone can superceed that in 2023 🤣
@sabinemetzger3219
@sabinemetzger3219 11 ай бұрын
Friend of mine was asked by her new classmates in the USA how she got over the Berlin Wall. Those classmates just thought all of Germany had a Wall straight through and is divided into east and West and since she is from Bavaria she had to come from east Germany.
@TheGosgosh
@TheGosgosh 11 ай бұрын
She should have answered „the Weimar Republic“
@petebeatminister
@petebeatminister Жыл бұрын
Einstein once said "The universe and the stupidity of people are infinite. Well, I'm not completly sure about the universe, though." :)
@christianlenik5307
@christianlenik5307 10 ай бұрын
Some Americans really think that Einstein was American...
@petebeatminister
@petebeatminister 10 ай бұрын
@@christianlenik5307 Well, some Americans think the earth is 6000 years old - so its not such a big surprise. :)
@frankpierco8826
@frankpierco8826 11 ай бұрын
When I was about 6yo I remember I didn't understand why some people would 'choose' to speak another language than Dutch. I mean, that's just stupid, right? Why speak something no one understands when you can simply speak Dutch? Quite funny to realize that a good percentage of the US population have the mental capacity of a small child. Let's hope those people don't get into a political career. Oh, wait ...
@andreaskaphengst8121
@andreaskaphengst8121 10 ай бұрын
This goes back many years but there was some kind of convention in Toronto and an American wanted directions. The problem was that he didn’t know where Canada was. The Canadian was very polite and asked if he knew where Florida was. He responded that he did. Well said the Canadian, if you go to Florida and then turn 180 degrees around and then keep going straight until you reach the border. Once you get there, ask for further instructions.
@Heidelbergensis2011
@Heidelbergensis2011 11 ай бұрын
Do we have refridgerators? No, we just invented them.
@heikestoll1205
@heikestoll1205 10 ай бұрын
I’m German but live in the US. I was at a wedding in Kansas, and I told the guy sitting next to me that German weddings are a lot longer, that there’s no “end time” and they go past midnight. He then said to me: “You guys don’t have tv then?”
@aimanmarzuqi4804
@aimanmarzuqi4804 Ай бұрын
😂
@merle8.0
@merle8.0 10 ай бұрын
When I was on vacation in the USA, I was asked in a very confusing conversation whether we in Germany also have mobile phones and whether our toilets are indoors or outdoors.... I didn't know if the question was meant seriously. I was a bit perplexed
@nell8840
@nell8840 10 ай бұрын
When we had American exchange students visiting our German high school in 10th grade, one guy remarked how many american cars can be found in Germany. After asking him which brands he'd seen, he listed off Mercedes, Audi and BMW... Also, my family has friends from the states and they always act like Europe is one big country with one culture and that Munich and Venice are a stonethrow away from another. And even though most US-American tourists exclusively speak English, they still react in that (to me somewhat triggering) surprised voice how many languages we Europeans speak and that we can speak English too.
@sirgecko666
@sirgecko666 10 ай бұрын
I was once asked if we also have trees in Germany... I absolutely didn't know what to answer to this question 😂
@aimanmarzuqi4804
@aimanmarzuqi4804 Ай бұрын
About Germany? The country with the geographical landmark called the Black Forest? The country with trees so thick and tall that it literally spookwd Roman Soldiers when they try to invade Germany? Unbelievable. Or maybe, that sounds perfectly believable 😂.
@jecapeter
@jecapeter 11 ай бұрын
The dumbest question I ever got asked was actually by an American... I studied Ancient history and he asked "How can you study Ancient history when the history of mankind started in 1492?"
@TheGosgosh
@TheGosgosh 11 ай бұрын
I got brain rot from reading this 😂
@marsultor6131
@marsultor6131 11 ай бұрын
That is just painful.
@slz987
@slz987 10 ай бұрын
🤣
@taniakrause9253
@taniakrause9253 10 ай бұрын
😅😅😅
@anunearthlychild8569
@anunearthlychild8569 10 ай бұрын
Uh, that was probably one of America's good Christians. 🤦🏼‍♀️ I mean, if human history didn't start until 1492, where on earth did Columbus and later settlers come from? 🤔 Fell from the sky?
@maikejahn9130
@maikejahn9130 Жыл бұрын
I´m German and lived in the UK for about 6 years and I never got dumb questions about being German. I actually really liked when people asked me if the food is authentic....it just means they want to find a place where they can eat good German food.
@faultier1158
@faultier1158 Жыл бұрын
It's just difficult to answer. If someone asked me, I'd take a look at the menu, see a bunch of (probably?) Bavarian stuff and conclude that I have no fucking idea.😅
@Delibro
@Delibro Жыл бұрын
Yea, thats the interesting stuff, why American people ask dumb stuff and other countries don't :)
@sternleiche
@sternleiche Жыл бұрын
Would not care if i get asked any of those questions and just answer them to my best knowledge.
@maikejahn9130
@maikejahn9130 Жыл бұрын
@TrustyCane To me, it looks like more than the questions themself it's the attitude of the questioner and how often you get these kind of questions. I'm sure they get more annoying over time.
@sternleiche
@sternleiche Жыл бұрын
@@maikejahn9130 Sure it is a matter self control to keep answering the questions over and over again, correctly and politely. No matter how absurd they may be, there is a chace the questioner knows better afterwards.
@ABode-er7rz
@ABode-er7rz 10 ай бұрын
When a classmate of me was in the US as a exchange student, she was asked if we have electricity in Germany (because no power supply lines are visible in the streets)...😂
@Geeeee61
@Geeeee61 10 ай бұрын
I don’t know how many people asked me about driving on the left when I moved to the US from Germany…it’s not particularly dumb I guess, but so many people are so confident about their “knowledge”, it’s astonishing 😅
@FaethorFerenzcy
@FaethorFerenzcy 11 ай бұрын
I am swiss, someone from the US once was baffled when i told em, that we got a highway. He seriously tought, there where too many mountains in switzerland. Also, they tought that we could live underground completly cause we have so many "nuclear shelters". (The brackets... well, those "Nuclear shelters" are just "Luftschutzbunker", mostly useless against anything bigger than a conventional bomb.) But then also, i usually play along. I don't want to be the one robbing them their illusions. So... yes here are so many mountains, we do not have highways. And about the shelters... well we are secured against neutron bombs since 2010.
@p3chv0gel22
@p3chv0gel22 10 ай бұрын
Once were with my school at the Airport in Frankfurt to greet an exchange student from Pennsylvania Well, we tried, but he got picked up by the police, because he "tried to be german" and tried to greet the worker there by raising his right arm and yelling ... You know, Something from 80 years ago...
@aquarius4073
@aquarius4073 10 ай бұрын
Oh no!! Lol 🙈🤣
@denisdrumm971
@denisdrumm971 Жыл бұрын
When you watch more of her content, you get a feeling that it is not the questions themselves that led to this video but rather the frequency in which they occured. At least that's what she hinted at several times
@jensschroder8214
@jensschroder8214 11 ай бұрын
Why Germany has so many different names is because this country came together late. Various tribes and later princes lived in the area. The neighbors named it after them. When Germany was later founded, the old names remained. The English sometimes do not distinguish between Dutch and Deutsch. I was in Hamburg at the weekend. There it is customary to eat a (raw) fish sandwich. A dish that does not exist in southern Bavaria. Likewise, typical Bavarian food is hard to find in Hamburg. German cuisine is very diverse in the region.
@mauer1
@mauer1 10 ай бұрын
And some languages just call Germany something like, "not beeing able to speak." Like polish
@christianlenik5307
@christianlenik5307 10 ай бұрын
​@@mauer1Because Polski People are stupid by themselves 😂 - My Family comes from Eastern Europe and "Ex-German" Territories (Silesia Which is in Todays South Poland) and Boy I Like the eldery there mocking the Polish
@christianlenik5307
@christianlenik5307 10 ай бұрын
Or Hessisch "Äppler"/"Äpplwoi" ("Aplewine") - thats popular in Frankfurt Not even Common in Kassel, North Hessen
@p3chv0gel22
@p3chv0gel22 10 ай бұрын
​@@christianlenik5307as a Nordhesse: We don't have äppler, but Frankfurt doesn't have Ahle Worschd, so i don't think we have the worse Side of that deal ;)
@Kuhmuhnistische_Partei
@Kuhmuhnistische_Partei 9 ай бұрын
Also worth mentioning that even Germans used all kinds of words to mean "German". For example the Latin name for the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation was "Sacrum Imperium Romanum Nationis Germanicae" - so here we have German/Germanic to mean German. But the Kingdom of Germany inside that Empire was called "Regnum Teutonicum" with "Teutonicum" having the same root as "Deutsch" (both go back to þeudō meaning people or tribe).
@martingerlitz1162
@martingerlitz1162 10 ай бұрын
I lived in Britain for over 3 years and never got a stupid question. I remember a guy telling me German sounds like having a too hot potato in the mouth, but trying to speak 😂... Whilst I got asked in America if they speak English in England....🎉😂🎉
@Grinse_Katze
@Grinse_Katze 10 ай бұрын
I worked several years as waitress in restaurants and hotels in Germany. And I heard a lot of crazy questions. „why don’t you introduce you with your name first before serving?“ or why the supermarkets are not open all the time and on Sunday/holidays? This question is ok, but they don’t want to hear the answer why it is. They only want to hear there are Markt is who opens all the time (they are very rare in the south of Germany). I wouldn’t say that people from the US are dump, I would say they are ignorant. Because people from other English speaking countries are more open and thinking out of the box. Only some persons from England are a annoyed of bad grammar, but this ist really rare
@Kaesaluk
@Kaesaluk 10 ай бұрын
I am German and was visiting relatives in the US. People asked me if I knew what a watermelon is. OMG.
@simonsays2774
@simonsays2774 Жыл бұрын
Europeans are really all in a good mood. Everyone I've met so far has been at least reasonably well educated. Americans are a whole different ballgame. So far, I have only noticed such ignorant and disrespectful behavior there. Sometimes you really have the feeling that Great Britain, Germany, France, etc. have sent all the idiots on the ships, so that we in Europe have our peace...
@fredplat467
@fredplat467 10 ай бұрын
Lol Indeed
@anunearthlychild8569
@anunearthlychild8569 10 ай бұрын
Okay, that sounds mean, but it would explain people like Trump....😂
@michaelstramm2366
@michaelstramm2366 10 ай бұрын
Well, you know, actually they sent all their Idiots to the US !!! Was a clever way to get rid of them and secondly how else will you explain Donald Trump and his followers??? America is a fu.... up society with fools and idiots running in abundance, so you got your answer........
@robinpeters9616
@robinpeters9616 10 ай бұрын
I believe his grandfather's name was Drumpf@@anunearthlychild8569
@kaspersergej
@kaspersergej 10 ай бұрын
if you check history books, you would be surprised. That’s actually what happened.
@FoxySocks
@FoxySocks 11 ай бұрын
I think some weird questions about other nationalities will always occur, what might be tragic is that citizens of US are tought a bit too much that they are the best and do not learn to change perspective as they just learn they are the best country in the world anyway.
@fenrin6311
@fenrin6311 10 ай бұрын
They even think they "win" WWII, but in war theres no winners... 😬
@arthur_p_dent
@arthur_p_dent Жыл бұрын
7:15 in this context, it bears mentioning that many Americans have a weird idea of what exactly constitutes a "German" name. "Gretchen" or even "Heidi" often comes to mind. Names that literally no one who is half sane would punish their newly born daughter with.
@ekesandras1481
@ekesandras1481 Жыл бұрын
Those are not even real names: Gretchen is the pet name form of Margarete and Heidi the same for Adelheid. The Swiss girl Heidi from the children's book is actually called Adelheid.
@arthur_p_dent
@arthur_p_dent Жыл бұрын
@@ekesandras1481 well, diminutives and short forms can be real names, too. Including these two. On 2nd thought, I have to retract "literally no one". Heidi Klum's Herman parents actually did officially name their daughter that, it's not like her real name was Adelheid. Which, btw, would probably have been even worse. When you hear Adelheid, yoi're thinking an old woman. Born in the 1940s or early 1950s, at the latest.
@ekesandras1481
@ekesandras1481 Жыл бұрын
@@arthur_p_dent Heidi Klum is an old woman.
@arthur_p_dent
@arthur_p_dent Жыл бұрын
@@ekesandras1481 not _that_ old. She's 50. That's at least 20 years too young for names like these.
@christianlenik5307
@christianlenik5307 10 ай бұрын
Heidi is actually more of a Swiss Alpes thing
@alexanderblume5377
@alexanderblume5377 Жыл бұрын
Feli is always very nice and polite, she is always willing to compromise and always tries to understand other cultures. Her education includes media, literacy and languages and linguistics. She picked out very simple stupid questions so as not to embarrass anyone too much. Please also react to other videos of her.
@jayandmorejay
@jayandmorejay 10 ай бұрын
The Algeria thing reminds me of smth that happened to me encountering a couple from the United States in Germany. Me: "So, where you guys from?" Guy: " 'merica! " Me: "South, Central or North"? Guy: "South!" Me: "Uh, that is still a big place. Let me guess, Argentina?", Guy: "No, Texas!" Me: "..."
@marcoherrmann1820
@marcoherrmann1820 Жыл бұрын
Greetings from Germany my friend
@KaroNordlicht
@KaroNordlicht 11 ай бұрын
My friends boyfriend (american) once asked me (german) if theres a moon in the sky in germany 😂😂
@PentragonCosplay
@PentragonCosplay 11 ай бұрын
The only english-speaking country I visited was England and just for 10 days. And on my second or third day in London a older man came up to me and my friend and asked were we are from. As he heard that we were Germans he asked us what we think about the WWII and if we get teached about it in school. I found that a bit strange but also sad that seemingly war is the first thing he connects with Germany.
@thejohnson2328
@thejohnson2328 10 ай бұрын
That was also the case when I've met a British guy in vacation.
@christianlenik5307
@christianlenik5307 10 ай бұрын
That could actually also be the Queens fault, too. - as Long as you can Trust Jeremy Clarksons Words 😂
@anunearthlychild8569
@anunearthlychild8569 10 ай бұрын
This is not entirely surprising. Here on the Internet, many foreigners are amazed that WW2 and the atrocities of the Nazi era are taught so extremely and extensively in our schools. Many countries like to sweep dark spots in their history under the carpet.
@geigerinity7912
@geigerinity7912 7 ай бұрын
I, english but living for 40+ years in Düsseldorf, had a similar experience the first time I met my sister‘s new partner, now hubbie. As we found ourselves alone for a few mins, he asked me “so, what do the Germans think of the war?” I felt like asking , “which one? Vietnam? Rwanda? Afghanistan? Balkan?…. Oh, THAT one, which ended over 70 years ago, before any of us were born” 🙄
@gi0nbecell
@gi0nbecell 10 ай бұрын
As for the soccer vs football question: This sport is football, as it was invented in England. The German word is simply the translation: Fußball - Fuß = foot, Ball = well, ball. As for Americans calling it soccer and deem American Football the "real" football sport, I think one could argue that you could call it "pussy rugby" with the same right Americans insist on giving football a separate name - and it would be more accurate. Btw, as there are so many variations of "Football", like Australian Football, it's really annoying how Americans tend to see their niche sport (on a global scale) as "the one big thing". Football, the real one, is waaay bigger internationally.
@werkstattkreuzberg4234
@werkstattkreuzberg4234 10 ай бұрын
In the end we should be lucky that the most Americans never leave their country.
@kohlicoide2258
@kohlicoide2258 Жыл бұрын
8:22 its often cringe for me when some Americans especially some borderline nazis try to explain what is german/austrian patriotism
@RagingGoblin
@RagingGoblin Жыл бұрын
The borders of socially acceptable patriotism are vastly different, for sure. In Germany, some of what's perfectly normal in the US would be looked at with very *very* deep suspicion ...
@kohlicoide2258
@kohlicoide2258 Жыл бұрын
@@RagingGoblin Jep, but is also read some BS like.. "How you can pride about your country but hate the nazis?" where i often tough... bruh.. PS. the most "normal" patriotic germans i meet are oft more prussia german aka pre 1. wk german fans^^
@notbob3590
@notbob3590 10 ай бұрын
I love the way you talk btw. Main reason why I haven't stoped watching your videos.
@strenter
@strenter 10 ай бұрын
First name is Ralf. Back in the days when X had still the bird logo, even was struggling fighting the takeover, I was confronted by a probably American who didn't like my political view I had expressed earlier about who in their right mind would spell "Ralph" this way. My answer consisted of two words: "My parents." I never heard a reply to this. 😊
@dansattah
@dansattah Жыл бұрын
Two ways to interpret the question about "warm beer": 1) Germany just uses a lot less ice cubes than the US. If the beer is refrigerated beforehand, it's cold enough for a German but maybe not for an American. 2) During Christmas season, you can get "mulled beer" (Glühbier) in Germany. We probably got the recipe from Poland.
@KaiHenningsen
@KaiHenningsen Жыл бұрын
3) The British actually have a bit of a reputation of drinking warm beer (enough to feature in Asterisk!). And the usual assumption that Europe is like GB.
@f.h.7671
@f.h.7671 Жыл бұрын
and nr 3: old medicin if you catch a cold. mind you, you will stink but feel better soon
@blablup1214
@blablup1214 11 ай бұрын
I would say. It is pretty uncommon here in Germany to dilute the beer with water. You should also not ask a German to water beer down or you get the stare of death. Ice is water, so you do want a cold beer but you do not want ice in it and if you drink it fast enough it doesn't get warm ^^' I would say warm beer is mainly for old people that have bad teeth. If you have a little damaged teeth the cold hurts a lot ^^'
@thejohnson2328
@thejohnson2328 10 ай бұрын
Glühbier ? I think you've ment Glühwein.
@dansattah
@dansattah 10 ай бұрын
@@thejohnson2328 Es gibt beides. In Sachsen findet man Glühbier wegen der Nähe zu Polen.
@Hey.Joe.
@Hey.Joe. Жыл бұрын
Best regards from Germany too
@karowolkenschaufler7659
@karowolkenschaufler7659 10 ай бұрын
the reason there are so many different names for germany in differnt languages is that they are all based on different germanic tribes.
@mickeymaus1
@mickeymaus1 11 ай бұрын
13:08 the question is valid and fair cause first rule all over the world is: mom makes the best authentic food of home But beside that the question is also absolutely okay cause here in Germany itself it’s quite difficult to find a restaurant who offers a very good and not average quality of local food who is homemade and not bought at the Metro or other wholesalers and just reheated it…. So nope, that question is fair.
@riptors9777
@riptors9777 10 ай бұрын
I visited my friend in the USA.. he was friends with an old dude that was stationed in germany after WW2. Old dude asked me "Do you have freedom now in germany?" XD To be honest it was more funny then dumb.. and he was an old guy so it wasnt an offending question
@eerokutale277
@eerokutale277 Жыл бұрын
Let's assume a random US citizen hears you speaking with Scottish accent for the first time, does he/she understand you are a native English speaker?
@armitage9204
@armitage9204 Жыл бұрын
You already know the answer. 😁
@YukiTheOkami
@YukiTheOkami Жыл бұрын
My boyfriend yes most other amaricans " wow ur english is songood where did u study it" 😅
@alicemilne1444
@alicemilne1444 Жыл бұрын
I have a Scottish accent. It's different from Mert's, but still instantly recognisably as Scottish to anyone from the UK. I've lost count of the number of Americans who have told me I speak "real good" or "perfect" English and wanted to know where I learnt it, or how long I've lived in the USA to get that good.
@KaiHenningsen
@KaiHenningsen Жыл бұрын
It's either "perfect English", or a "Mexican accent".🤣
@aphextwin5712
@aphextwin5712 Жыл бұрын
That will depend on whether they had prior experience with Scottish accents. Whenever you hear a new accent, you need contextual clues as where the person comes from. Sometimes it is sufficient that you had some exposure to, eg, French, to be able to place the accent of a French person speaking English.
@wilhelmignis1314
@wilhelmignis1314 7 ай бұрын
6:20 min: UK, Ireland, Cyprus and Malta request to drive on the left side. All others in Europe drive on the right side.
@N_K12695
@N_K12695 Жыл бұрын
I also find the question about the authenticity of the food of a foreign restaurant here in Germany absolutely legitimate. With Asian food, you usually know that it is europeanized, so I would also rather ask for a recommendation for a particular restaurant. - Translation by 'deepL'
@glockenrein
@glockenrein 10 ай бұрын
The answer is usually obvious. It’s never authentic. I don’t think necessarily matters either, as long as it tastes nice everything’s fine.
@tomt6963
@tomt6963 10 ай бұрын
A motel host once told me, "oh, I was in Germany too, I was in Stockholm".
@Kamil0san
@Kamil0san Жыл бұрын
You find ppl with weird imagination, when my family moved from poland to germany, from a big city to a small village ppl there asked weird questions like "Did you have refrigerators, washing machines and do you know how they work?"
@cluft105
@cluft105 10 ай бұрын
In 1997 two of my friends and me went for Dinner in Washington D.C.. We got into a nice talk with the waitress and she asked us where we were from. When we told her, that we live in Germany, she was quite astounded. She then asked us if we had driven all the way up here by car...
@andreaskaphengst8121
@andreaskaphengst8121 10 ай бұрын
😮
@taniakrause9253
@taniakrause9253 10 ай бұрын
😅😅😅
@markalexander71332
@markalexander71332 Жыл бұрын
I,m from Germany 🇩🇪. I blame it on American school system.😢
@faultier1158
@faultier1158 Жыл бұрын
I blame the sheltered nature of North American life. They're generally not as exposed to foreign countries, their languages, and how people live there. And don't underestimate the one-sided language barrier. We can (and do) read US online discourse and follow their political debates. They usually can't do the same with German discourse & politics.
@davidmarkwort9711
@davidmarkwort9711 Жыл бұрын
I once had a friend who was an MP stationed in West Germany during the 50‘s. He told me once a story of a British officer looking for Köln (Cologne), he was in a sports car and asked for directions to cologney, nobody had a clue what he was on about, not until he wrote it down, oh! Köln, no, cologney😂😂😂😂
@alicemilne1444
@alicemilne1444 Жыл бұрын
He would either have been using the British pronunciation, which sounds something like "coloan", or the French pronunciation "colo-nyeh".
@davidmarkwort9711
@davidmarkwort9711 Жыл бұрын
@@alicemilne1444 actually he said the name using the individual letters as they are in the alphabet, it sounded really stupid, but he was an officer!
@alicemilne1444
@alicemilne1444 Жыл бұрын
@@davidmarkwort9711 Speaking as someone from the UK, you didn't get to be an officer in the British Army in the 1950s without a certain level of education. And when you went to Sandhurst Officer Training College, you certainly learnt about how the major cities of Europe were called or pronounced in English. Add to that, I have never, ever heard a British person say "Colog-nay". For the simple reason that the word "cologne" has been used for a couple of centuries in Britain to mean a kind of perfume. So I'm guessing this story was apocryphal.
@davidmarkwort9711
@davidmarkwort9711 Жыл бұрын
@@alicemilne1444 nope! He knew I was German, and I knew he had served time in Cyprus and the then West Germany. He even said the word, it sounded rather weird coming with the high English accent, I knew how they spoke because I had been to school in London, I learned how to speak „Oxford „ as well. My mum killed herself laughing, we Germans do have humour
@alicemilne1444
@alicemilne1444 Жыл бұрын
@@davidmarkwort9711 Fair enough. As someone who grew up in the UK (born in the 1950s) and have known masses of people who were in the British Forces back then, including officers and squaddies who were based in West Germany, I just don't find it very credible. I've lived in Germany myself for over 40 years. I know they teach you what they call "Oxford English" in schools, but nobody in the UK except for people who actually come from the city of Oxford speak with "an Oxford accent". And yes, I know Germans have humour. I often end up explaining it to non-Germans.
@simont.4819
@simont.4819 10 ай бұрын
About Americans consuming predominantly British or Australian content, "because the languages are so similar". XD Love it! :D
@XYpsilonLP
@XYpsilonLP 11 ай бұрын
Well... I spend a few month in the UK back in 2008 - and I got the question "You are from Europe, aren't you?" Yeah... We both are, aren't we? ^^° (well, back then at least)
@bjorn-falkoandreas9472
@bjorn-falkoandreas9472 Жыл бұрын
That's why I am always confused when Americans have problems understanding some of the thicker UK accents. I am German. I understand most of it. Thick Geordie will throw me a loop. I understood most of Trainspotting. But I have seen Americans capitulating in Derby.
@beageler
@beageler 10 ай бұрын
"It's shite been Sco'ish!" :-D
@dinoscheidt
@dinoscheidt 10 ай бұрын
German, partially grew up in the US. In 2007 a girl in my high school senior history class said that she heard the German wall was torn down… and that she wonders where the Great Wall of China ends now 🤔
@arno1811
@arno1811 Жыл бұрын
Oh Mert. You simply are a shinin light inthis f up world. Gives me so much joy. And the scottish to fit it. 😍
@pyroteamfrankenjunior
@pyroteamfrankenjunior 11 ай бұрын
Realistically, it's more like ten to twenty thousand different dialects, since almost every city has its own dialect
@user-xi6nk4xs4s
@user-xi6nk4xs4s Жыл бұрын
OK. Greetings from the Netherlands as well I guess ;o). Thank you Mert.
@sonjakowalski3075
@sonjakowalski3075 11 ай бұрын
"You're are from Germany? - Do you have cars over there?"
@bensonheadshis3131
@bensonheadshis3131 4 ай бұрын
The last question was the best :) I love your channel Mert!
@koffeinx6738
@koffeinx6738 9 ай бұрын
I saw a "german fest" celebrated in milwaukee. Its basically just Bavaria some centuries ago. Since i saw that fest, i know where some questions has there origin.
@mariaslasovicz6185
@mariaslasovicz6185 11 ай бұрын
My favourite was, if life in Germany is not very hard, seeing that we live in ruins, as WW2 had destroyed so many buildings.
@claudiafromgermany1674
@claudiafromgermany1674 11 ай бұрын
When I lived in the States I was asked a thousand times for the original German Chocolate cake receipe. There is no such cake in Germany.
@teemo2950
@teemo2950 11 ай бұрын
Sachertorte?
@TheFeldhamster
@TheFeldhamster 11 ай бұрын
​@@teemo2950is Austrian.
@teemo2950
@teemo2950 11 ай бұрын
@@TheFeldhamster ah, right.
@claudiafromgermany1674
@claudiafromgermany1674 11 ай бұрын
No, German Chocolate cake in the US with a lot of frosting is nothing close to any German cake in Germany.
@sabinemetzger3219
@sabinemetzger3219 11 ай бұрын
They have a german Chocolate cake in the us. The company and its founder are named german as a last Name.
@beageler
@beageler 10 ай бұрын
The real important question about German food is where one can get a good Döner. AFAIK one can find acceptable bread and beer, although one has to look for it and it's expensive. But I have never gotten an acceptable Döner in any country except Germany, so how bad would it be in the US...
@coellnbrueder8879
@coellnbrueder8879 11 ай бұрын
P.S. Typical female reaction with that "football" situation. I, as a German, will ALWAYS call the best game of the world "football", because you use your foot to play the ball. American football consists of padded big boys carrying an egg-shaped ball: Call it by its true name "Chicken run" and the confusion will go away at once.
@thierryf67
@thierryf67 5 ай бұрын
IMOA, what's important in the food, is the quality of the ingredients, rather than the recipe that the chief uses. If it's good and the ingredients are good, that's fine. Every cook has it's own recipe.
@constancevigilance8696
@constancevigilance8696 11 ай бұрын
I am certain, that in every country there are vast differences in the food between north and south or east and west. I am from the north and haven't even tried Prezls? Brezeln. Or Sour joint Sauerbraten.😂😂 Nor have people from the south have tried Labskaus.
@volcano3493
@volcano3493 10 ай бұрын
Telling them ahead of 9/11?! That one was EPIC! LMAO!
@achimwokeschtla7582
@achimwokeschtla7582 10 ай бұрын
To add more confusion to the topic of football vs. soccer vs. Fußball … Tischkicker is called table football or foosball in the States which sounds exactly like Fußball
@Rezzatoni
@Rezzatoni 10 ай бұрын
6:30 To be precise, there is another country in Europe where people are driving on the left side of the street, and unlike UK it still is member of the European Union: Malta ...
@bracinggreen3785
@bracinggreen3785 Жыл бұрын
If i get it right (from memory), the last country in europe, that canged driving on the left side of the road to drive on the right side was Sweden. They did in over a weekend (a long time ago), they changed any road sign... Well on saturday you got to drive on the left side, on monday on the right side of the road. About country/city names: Bodensee Lake Konstanz (Konstanz is a town at Lake Konstanz, Bodensee means: The lake at the bottom, (Poem about Bodensee: Ach tun mir die Augen weh, wenn ich im Glas den Boden seh. That transates to: Oh what an ace in my eyes i got, if i can see the bottom of my glass. (seh means i can see, see means lake))), München Munic, Köln Cologne - (Eau de Cologne Kölnisch Wasser (parfume), Köln was build by the romans (imperator Claudius 50 a. Chr) -> latin: Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium... There are a a lot more: Königsberg, Hamburg, Danzig.... And about Felicita...: felice navidad (spanish?) - Means: I want to wish you a merry christmas. Edit: It seems i posted that twice, i dont know how i did this???
@MrWalter2202
@MrWalter2202 11 ай бұрын
sorry, the name Felicita doesn't have anything to do with Xmas! Felicita comes from latin and means something likee happiness! Merry Xmas in Spanish is: "Feliz navidad" ! Nice greets from a German living in Spain!
@beageler
@beageler 10 ай бұрын
About the names, if you want to visit the Haardter Schloß and need to ask for directions it might help to know the alternative names because some people in Neustadt find it funny to confuse people. It's also known as Kästeburg (Kastanienburg, sounds like Käschteburg), Maxburg, Hambacher Schloß (Hambach is the suburb, the Haardt is the whole mountain range) or Villa Klemm.
@Warwipf
@Warwipf 10 ай бұрын
Since you're living in Malaysia... have you ever considered making videos about your experience there? I'd be interested. I've got a friend who's from there as well, a child of German immigrants who then moved back to Germany. Apparently there's large German communities in the country aswell, if you wanna keep the whole "Germany" theme going
@niiica__________294
@niiica__________294 10 ай бұрын
As I was in the US.... In 1989.... They asked me things like.... Do hitler still lives.... How long I need to drive from Boston to Germany by car.... Unbelievable 😊😂
@markusscheid7235
@markusscheid7235 10 ай бұрын
I was a Hotel employee for about 13 years, receptionist. A U.S. American guest asked me if Hitler built the Berlin Wall.....
@Camponotus100
@Camponotus100 11 ай бұрын
the main problem with a lot of questions from americans is, that they assume/claim, that all is based or made for america. a lot of EU cities are way older than several US cities together. also the refrigarator thing... they categorize EU or germany way behind the US in technology. even our standart homes are made from steel and concrete and have all electric stuff. also the whole discussion with taxes and insurances ect... all americans who lived longer than a year in germany i know, changed their opinion and find most things better here. and to be fair, some points arent important and just personal preference :D
@jk9554
@jk9554 11 ай бұрын
9:20 not to be confused with "foosball" (as in table soccer) either.
@lilypad2827
@lilypad2827 10 ай бұрын
One of my former classmates once went abroad and they told me that many people mistook Austria for Australia and somebody was actually trying to convince her that Austria is in Australia. Also somebody thought that the Berlin Wall was still standing and that Hitler was still chancellor.
@no1leader135
@no1leader135 10 ай бұрын
@14:19 your face expression said it all. 😉
@geordiegeorge9041
@geordiegeorge9041 8 ай бұрын
It's not just the US. Now I am a naturalised German, I was born in England but I've lived in Germany for over 40 years. When I'm visiting family in England, I am always getting asked, the same question. Oh you live in Germany, do you speak German?????????
@pnass1
@pnass1 11 ай бұрын
I liked the look on your face when she talked about StuDoc :) I thought her promoting this platform was ironic.
@Zinkhal1
@Zinkhal1 11 ай бұрын
5:36 well i wasnt really out of germany but to be honest im pretty sure i could asked some stupid questions too ... some countrys are SO different in many situations you just cant know "normal" stuff that comon sense for them just some culture difference as example getting off your shoes when entering the house ... i dont really know that from germany and without the onlineworld i wouldnt really know its a thing in a lot of other spaces but yeah ok... i would never ask an italian man if he speaks his own language to be honest ..XD dont know how that can come to someones mind :D 6:30 thats another topic .. i have no clue as example what country is driving on which side of the road ... and in the end i dont really care at all its not like everybody could change the country because he think "driving left or right side is stupid" thats not how a country work xD so its useless to ask anyone "why are you driving on the wrong side of the road?" well ... because its a rule in the country ...? 9:23 reminds me of some stuff english teacher was talking ... uhm ... over 15 years ago .. man im getting old xD you cant translate word for word and "fußball" whats fuß=foot and ball=ball (well that looks stupid ..xD) would be football but that dont mean the activity is called the same in another language ... have overall the feeling german love just to press 2 words together to get a new one and of course you cant just translate these 2 words and put them together for the new word "translation" 12:30 but its a question that makes sense ... i mean of course not like "are you eating this every day in your country" but if i could i would love to ask a japanese guy as example about some places in germany "is it truly kinda like in japanese?" but more like "thats something you do or eat in that country from time to time ... not every day obviously xD maybe it would be better to ask like "would you say you can recognize these food from your country or is it complete different?" and i mean the question makes sense ... how should i know if not asking someone coming from that country? or just trust blind someone selling food and name it like its from another country
@ansgar759
@ansgar759 Жыл бұрын
To get good and authentic food abroad, in particular in Asia, go where locals go!
@knutritter461
@knutritter461 11 ай бұрын
Dipping pretzels in mustard????!!! 😂
@drsnova7313
@drsnova7313 11 ай бұрын
I'm German, and I fail to see why that is so outrageous. With sweet mustard, not the hot variants.
@knutritter461
@knutritter461 11 ай бұрын
@@drsnova7313 Right... with the sweet one it works. But not with the hot one. You will have trouble finding sweet mustard in the US.
@hollenfurst7104
@hollenfurst7104 11 ай бұрын
My friend was asked on her exchange year, if this "Hitler guy" still rules in germany. That was 20 years ago. I asked my friend back if they have a huge bunker in their garden.😂
@kathleesi
@kathleesi 10 ай бұрын
6:18 as a German who was in Ireland for a year I felt double the insult...
@adrianmeyer7985
@adrianmeyer7985 11 ай бұрын
Yes, this makes for a fun video and story but it actually should be "dumbest question uneducated (American) people ask Germans". Any honestly asked question is a good one as it show curiosity - which is the foundation for real learning, it should be appreciated and is why you say "there are no dumb questions". In general, Americans have the same potential knowledge and intelligence as anyone else, but their education system is pretty shit if you compare it to other highly developed nations. And this is what gives many the impression of dumb Americans - e.g. their education is extremely America-centric.
@wilhelmignis1314
@wilhelmignis1314 7 ай бұрын
Even President Obama once said that Henry Ford invented the car. So, what do you expect?
@martinphilipps8678
@martinphilipps8678 11 ай бұрын
i was asked in the US (of course) : how far is east germany from west germany?
@drsnova7313
@drsnova7313 11 ай бұрын
"Oh, in an amazing coincidence, the distance is, to an inch, the same as between North Dakota and South Dakota".
@cypress3595
@cypress3595 10 ай бұрын
where r u from? germany. east or west coast?
@EmilySC23
@EmilySC23 9 ай бұрын
I did an exchange year in France and every single French person I met thought I was British. Apparently they can’t differentiate between the accents.
@viperdoe5720
@viperdoe5720 9 ай бұрын
6:02 und warum ist das so? Genau! Napoleon und die Grande Armée
@pflegefachkraft7595
@pflegefachkraft7595 10 ай бұрын
I will have to start taking drugs when i finally visit amerika and have to deal with that sort of people. Maybe I should rethink my plans
@mattheshwi
@mattheshwi 5 ай бұрын
Auckland New Zealand 2009: I was ask if I ever meet hitler. I was 19 years old….
@lakritz1987
@lakritz1987 10 ай бұрын
In Australia I was asked by an Indian Girl whether we do have trees and fridges in Germany -.-
@addison207
@addison207 11 ай бұрын
German here. Many years ago I worked in tourism and one day a maybe 14yo girl from the Us ask me :"why are there so many languages in Europe". And the only thing that came in my mind was :" because weve lost a war". And she looked at me and says :" Oh,thats horable, im so sorry".
@MH-ns3bh
@MH-ns3bh 10 ай бұрын
That's a good one, Michael Mittermeier!
@kevbridges3963
@kevbridges3963 10 ай бұрын
yep, i saw that clip as well, very funny guy.@@MH-ns3bh
@Subraumdings
@Subraumdings 11 ай бұрын
Yeah great, do the Ads too ^^
@Sammy200655294
@Sammy200655294 4 ай бұрын
I was asked by my host mum in the US if the leaves change color in fall over in Europe... also I've been asked if I knew Hitler and/or was a Nazi multiple times, because of my German roots, although I think that was mostly just to annoy me.
@bambulkomccloud3983
@bambulkomccloud3983 10 ай бұрын
I have lived two year in the US as a German, and I never got these questions.
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