Number 18: the European head is a carved turnip. It refers to the fact that in Ireland and England, people used to carve turnips (and beetroots and potatoes) for All Hallow's Eve (which later became Halloween) as a way to ward off evil spirits
@@Gwendolinex Just as Christmas Eve is the night before Christmas, All Hallow’s Eve (hallow meaning holy) is the night before All Saints’ Day which is on 1st November each year with All Souls’ Day being on 2nd November. These are Catholic Feast Days. The Catholic Church teaches that souls end up in Purgatory when they are not in a perfect state of grace and communion with God when they die. All Saints’ Day and All Souls’ Day are not observed by most Protestant denominations, since that teaching is in 2 Maccabees.
About the date of year thing: While I do prefer the european order over the american (well, I am european and I'm used to it), as a programmer I prefer the order year-month-day, with always 4 digits for the year and 2 for day and month (01, not just 1). This order is the easiest to sort, you can just see them as an 8 digit number and every alphanumeric sorting gets them in the right order. P.S.: I want to have that water tower and make a home out of it 🤯
I'm from the Czech Republic and when I was little a always wondered how anybody can punch a hole in the wall as I saw it in the American movies 😂 tried it a few times, didn't work... back then I figured that in the movies the walls are probably already damaged 😂 took me a few years to realize the walls are built differently
To be fair a lot of houses in UK have wood framed plasterboard partitions between rooms, with just the external walls being brick or stone. You could punch a hole if it happens to be an internal wall. There is also dry lining in some older stone houses.
@@Phiyedough Same as in New Zealand but I've been told that the UK/NZ plasterboard is a lot thicker than the stuff used in the US. I remember when people started using what was called bison board* in houses instead of plasterboard and I was helping to decorate a new house. The painter/decorator I was working with put the roller through the wall it was so pathetically thin. *like chipboard but with huge wood chips and probably only a couple of mm thick, I have 5mm ply in my room and the bison board was thinner than that.
@@annaluskova6129 Don't try punching a hole in an internal wall of an older house unless you want to spend hours in casualty.! it's only newer houses and flats (or renovations) that have plasterboard walls. You can't bang a nail into the walls of my 1930's bungalow.
They do exist but tend to be operated for business rather than private use. In Europe we buy the kind of vehicle we need whereas Americans are more interested in presenting a certain image.
What's funny is that in a recent video I saw of a US mechanic trying to "revive" an old Mazda B2500, there were tons of comments of US americans saying that it's a shame they don't have normal pickups anymore because if they had, they would buy them in a heartbeat.
A few years ago I saw a programme where a dad bought his teenage daughter a truck as big as a Hummer! She could hardly climb in it, and yet she was going to be driving in on the roads. That is just ridiculous.!!
that "European truck" is Japanese truck made for the US market Ps: I must nitpick on me by mentioning that to be exact this Truck (which is a Toyota Tacoma) is 20 years old and have similar sizing of a Rest of the World/Non US truck
FYI, N14 is the line 6 Metro in Paris. Also to be fair most water towers in Europe are not that fancy especially outside of cities, they are just concrete tubes.
@@Arltratlo the second reich to be true.who ended in 1918, also in versailles. I don't understand the purpose of your reply. Do you have something to proof about or against France? It was a funny video, ffs !
@@michaelhamon886 i have been to France many times, even been inside the mirror gallery... i like French cheese and whine... i even like French girls/women... i speak only a very little French, wich is also spoken in Belgium, Monaco and Switzerland....there i have been already, too... i am European....born close to an international border, wich i crossed as a kid with my friends to eat ice cream! the ice parlor on the other side of the border been closer to our place!
@@Arltratlo je comprends toujours pas ton problème. Il se demandait où étais le lieu sur la photo, je réponds simplement et toi tu nous fais laïus sur la défaite de 1871. Toi tu connais la France ?
European countries aren't THAT close. I think if you lived in an Austrian village close to the German border, I think you can make it to a town in Germany in 15 minutes. Yeah, but I think a ferry ride from Germany to Switzerland takes like 55 minutes at the fastest, but I could be wrong. And from where you landed in Switzerland after the ferry ride, it would take you a little over 2 hours to get to a small village in Italy. Yes, European countries are smaller and closer together, which seems nice to me.
Did you know Switzerland is one of the 14 landlocked countries in Europe? ;) ..like Austria, you can drive into Switzerland from Germany. But you are right, it depends on where you live. I live close enough to Germany that I can (and do) walk from my house in the Netherlands to Germany for grocery shopping. Yes, walk. About an hour one way (3 miles). Why walk? Healthy, nature along the way, enjoying dry weather and sunshine while it lasts. Europe will be dipped in clouds and cold soon enough. :)
It is all a matter of location and opportunity. Once whiel on holiday I had a walk. I started in The Netherlands and walked all the way over to Belgium. From there I walked further to Germany and finally from there back to The Netherlands. I think it was under ten paces. There are plenty places where 3 countries meet. Also If you do a trip long enough to include Germany Austria Switzerland and Italy, Why not d a detour into Lichtenstein while near there. Make it a trip, then you can also go to France and Monaco, probably still in the same day.
i live in croatia, i am in austria in like an hour, crossing the border, slovenia, even less, for italy i would need few hours depending wich route i would take, but the fact is you can travel whole europe with car, public transport and every counry will be completly different than previous one and yet we all are simmilar, by way of life, customs, values etc....
In my tiwn there was the tradition of the biete man ( beet man). Beets are the last harvest of the year and to celebrate it we would go door to door with a hollowed out beet with a candle in it. I still have 5 scars on my hands from carving out beets.😊
# 11: The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City (abbreviated as RHOSLC), The Real Housewives of Atlanta (abbreviated RHOA), The Real Housewives of New York City (abbreviated RHONY)...
About the ice in the glass... the left side is still too much ice for me, because i hate iced drinks. Nothing worse than watered down stuff. The drink was already precooled from the tap / bottle and i wont sit there 5 hours for my drink to warm up before i drink it. Also such ice is nasty, old water coming from cooling loops that run the water constantly and on top of that, my drink will have more actual liquid because most bars / cafés fill up the glass, ice or not. So i get more drink for my money in the end (unless it is filled from a bottle). And in the end, cooled down drinks are bad for your system, because the body warms up to bring the drink in your belly to a good temperature, making you sweat more in the end. I personally drink everything i can in room temperature.
@@melindaburch4318 sure, but what does this have to do with iced drinks? Its even worse to drink iced drinks in warmer climates. Sure, it cools down your body for a moment, until your stomach notices that it is indeed too cold for your system to be processed and heats up to bring the liquid to a useable temperature.
Douglas Murray said something great the other day and it really struck me. he said (and im paraphrasing) "when he sees these university students standing under the signs & quotes & infrastructure of Dante and Archimedes or Constantine the Great and he thought yes its good to keep your finger on the pulse, but dont forget those who came before you. You can build upon that which came before"... i couldnt agree more
I’ve always thought that the reason Americans put the month first is because it follows the way they and we often refer to the date verbally: e.g. “March 31st 2024”
I think Americans say it that way, because they write it that way. We don't say it that way. We just say 31 March. Not even fist or second, just the number and the month, that's it. The way we also write it 🤗
I remember as a kid in the UK diligently trying to carve a rock-hard turnip for Halloween. But I must admit the smell of a candle-scorched turnip makes you hungry. Apples... nothing can compare to a Russet. Ugliest apple you ever saw but Mmmmmmmm, nice.
normal driving license for cars is for vehicles up to 3500 kg total weight. thats why alot of the big american models are not a hit here. also why the cybertruck is not marketed here. need a driving license to drive a semi to meet the weight of that pile of junk.
Also, there's some rule in the US - I forget where exactly, maybe tax law? - which makes larger vehicles more attractive, it's not *just* that they like big trucks.
not all our water towers are so fancy... In my town we call it "la copa" (the glass) because it has the shape of a martini glass. Now it's a symbol of our town and has lights. If it's our national day it got red and yellow lights, pride month is marked with rainbow theme lights, breast cancer day: all pink. It's modern (middle 1900) cute but not like the one of the video.
I think the one on the left of the picture (of the mask and pumpkin) , means that our souls are preserved whereas Americans souls have been carved out.
This is a reference to the irish legend of Jack O Lantern. It’s a turnip, native to Europe, the pumpkin is native to America. When immigrants arrived, following the great famine 1845 to 1852, in the new world, they took their traditions with them but adapted them to their new environment. Hope it’s help. Sorry for my bad english, it’s not my native langage.
@LouiseN-r9m thank you for the in depth knowledge, I appreciate it. I just randomly used my own interpretation. I'm no good with history. By the way, your English is awesome. 😊
I miss my native food 😢. Please just for me eat a smørrebrød with torskerogn and remoulade, after a rødgrød med fløde, and in the afternoon maybe some piratos or tyrkisk peber. 🥹🥹🥹
I don't think the health difference between the apples is that big. But it goes to show the difference in portion sizes. And it shows how Americans just can't get enough or when to stop... 3 small apples will stay fresh for longer if you don't feel like that much apple at once. Also have a look at canned food sizes... in Europe its quite common to get sweet corn is smaller 170g cans... Don't know if that size is available in the US... it's probably 400g or what's known as a size 10 can, which I guess is 800-1000g ... and I rarely need more than a 170g can when I'm just cooking for 2 adults + 2 kids... who really needs the "industrial kitchen" sized cans?
@@KaiHenningsen ah yes, just a casual and cozy date night for two, eating 4 pound of beef, 3 pounds of greens, and the softest bread (cake) to go with it... The irony is that while I was writing this comment, an American(allied) chinook just passed above my head... you know, a regular sized 'merican helicopter 😄 Nah it's good, keep your portion sizes... I'm just puzzled.
6:06 for starters... in Europe that isn't a truck... DAF, M.A.N Scania, Peterbilt, Mack,, are trucks, in Europe these are all named Jeeps.. as in.. Toyotajeep, VWjeep, Nissanjeep, Hondajeep
It depends on the country. In Spain we call it "all terrain" "4x4" or simply a "country car". And you are right, here a truck is what they call "semi".
I own a small Suzuki Vitara 2.0 diesel 4 cyl. which I use for pulling a trailer loaded with 1000 Kg or more of olives between the olive groves. I bet that American mastodon can't do it properly.
At least they don't show the corpse of the child run over by the father driving the American truck versus the child playing on the European driveway where the father could see him and stop his truck in time.
Of course America is going to have bigger trucks - they have better roads for driving when compared to Europe - plus, I think they have to drive more considering the distances they have to travel for every day life. Bigger is better, probably.
They have bigger trucks because their warped CAFE standard actually punishes smaller vehicles AND also cut pollution maluses on pick-up trucks on the ground that they are utility vehicles. That is why even Japanese carmakers makes oversized trucks for the US market.
O.k. kids, ready for another reading lesson? Personally I find it a bit offensive. You think migrants don't come to Europe? You're not following the news, right? Do you know you can make your own bread? Very cheap and easy to make, so it could be something to consider.
Number 18: the European head is a carved turnip. It refers to the fact that in Ireland and England, people used to carve turnips (and beetroots and potatoes) for All Hallow's Eve (which later became Halloween) as a way to ward off evil spirits
In belgium, it was carved beet
That's a swede, not a turnip. Turnips are smaller, harder and impractical for lantern use.
@@helenwood8482swede is a type of turnip
@@Gwendolinex Just as Christmas Eve is the night before Christmas, All Hallow’s Eve (hallow meaning holy) is the night before All Saints’ Day which is on 1st November each year with All Souls’ Day being on 2nd November. These are Catholic Feast Days. The Catholic Church teaches that souls end up in Purgatory when they are not in a perfect state of grace and communion with God when they die. All Saints’ Day and All Souls’ Day are not observed by most Protestant denominations, since that teaching is in 2 Maccabees.
About the date of year thing: While I do prefer the european order over the american (well, I am european and I'm used to it), as a programmer I prefer the order year-month-day, with always 4 digits for the year and 2 for day and month (01, not just 1). This order is the easiest to sort, you can just see them as an 8 digit number and every alphanumeric sorting gets them in the right order.
P.S.: I want to have that water tower and make a home out of it 🤯
I'm from the Czech Republic and when I was little a always wondered how anybody can punch a hole in the wall as I saw it in the American movies 😂 tried it a few times, didn't work... back then I figured that in the movies the walls are probably already damaged 😂 took me a few years to realize the walls are built differently
To be fair a lot of houses in UK have wood framed plasterboard partitions between rooms, with just the external walls being brick or stone. You could punch a hole if it happens to be an internal wall. There is also dry lining in some older stone houses.
@@Phiyedough really? I had no idea 😮 thank you for letting me know ❤️
@@Phiyedough Same as in New Zealand but I've been told that the UK/NZ plasterboard is a lot thicker than the stuff used in the US.
I remember when people started using what was called bison board* in houses instead of plasterboard and I was helping to decorate a new house. The painter/decorator I was working with put the roller through the wall it was so pathetically thin.
*like chipboard but with huge wood chips and probably only a couple of mm thick, I have 5mm ply in my room and the bison board was thinner than that.
Yeah, good luck with punching holes in AAC (Autoclaved aerated concrete) or calcium-silicate brick inner walls.
@@annaluskova6129 Don't try punching a hole in an internal wall of an older house unless you want to spend hours in casualty.! it's only newer houses and flats (or renovations) that have plasterboard walls. You can't bang a nail into the walls of my 1930's bungalow.
At 6:12 I love the American truck to the European truck when in Europe we don't drive truck!
They do exist but tend to be operated for business rather than private use. In Europe we buy the kind of vehicle we need whereas Americans are more interested in presenting a certain image.
What's funny is that in a recent video I saw of a US mechanic trying to "revive" an old Mazda B2500, there were tons of comments of US americans saying that it's a shame they don't have normal pickups anymore because if they had, they would buy them in a heartbeat.
Try to navigate an old European town in one of those US behemoths... or find somewhere to park it.
@@bjornh4664 - Well, they can find a place to park but it won't be in a car park. 😄
A few years ago I saw a programme where a dad bought his teenage daughter a truck as big as a Hummer! She could hardly climb in it, and yet she was going to be driving in on the roads. That is just ridiculous.!!
that "European truck" is Japanese truck made for the US market
Ps: I must nitpick on me by mentioning that to be exact this Truck (which is a Toyota Tacoma) is 20 years old and have similar sizing of a Rest of the World/Non US truck
If you taste a British apple, you will never want an American one again.
at least the hospital visit after the punch in the wall is free.. :oD
Look at the bedsize of the trucks. Pretty much the same. But the european drives the double miles per gallon...
The lighter the vehicle.
The longer the distance.
Also pay over double the price per gallon and significantly more for that similar car that's also much smaller...
The ford pulls more and holds a little more but that extra capability is rarely used.
Not miles, but kilometres. We use metric here mind you
@@commandbrawler9348 I'm Swedish, I know we use kms :) . My comment was towards the americans in the audience.
FYI, N14 is the line 6 Metro in Paris.
Also to be fair most water towers in Europe are not that fancy especially outside of cities, they are just concrete tubes.
Euro Architecture picture is from "la galerie des glaces"(mirror's gallery) in the versaille's palace !
its the place the German empire been founded in 1871!
after the French attacked the German states first and got their ass handed by the Prussians!
@@Arltratlo the second reich to be true.who ended in 1918, also in versailles.
I don't understand the purpose of your reply. Do you have something to proof about or against France?
It was a funny video, ffs !
@@michaelhamon886 i have been to France many times,
even been inside the mirror gallery...
i like French cheese and whine...
i even like French girls/women...
i speak only a very little French, wich is also spoken in Belgium, Monaco and Switzerland....there i have been already, too...
i am European....born close to an international border, wich i crossed as a kid with my friends to eat ice cream!
the ice parlor on the other side of the border been closer to our place!
@@Arltratlo je comprends toujours pas ton problème. Il se demandait où étais le lieu sur la photo, je réponds simplement et toi tu nous fais laïus sur la défaite de 1871. Toi tu connais la France ?
All those RHOXX means "Real Housewives Of" and the name of the area. LOL.
our unused water tower is now a restaurant!
European countries aren't THAT close. I think if you lived in an Austrian village close to the German border, I think you can make it to a town in Germany in 15 minutes. Yeah, but I think a ferry ride from Germany to Switzerland takes like 55 minutes at the fastest, but I could be wrong. And from where you landed in Switzerland after the ferry ride, it would take you a little over 2 hours to get to a small village in Italy.
Yes, European countries are smaller and closer together, which seems nice to me.
Did you know Switzerland is one of the 14 landlocked countries in Europe? ;) ..like Austria, you can drive into Switzerland from Germany.
But you are right, it depends on where you live. I live close enough to Germany that I can (and do) walk from my house in the Netherlands to Germany for grocery shopping. Yes, walk. About an hour one way (3 miles). Why walk? Healthy, nature along the way, enjoying dry weather and sunshine while it lasts. Europe will be dipped in clouds and cold soon enough. :)
It is all a matter of location and opportunity. Once whiel on holiday I had a walk. I started in The Netherlands and walked all the way over to Belgium. From there I walked further to Germany and finally from there back to The Netherlands. I think it was under ten paces. There are plenty places where 3 countries meet.
Also If you do a trip long enough to include Germany Austria Switzerland and Italy, Why not d a detour into Lichtenstein while near there.
Make it a trip, then you can also go to France and Monaco, probably still in the same day.
i live in croatia, i am in austria in like an hour, crossing the border, slovenia, even less, for italy i would need few hours depending wich route i would take, but the fact is you can travel whole europe with car, public transport and every counry will be completly different than previous one and yet we all are simmilar, by way of life, customs, values etc....
It's a specific triangle of land on the border
In my tiwn there was the tradition of the biete man ( beet man). Beets are the last harvest of the year and to celebrate it we would go door to door with a hollowed out beet with a candle in it. I still have 5 scars on my hands from carving out beets.😊
# 11: The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City (abbreviated as RHOSLC), The Real Housewives of Atlanta (abbreviated RHOA), The Real Housewives of New York City (abbreviated RHONY)...
I think the beautiful building next to the Chicken Dippin' Dippadrome could be the Palace of Versailles in France. It's a stunning place.
RHOBH = Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, etc. I had to google it because I’m an Aussie.
I read all of those as a joke on mispelled names Rob, Ross, Rhonda, Rony
Number 7 left must be the "Palais de versailles"...
You should take a look at the Moscow underground. It looks like a Palace.
From where they take a parts :) if they Sanctioned
Love your videos and how humble you are. Yeap things are a bit different here.
Hugs from Portugal
lets go and buy a baguette with my polluted 8 cylinder so good for the planet :)
About the ice in the glass... the left side is still too much ice for me, because i hate iced drinks. Nothing worse than watered down stuff. The drink was already precooled from the tap / bottle and i wont sit there 5 hours for my drink to warm up before i drink it. Also such ice is nasty, old water coming from cooling loops that run the water constantly and on top of that, my drink will have more actual liquid because most bars / cafés fill up the glass, ice or not. So i get more drink for my money in the end (unless it is filled from a bottle).
And in the end, cooled down drinks are bad for your system, because the body warms up to bring the drink in your belly to a good temperature, making you sweat more in the end. I personally drink everything i can in room temperature.
The U.S. is hot in the summer.
@@melindaburch4318 Exactly.
@@melindaburch4318 Even in southern Europe it is hot, it is a continent, there are different climates
@@melindaburch4318 sure, but what does this have to do with iced drinks? Its even worse to drink iced drinks in warmer climates. Sure, it cools down your body for a moment, until your stomach notices that it is indeed too cold for your system to be processed and heats up to bring the liquid to a useable temperature.
I never have ice in my drinks. I paid for a glass full of fizzy drink/juice, and that's what i want. Ice takes up too much space.
Douglas Murray said something great the other day and it really struck me.
he said (and im paraphrasing) "when he sees these university students standing under the signs & quotes & infrastructure of Dante and Archimedes or Constantine the Great and he thought yes its good to keep your finger on the pulse, but dont forget those who came before you. You can build upon that which came before"...
i couldnt agree more
Yes that is a real Simon Pegg movie and the guy on the left is Academy Award winner Brendan Fraser.
He's put on a bit of weight, definitely doesn't look like George or that bloke fighting mummies any longer [even without the white hair]
@@MayYourGodGoWithYouhe was in a fatsuit
I’ve always thought that the reason Americans put the month first is because it follows the way they and we often refer to the date verbally: e.g. “March 31st 2024”
I think Americans say it that way, because they write it that way. We don't say it that way. We just say 31 March. Not even fist or second, just the number and the month, that's it. The way we also write it 🤗
I remember as a kid in the UK diligently trying to carve a rock-hard turnip for Halloween. But I must admit the smell of a candle-scorched turnip makes you hungry. Apples... nothing can compare to a Russet. Ugliest apple you ever saw but Mmmmmmmm, nice.
I grew up on a UK farm, we used to cave turnips too, or a Swede, depending on what my dad was growing at the time,
While a year only changes every 12 months, the days and months are first important.
Yes from the closer : day to the farmer : year. Logical !
6:00 That first gen Tacoma has absolutely nothing to do with Europe. At least show a European vehicle.
I have a water tower in front of my house, no water in it, just a few apartments
Ruckerberg translated in Dutch is Wankermountain
Fapper :)
If you Wank down a mountain you are bound to leave a .... Mark!
Zuckerberg in German is lit. Sugar-Mountain.
normal driving license for cars is for vehicles up to 3500 kg total weight. thats why alot of the big american models are not a hit here. also why the cybertruck is not marketed here. need a driving license to drive a semi to meet the weight of that pile of junk.
Also, there's some rule in the US - I forget where exactly, maybe tax law? - which makes larger vehicles more attractive, it's not *just* that they like big trucks.
not all our water towers are so fancy... In my town we call it "la copa" (the glass) because it has the shape of a martini glass. Now it's a symbol of our town and has lights. If it's our national day it got red and yellow lights, pride month is marked with rainbow theme lights, breast cancer day: all pink. It's modern (middle 1900) cute but not like the one of the video.
Run Fatboy Run is a good watch!🇬🇧
The first one is so random. There would be plenty of European men who look like the American man and vica versa.
If you want to make a video abouth dutch water towers please take a look at the water tower in Eindhoven. I think this tower looks pretty cool
Eindhoven mentioned.
A little (temporary) overweight does not really hurt.
Watertorens enough in the netherlands. Just they are older and not realy in use anymore. We have pumps now....😅
I think the one on the left of the picture (of the mask and pumpkin) , means that our souls are preserved whereas Americans souls have been carved out.
This is a reference to the irish legend of Jack O Lantern. It’s a turnip, native to Europe, the pumpkin is native to America. When immigrants arrived, following the great famine 1845 to 1852, in the new world, they took their traditions with them but adapted them to their new environment. Hope it’s help. Sorry for my bad english, it’s not my native langage.
@LouiseN-r9m thank you for the in depth knowledge, I appreciate it. I just randomly used my own interpretation. I'm no good with history. By the way, your English is awesome. 😊
@@OrangeLemons307 Merci beaucoup, I try my best 🎃
@LouiseN-r9m awww, problem is, I didn't study French at school, I know the phrase though 😊
I live in Denmark, we have a border to Germany and you can just cross it, many do to shop every day. Its nearly the same with the border to Sweden
We have a border to Canada as well. Just not as busy as the one to Germany. 😊
@@kasperkjrsgaard1447 I know, and now the whiskey/snaps-war is over I guess there is noone human crossing that border anymore 😉😂
@@evamayakornstad2576 Maybe the odd Inuit on a winter vacation 😁
I miss my native food 😢. Please just for me eat a smørrebrød with torskerogn and remoulade, after a rødgrød med fløde, and in the afternoon maybe some piratos or tyrkisk peber. 🥹🥹🥹
@@LouiseN-r9m and maybe some Øllebrød med flødeskum for breakfast?
I don't think the health difference between the apples is that big.
But it goes to show the difference in portion sizes. And it shows how Americans just can't get enough or when to stop...
3 small apples will stay fresh for longer if you don't feel like that much apple at once.
Also have a look at canned food sizes... in Europe its quite common to get sweet corn is smaller 170g cans...
Don't know if that size is available in the US... it's probably 400g or what's known as a size 10 can, which I guess is 800-1000g ... and I rarely need more than a 170g can when I'm just cooking for 2 adults + 2 kids... who really needs the "industrial kitchen" sized cans?
At a guess, Americans cooking for less people 😂
@@KaiHenningsen ah yes, just a casual and cozy date night for two, eating 4 pound of beef, 3 pounds of greens, and the softest bread (cake) to go with it...
The irony is that while I was writing this comment, an American(allied) chinook just passed above my head... you know, a regular sized 'merican helicopter 😄
Nah it's good, keep your portion sizes... I'm just puzzled.
You should see the Sweden/Norway border...
You won't see it for all the trees!
6:06 for starters... in Europe that isn't a truck... DAF, M.A.N Scania, Peterbilt, Mack,, are trucks, in Europe these are all named Jeeps.. as in.. Toyotajeep, VWjeep, Nissanjeep, Hondajeep
It depends on the country. In Spain we call it "all terrain" "4x4" or simply a "country car".
And you are right, here a truck is what they call "semi".
RHO = real housewifes of
I own a small Suzuki Vitara 2.0 diesel 4 cyl. which I use for pulling a trailer loaded with 1000 Kg or more of olives between the olive groves. I bet that American mastodon can't do it properly.
Most likely so heavy that it would get bogged down or so high and wide that it would hit the trees.
Don't underestimate those little Suzuki's. In the 80ies I pulled with a samurai a 13 ton mercedes truck with stucked brakes 2 km to the depot.
@@JohanEngelen I also owned a LWB 90s Samurai. What a memories...
It watch the video From Sky with your lady (It this English my 9 months baby driving me nuts) just forget...
RHO = Real Housewives of.. etc
At least they don't show the corpse of the child run over by the father driving the American truck versus the child playing on the European driveway where the father could see him and stop his truck in time.
Just curious, is eng. your native language?
US education system?
"Run Fatboy Run" ... nothing special about it at all, might get a couple of laughs but the plot is generic as hell.
Of course America is going to have bigger trucks - they have better roads for driving when compared to Europe - plus, I think they have to drive more considering the distances they have to travel for every day life. Bigger is better, probably.
It's about ergonomics, not size. One has nothing to do with the other.
They have bigger trucks because their warped CAFE standard actually punishes smaller vehicles AND also cut pollution maluses on pick-up trucks on the ground that they are utility vehicles.
That is why even Japanese carmakers makes oversized trucks for the US market.
Sorry to disappoint you, but you certainly don’t have better roads. You may have wider roads, but they’re not better.
Just as a simple note on language "vs" stands for versus and not verse 😉
Fail, Europe is many countries with different cultures and histories, get your facts straight
O.k. kids, ready for another reading lesson? Personally I find it a bit offensive. You think migrants don't come to Europe? You're not following the news, right? Do you know you can make your own bread? Very cheap and easy to make, so it could be something to consider.
Europe has a population of about 750 million. Compared to the US, our immigration is almost irrelevant.
Ar dtús
Vs. is versus, not verse 😊
VC = Venture capitalist
Rho = Real Houswives Of... (I think that's the reference)