@@MemphisKennedy-xy5ye cold?? lol I'm hot, my state is Bahia, Brazil 🇧🇷 it's hot and has beautiful paradisiacal beaches, I live in Porto Seguro, kisses
As an Argentinian living in the USA, I know that Mexican Spanish is taught, instead of a neutral Spanish, both in schools and in companies that offer classes to their employees. I know this is a fact, because I participated in classes at my company to show the “students” the difference between Mexican Spanish and our Castellano Rioplatense.
Hola Poemita, Good to see you again. I don't know if I simply missed passed episodes, but it's good to see you're still around. AND EN LA CIUDAD DE MI CORAZÓN! ........... (Castellano es not a dialect. It's proper Spanish in fact the name says where it originated, Castilla) ;-) But Argentinean Spanish is yes, influenced by Italian (many people commonly say that, but I do believe other influences seeped in early on as well ) What IS a "dialect" or was in the process of becoming a dialect is Lunfardo, which does have a lot of Italian influence. It had its heyday back in the early 20th century and was used a lot in Tango lyrics as you know. Unfortunately it has been diluting very quickly and hardly any of it remains. Some people use words today like "laburo" to say work, and they don't even know it comes from Lunfardo. But Castellano refers to Spanish. That's why in High School the subject is called or at least when I was a kid, was called Castellano. You know... the history of that area you're filming from is geographically very interesting. Where you are standing was ocean shore and or sand beach. When the French built the harbor in the late 1920's and early 30's all that sand started accumulating and formed in very little time what is now "La Reserva Ecologica", where before there was ocean. At the same time sand stopped depositing in Playa Chica until it disappeared completely in the 1970s. Right behind you, you can actually visibly see the drop along the highway that used to be where the land came down onto the rocks and sand. It's a huge heartbreak actually because those rocky granite shores only occur in Argentina between El Faro de Punta Mogotes and Punta Iglesias and La Perla. So when they built the harbor smack in the middle of that 12 or 14 km stretch they obliterated three natural sandy bays or about one/third of it. What's worse is that where they chose to put the harbor was probably the nicest or most picturesque area with tons of brooks and spring water "manantiales" that poured into the ocean. Unfortunately there is no photographic record of that particular area, or maybe there is in some archive construccion company office in France. To build those two huge breakwaters or "arms" that contain the harbor they literally ate up a couple of low granite hills that used to face right up against the coast where the Escollera Sur starts, flattening them out completely. You can still see remnants of that behind "La Central 9 de Julio" power plant. Plus they scraped away a bunch of rocky coast line, and entombed a couple of lovely babbling brooks that used to spill out onto those beaches. Like in Punta Iglesias. Did you know that La Diagonal Alberdi is on an angle like that because underneath is the original stream Las Chacras, around which the first settlement was built. Tragic! If you're interested in this subject I have some material and pictures I've been publishing about this in our Facebook group "Mar del Plata Piensa su Futuro". Un fuerte abrazo desde Italia amigo!
I’m a green-eyed blond from the US who was was surprised and delighted to be asked by an older Argentinian gentleman if I was Mexican 😂 I’ve spent a Lot of time in Mexico and never ever has anyone mistaken me for a local. But it does tell you that I speak Mexican Spanish!
my friends paid a 60% down payment on a brand new Toy-ota in Buenos Aires and 1.5yrs later they still don't have a car. After taking their money AND some quotas (monthly payments) the dealer simply nullified the contract. My friends are suing now. As they should. Crazy and crazy different compared to the US.
This is quickly changing with the new administration of President Milei. He is changing upside down the whole affair of wrongdoings we've had with the Kirchnerist governments for the last 20 years.
That sounds like an installment plan.... Not an actual car purchase. Installment plans here in Argentina work as a savings plan. You put some money down ( not 60%), then for 5 years you do a monthly pay. You basically own a percentage of a car ( each month a bit more). Throughout the 5 years every month a single car is assigned to someone in the plan. You can get it at any point in the 5 years period. The idea is that with so much inflation owning a percentage of a car is better than keeping your money in the bank. This way you "save" since once you get the car you simply sell it ( sometimes even back to the dealer ) and collect your money. It's also good for people that can't really afford a car but want to save a bit every month In order to get one.
@@edgardogho - Gracias por la aclaración, porque yo no conocía bien ese sistema. Cuando compré mi auto, lo hice de una, al contado, luego de haber ahorrado en el Banco ese dinero. Si nosotros mismos no conocemos bien cómo funciona eso del ahorro previo en círculos cerrados, imaginate lo que es explicarle a un yanki los intríngulis de estos inventos argentos !
@@jenniferkelly6931 el "curro" de los planes de ahorro está en las comisiones. Quien administra el plan recibe una comisión. Luego si lo queres utilizar realmente como medio para adquirir un vehículo tiene el problema que se abona el auto a precio de lista ( sticker price ). La realidad es que si tenés todo el dinero para comprar un auto es poco probable que pagues el precio de lista, ya que vas a negociar un descuento durante la compra...y este descuento no lo obtenes con el plan de ahorro. Otra particularidad del plan de ahorro es que se puede "transferir". Esto es común entre conocidos. Uno quizás paga un plan, y durante el transcurso del mismo sale adjudicado el auto...si alguien conocido quiere comprar un auto similar y no tiene todo el dinero pero si tiene la parte para cubrir lo ya pagado puede comprar ese plan , obtener el auto y seguir pagando las cuotas. Todo esto son esquemas para tratar de capitalizarse. En USA los autos salen con créditos y uno se lleva el vehículo a casa en el día....eso en argentina no pasa lamentablemente.
Yes, that’s because the car dealerships in Argentina were struggling to get the cars themselves. I know people who went through the same thing with other car brands. This country can definitely be a mess sometimes lol
Dude 'Castellano' and Spanish are the same thing. Buenos Aires and most of Argentina's dialect is actually called Rioplatense, as in from the Rio de la Plata basin
@@Zerc92 Castellano is the original name of the language that's true but both terms are accepted anyway and both can be use to talk about the language in general. What is incorrect is to use "Castellano" to talk about the dialect of Argentina, which is "Rioplatense".
@@Adrian-rc2ss mi punto es que el idioma se llama castellano, se le dice Español porque es el lengua común de España, el catalán por ejemplo si bien es un idioma español no es la lengua comun
In Colombia, it’s the same with car financing. You pay payments without having it. Then the financiar will decide at what point they give it to you. Sometimes you have to lay it all before you get it, others they give it to you with some left to pay.
You can't buy anything beyond locally produced goods in Argentina without feeling like you've been ripped off. The food is not my cup of tea either, but to each his own - for me, it's mostly plain and got boring very quickly (the exception is el locro, which they don't sell anywhere outside of national holidays). The beef is indeed good, but it's as good as good beef anywhere else in the world - nothing out of the ordinary. In most of Argentina, you've also got to be ok with there being seasons, including fairly miserable winters. In Buenos Aires, you feel like you're in Europe (especially Spain, France or Italy) - there's nothing very exotic about it for a Westerner, which could be a pro or a con, depending on what you're looking for. The wine is excellent - world-class quality, in my opinion. As a yerba mate addict, it's good to be able to find a wide selection within 50 metres of my doorstep. The Argentinian people - the country must have one of the highest concentrations of good and decent people in the world. Buenos Aires is also very culturally rich, so if you're into art, literature, music, theatre, that's something to consider.
@@nachopve Nunca he estado en Estados Unidos. Para mí la mayoría de la comida argentina (no toda) es un poco aburrida y falta de sabor. Pero a cada uno lo suyo. Todos tenemos nuestros propios gustos. Pero si quieres que mienta sobre mis preferencias y te dé una respuesta políticamente correcta, puedo hacerlo.
@@nachopveamo la comida argentina, pero tampoco nos podemos mentir así jsjajajaj los argentinos tenemos el paladar bastante soso. Hasta los Yankees le ponen más pimienta a la comida jajajaj
Bro stop spreading misinformation,they speak the same spanish in Argentina than in any country in South America,of course they speak with a different accent and have different slangs of ways to speak it like in Colombia,Chile or Peru
Agree. I'm from Argentina. As you have differences between American, British, Australian and Canadian English, there are different accents in all countries who speak Spanish, but we pretty understand all of them.
Bueno tampoco es que este "desparramando desinformación " fake news o alguno de esos términos más de batalla cultural. A mi más que nada me pareció leer entre líneas que en realidad esta como advirtiendo a sus compatriotas, y esto es lo sorprendente, que van a venir en este caso a Argentina...y la gente no va a hablar SU IDIOMA😂. En realidad sería sorprendente para cualquier otro habitante de cualquier otro país país mundo...pero el americano se mueve diferente y tiene otra visión del mundo que el resto. Si conoces un poco su cultura lo vas a entender. Sin dudas para nosotros y el resto del mundo hay cosas que son obvias...pero para ellos parece que no.😂 saludos
Hey, thanks for the information. We love the beach but wanted to be away from a big city with warm temperatures and less humidity. What do you think of Mendoza to live and come to the beaches in the warm season? Thank you from Washington State 😊
el auto es caro, si, yo tambien me quejo de eso. Aun así, y a diferencia de USA, la salud es muy accesible y buena. Prefiero eso a un auto. La educación tambien es accesible. Y si queres, la educación publica, a nivel universitarios, es la mejor.
Is importing a car from the United States allowed in Argentina. Can you imagine bringing a new F-150 into Argentina, I bet even after the cost of shipping it in you’d still make a huge profit even if you drove it for 5 years in Argentina then sold it later.
It is not yet allowed but it will soon be possible, the new government is releasing everything and right now the import of vehicles by private people is about to be released.
100 años de crisis? es verdad, causados por 70 años en los que goberno la derecha, entre dictaduras y democracias neoliberales, como los que estan gobernando ahora, a pura bicicleta financiera y endeudamiento. Eso no es gratis. Saludos!
I lived in Buenos Aires Argentina for 10 years. You don't seem you are happy in Argentina. You sound like you would be better off in the United States. I own a house a Mar del Plata. I will be in Mar Del Plata in December. I love Buenos Aires. 😢
I rented a car when I went to Mar Del Plata and it wasn't that bad at all but then again I am a Boston driver where we have the worse drivers and traffic.
Being born in mar del plata, and living in the states, I can tell you that the difference is that, in argentina, people really know how to drive, but off course, traffic is a mess! Is like miami! Lol
I understand that the Argentine Spanish accent originates from the area of Spain called Extremadura, where many of the first Spanish settlers came from.
The Spanish of Argentina, particularly around Buenos Aires, was heavily influenced by Galician and Italian. For decades, Buenos Aires was the city with the most Galicians in the world, even more than in Galicia itself.
Appreciate the info! What are the rents now in Mar del Plata since Milie became president? Have they gone up or stayed pretty much the same? I'm from the United States and am looking for a cheaper cost of living.
Buying a decent car in Argentina is an impossible mission. No credit for starters, raffle is something close to a scam an even you have the chance to buy, delivery is not immediate and don't even think you can register it yourself. In a few words, a nightmare even paying in cash. Oh btw, minor correction to your video: Capital of Buenos Aires is La Plata, not CABA which stands for Ciudad Autónoma Buenos Aires, kinda Washington DC. Other than that, good video with useful tips.
Its not a different dialect, its all Spanish, castellano and spanish are the same thing since castilla is in Spain. The difference you point out isnt language, its region. Like NY english vs LA or Texas english, its only accept. You are simply noticing the difference between barely knowing the language from school/dualingo and actually knowing the language and being fluent.
Castellano is the same as Spanish...in Argentina there is a distinct type of Spanish, with some word differences but basically with a different accent, like the difference between British English and American English 👌🏻
Depends on where you live. Mendoza is just a drive away from Santiago de Chile. People in Misiones and Formosa are just across the border from Paraguay and Brazil. Entre Rios is also a drive away from Uruguay, Buenos Aires is an hour away from Montevideo in Buquebus (boat ride). In general, Uruguay is as expensive if not more expensive than Argentina in all ways. Chile is similar in terms of daily life expenses (food, rent, bills, transport, etc) but they have cheaper tech and clothing (and they have more foreign brands). Paraguay has by far the cheapest tech and imported goods (nobody pays taxes there lol) Brazil is not too different to Argentina. It’s cheaper to go on holidays there, but that’s it.
Dear Friend, Thanks for sharing your experience. I'm an Argentine man who has lived in the US, and like you, I love both places. Please let me offer a piece of advice to you while in Argentina: make friends, make connections. That's how our culture works and how you'll be able to navigate our particular system, rules, etc. Your acquaintances will become the doorway to easier processes, knowledge, and know-how. For most of the problems/challenges/opportunities you'll encounter as an American, if I were your friend, someone you've learned to trust, I would help you right away, and you would definitely find an easy way around. For example, I know that buying a car could be experienced as being more complex and problematic here in Argentina. But I know people who buy and sell all the time, and it really is quite simple for them. I've learned that skill, too. (I would say, the best way is to buy a very good used car which hasn't been used too much, you can get pretty good deals.) But you will learn to trust the invisible loving force that allows Argentinians to find their way around and get everything you need to enjoy your life here. I admire people like you who make the decision to move to a new culture and have their experiences. Rest assured you'll learn a lot and grow as a person in ways you would not have imagined. Have fun opening up, being who you are; people love getting to know those who can see them from a different vantage point, like you. Abrazo y buena suerte.
as far as driving, to me it SEEMED at first that they drive crazy in Argentina, but in Capital, they drive sooo slow, it does not matter what they do, you have ample time to react. Much better than in Mexico, I thought. BUT...most cars are teeeeeeerrible.
The dialect is called Rioplatense , Castellano is just what they call the Spanish language there. Spanish and Castellano are synonyms. In some countries it's called Español, while in other countries it's Castellano. Same thing. It's just the Argentinian accent and pronunciation that makes it a little difficult to understand if you come from an English speaking country.
@@vmoses1979 60% of Argentines descends from Italy. 30% Germans, Jews, etc. It is actually surprising Argentina still speaks at least some version of Spanish.
@@DanielFernandez-jv7jx y... Pensa que en esas aguas en la zona del puerto hay lobos marinos. En verano en general es de 18 grados, con mucho calor puede llegar a 24 grados. En invierno es de unos 9.8 grados
Naah Este tipo es de Saavedra y se hace el estadounidense. Fijate como pronuncia perfecto "Castellano", "Mar del Plata"😂 Great takes overall bro, hope you enjoy your time here and be able to transmit some of the "it's gonna be okay, don't worry" mindset to people back home. Good Luck!
"Castellano" is not the Argentine dialect. Castellano is in fact the true name for the Spanish language. Spanish as is spoken in Argentina is the Río de la Plata dialect (in Buenos Aires and many other areas, though not all of Argentina).
English should be the second official language in Argentina. English is taught in our schools, not so much from the USA, but more from the UK. So please dont hesitate to use your language, were, we're and will be immigrants like u and everybody here and personally english dominates the whole world, it's the right thing to do. Of course, spanish IS the main language. (even though its ironic cause were more "Italian" than spanish)
Claro que no, yo vi como conducen en Paraguay, era una esquina sin semáforo, las avenidas eran anchas y de mucho tránsito, todos querían cruzar el mismo tiempo y nos quedamos todos bloqueados unos minutos hasta que de a poco se empezó a destrabar, si vez un video de la India, Paquistán, Bangladesh, esos paises son un desastre, nada se compara a eso, es un montón de gente, autos, moto taxis y vacas en la calle.
Nooo, i just bought a 2023, payed for it, took it to my house, one month later I got all the papers, I guess everything is karma, my brother did the same thing without any problems, I never had a problem selling or bying a car....I insist, not all karmas are the same...
Mar del plata has a similar weather to Western Europe (For example Paris, but with both a slightly milder summer and winter. Same amount of rainy days, but more rainfall overall, and with considerably more hours of sunshine. It’s very windy btw). Its comparable to the climate in New Zealand.
Castellano is not a dialect, It´s just a different way of calling our language which is Spanish, It is exactly the same thing. Stop repeating that dialect thing which is totally wrong.
We were in BA two months ago. The prices were ridiculously high. Eating out, for lunch, mind you, would set you back between $60 and $80, and that is with no alcohol included. Awful! Never again. The people in general were very nice.
Prices depend heavily on the districts the shops are located (it's not the same in downtown than in most neighborhoods). the rating of the restaurant (5 stars - 1 star), the place atmosphere, the sort of fancy dishes they offer, etc....If their prices are too much for your wallet (you can check them out in the menus at the joint's entrance) you'll find thousands of cheap diners with more than reasonable prices. No doubt you chose in BA the best places if you paid that much. It will happen the same to you anywhere else in the world.
What? Only in the very best places you will pay that! Normal food prices are about $12. I'm here now and even with delivery to my house I'm paying half of what I will pay in the states! And the food quality is 10 times better!
@@12masterr - The only possible explanation is that they had lunch at one of the most exclusive restaurants (in Puerto Madero, most likely) and with a bottle of the finest wines ! Plus the tip.
@jenniferkelly6931 yep! I'm having lunch delivered to my house today, sorrentinos with meat sauce, that I can not get even at the best restaurants in the States (and if you get it will be $25), and is $12!!!!!! That's with a tip for the driver! Lol
"Castellano" = "Spanish", they're synonims, not only argentina speak it, every hispanic country speaks it. Is more accurately to call the dialect "Castellano" because it comes from the spanish kingdom of "Castilla", but people started to call it "spanish" because if the frenchs speak french, the german speak german, and the englands speak english... then for sure the spaniards had to speak spanish; but this is wrong because there where MANY dialects in spain (and even to modern days, there are a considerable amount of), like "catalan" or "Vasco" (euskera)), so desmite them being spaniards, they don't speak spanish. What you tried to refeer to is "Castellano rioplatense" speaked in argentina, uruguay and some parts of chile; if you're from any other hispanic country you can understand it just fine, but I can see someone who dosn't speak castellano has his first language can get confused..
Castellano is the name of the language franca utilized by all Iberian tribes. The Iberoamericans are forgetting how to speak and write correctly the Castilian language ( Spanish ) this include my self. saludos Iberoamericano
@@maritegonzalez5234 si correcto es su comentario. Castellano idioma el Reino de Castilla, creado y modernizado por los IberoVisigods en la peninsula Iberica, lengua franca del Imperio del Reino de España, todas las tribos de la peninsula Iberica, al rededor del mundo y Iberoamericana. mariteGonzalez5234 vos sois fuerte IberoVisigoda, Saludos Maja
@pavelavietor1 la acertaste, mis padres eran de galicia pero los origenes de parte de mi familia llegan hasta la epoca visigoda. En la familia decian que el rey wamba era un antepasado y ese rey fue del año 890 aprox.
Owning a vehicle you will see your salary reduced 50%. Public transport is more availble in Argentina than it is in the US. Why own a car? There's no car culture here. You don't need a car to go to a mall on a faraway road, because you have everything at a walking distance (convenience stores, butchers, bakeries, supermarkets, kioscs, hairdressers, etc...). In my neighbourhood in Buenos Aires, I have a 24 hours open bakery and supermarket close to home. It means, I can buy hot bread at 3 a.m., or whenever I want to.
Probably you did not speak as much Spanish as you thought you did... I have met tons of Argentinians and never had issues communicating with them. Native Spanish speaker here.
We’re sorry for all the nightmare you had to go through trying to buy basic things like you do in the US, but Peronism just destroyed almost all posibilites to achieve cheaper goods from outside. Hopefully Milei will begin to change all that shitty model for us to become a normal country once again.
Youre spanish accent is too good, like mother tongue level! I daresay you're family is from Argentina...or you were born here and went to USA when you were very little!! 🧐🧐😁😁
Is there a company that would give you the ability to call the the USA from Argentina? I was in Buenos Aires, I used the Claro company to get phone and data access but claro did allow me to make calls to the USA. Whats app is not a solution for me because the people I was trying to contact do not use what’s app.
Next time you're in the US, port your US number to Google Voice for a one-time $20 charge. Then you can text or call your friends in the US for free, and to them, you'll look like you're in the US, with your normal US caller ID, etc.
El título debió decir "Lo que los ESTADOUNIDENSES necesitan saber antes de viajar a Argentina en 2024". La obvia aclaración es porque Argentina está en América. Felicitaciones por el video. Saludos
Estados Unidos se llama Estados Unidos de AMERICA...! Entonces, por ser la denominación demasiado larga, EN TODO EL MUNDO se lo llama América. En inglés no existe la palabra "estadounidense". ASÍ DE SIMPLE.
Puede ser que no exista en inglés esa palabra, igualmente eso no anula el error de indeterminación semántica que implica nominar una parte con la referencia a la totalidad, que no abarca. No es tan difícil de entender, verdad?
Para ellos no existe America el continente, es Americas (norte y sudamerica). Por eso se llaman a si mismos America, para abreviar y porque segun ellos no hay otro lugar que se llame asi.
@@John123-oe1sg - TODO EL MUNDO (en el idioma que sea) se refiere a un habitante de USA como "americano", porque el país se llama así, América...mientras que Argentina es sólo República Argentina, o Uruguay es República Oriental del Uruguay...En el continente americano hay UN SOLO PAÍS que se llame América, y ese es USA, aunque a usted le moleste tanto.
Te lo resumo así nomás: La situación económica y social de EE.UU está para el orto, asi que prefieren venirse para Argentina ya que les resulta medianamente mas asequible que en EE.UU
@ and that’s a problem. No betterment of the state. If anything it’s been getting worse. Especially for the coming folk. Americans can live anywhere especially if they’re remote. But that’s what worsens the problems.
You weren't fluent my friend, if no one understands you... 😅 A fluent Spanish speaker with a broken accent it will be easily understood by my people. Perhaps you have a misconception about the meaning of "fluent". For the people who may be reading this, argentinian it's just like the regular spanish with a little twist 👌👍 you will be fine
Castellano is same thing as Spanish. No difference. Castellano ia just the official name from the Kingdom of Spain. It's all castellano from Mexico to Chile all over Íberoamerica except Brazil.
Given that psycho prime ministet of yours and 2oo+% inflation, I think ill take a pass on moving to Argentina. I really just dont think moving to other countries will solve your problems.
Dude you are living in the worse place to buy a car, Argentina is not America everything is backwards I won’t live there even if I get it free , I live in Vancouver Canada my iPhone 14 I paid 1.800.00 and paid cash , I been in Bueno Aires I won’t live there everything is collapsing but if you like to live there you have to pay the price of inconvenience good luck
I am Brazilian and love Argentina ❤
All I am saying is you could have my attention.
@@MemphisKennedy-xy5ye cold?? lol I'm hot, my state is Bahia, Brazil 🇧🇷 it's hot and has beautiful paradisiacal beaches, I live in Porto Seguro, kisses
Are you most attracted to white men with blue eyes? lol
This content is so sick. I really appreciate getting honest information from people who put the boots on the ground. Muchas gracias amigo.
I just recognized the background of my neighborhood, my building is on the back!! Punta mogotes !!! Big love from Austria !
this is great info for those considering moving to Argentina. 😎👍
Don’t move. Thanks
As an Argentinian living in the USA, I know that Mexican Spanish is taught, instead of a neutral Spanish, both in schools and in companies that offer classes to their employees. I know this is a fact, because I participated in classes at my company to show the “students” the difference between Mexican Spanish and our Castellano Rioplatense.
Hola Poemita, Good to see you again. I don't know if I simply missed passed episodes, but it's good to see you're still around. AND EN LA CIUDAD DE MI CORAZÓN! ........... (Castellano es not a dialect. It's proper Spanish in fact the name says where it originated, Castilla) ;-) But Argentinean Spanish is yes, influenced by Italian (many people commonly say that, but I do believe other influences seeped in early on as well ) What IS a "dialect" or was in the process of becoming a dialect is Lunfardo, which does have a lot of Italian influence. It had its heyday back in the early 20th century and was used a lot in Tango lyrics as you know. Unfortunately it has been diluting very quickly and hardly any of it remains. Some people use words today like "laburo" to say work, and they don't even know it comes from Lunfardo. But Castellano refers to Spanish. That's why in High School the subject is called or at least when I was a kid, was called Castellano.
You know... the history of that area you're filming from is geographically very interesting. Where you are standing was ocean shore and or sand beach. When the French built the harbor in the late 1920's and early 30's all that sand started accumulating and formed in very little time what is now "La Reserva Ecologica", where before there was ocean. At the same time sand stopped depositing in Playa Chica until it disappeared completely in the 1970s. Right behind you, you can actually visibly see the drop along the highway that used to be where the land came down onto the rocks and sand. It's a huge heartbreak actually because those rocky granite shores only occur in Argentina between El Faro de Punta Mogotes and Punta Iglesias and La Perla. So when they built the harbor smack in the middle of that 12 or 14 km stretch they obliterated three natural sandy bays or about one/third of it. What's worse is that where they chose to put the harbor was probably the nicest or most picturesque area with tons of brooks and spring water "manantiales" that poured into the ocean. Unfortunately there is no photographic record of that particular area, or maybe there is in some archive construccion company office in France. To build those two huge breakwaters or "arms" that contain the harbor they literally ate up a couple of low granite hills that used to face right up against the coast where the Escollera Sur starts, flattening them out completely. You can still see remnants of that behind "La Central 9 de Julio" power plant. Plus they scraped away a bunch of rocky coast line, and entombed a couple of lovely babbling brooks that used to spill out onto those beaches. Like in Punta Iglesias. Did you know that La Diagonal Alberdi is on an angle like that because underneath is the original stream Las Chacras, around which the first settlement was built. Tragic!
If you're interested in this subject I have some material and pictures I've been publishing about this in our Facebook group "Mar del Plata Piensa su Futuro".
Un fuerte abrazo desde Italia amigo!
I’m a green-eyed blond from the US who was was surprised and delighted to be asked by an older Argentinian gentleman if I was Mexican 😂 I’ve spent a Lot of time in Mexico and never ever has anyone mistaken me for a local. But it does tell you that I speak Mexican Spanish!
Bro
"Bro, I'm from Argentina, and when you pronounced the names of the places, you sounded like an actual Argentine. That blew me away!
my friends paid a 60% down payment on a brand new Toy-ota in Buenos Aires and 1.5yrs later they still don't have a car. After taking their money AND some quotas (monthly payments) the dealer simply nullified the contract. My friends are suing now. As they should. Crazy and crazy different compared to the US.
This is quickly changing with the new administration of President Milei. He is changing upside down the whole affair of wrongdoings we've had with the Kirchnerist governments for the last 20 years.
That sounds like an installment plan.... Not an actual car purchase. Installment plans here in Argentina work as a savings plan. You put some money down ( not 60%), then for 5 years you do a monthly pay. You basically own a percentage of a car ( each month a bit more). Throughout the 5 years every month a single car is assigned to someone in the plan. You can get it at any point in the 5 years period. The idea is that with so much inflation owning a percentage of a car is better than keeping your money in the bank. This way you "save" since once you get the car you simply sell it ( sometimes even back to the dealer ) and collect your money. It's also good for people that can't really afford a car but want to save a bit every month In order to get one.
@@edgardogho - Gracias por la aclaración, porque yo no conocía bien ese sistema. Cuando compré mi auto, lo hice de una, al contado, luego de haber ahorrado en el Banco ese dinero.
Si nosotros mismos no conocemos bien cómo funciona eso del ahorro previo en círculos cerrados, imaginate lo que es explicarle a un yanki los intríngulis de estos inventos argentos !
@@jenniferkelly6931 el "curro" de los planes de ahorro está en las comisiones. Quien administra el plan recibe una comisión. Luego si lo queres utilizar realmente como medio para adquirir un vehículo tiene el problema que se abona el auto a precio de lista ( sticker price ). La realidad es que si tenés todo el dinero para comprar un auto es poco probable que pagues el precio de lista, ya que vas a negociar un descuento durante la compra...y este descuento no lo obtenes con el plan de ahorro.
Otra particularidad del plan de ahorro es que se puede "transferir". Esto es común entre conocidos. Uno quizás paga un plan, y durante el transcurso del mismo sale adjudicado el auto...si alguien conocido quiere comprar un auto similar y no tiene todo el dinero pero si tiene la parte para cubrir lo ya pagado puede comprar ese plan , obtener el auto y seguir pagando las cuotas.
Todo esto son esquemas para tratar de capitalizarse. En USA los autos salen con créditos y uno se lleva el vehículo a casa en el día....eso en argentina no pasa lamentablemente.
Yes, that’s because the car dealerships in Argentina were struggling to get the cars themselves. I know people who went through the same thing with other car brands. This country can definitely be a mess sometimes lol
I watched your apartment tour a year ago. Glad to see your uploading consistently, subscribed!
When you said Mar del Plate, your Argentinian accent sounded pretty good!
That's my city brother !! Mar del Plata city... Welcome! Hope you having an awesome experience here, much love and blessings !
ESPERAMOS MILEY AGILIZE LA ECONOMIA Automotriz y de electronicos baje impuestos y importar sea mas facil es una de sus metas espero sea pronto 🙏🙏🙏
Dude 'Castellano' and Spanish are the same thing. Buenos Aires and most of Argentina's dialect is actually called Rioplatense, as in from the Rio de la Plata basin
No, castellano is the proper term, "Castellano" is to "Spanish" what "mandarin and cantonese" are to "Chinese"
@@Zerc92 True. But that is not the point here.
@@Zerc92 Castellano is the original name of the language that's true but both terms are accepted anyway and both can be use to talk about the language in general. What is incorrect is to use "Castellano" to talk about the dialect of Argentina, which is "Rioplatense".
El castellano es una de las lenguas que se hablan en España
@@Adrian-rc2ss mi punto es que el idioma se llama castellano, se le dice Español porque es el lengua común de España, el catalán por ejemplo si bien es un idioma español no es la lengua comun
Vamos vamos!!! Argentina!!! 🎶🎶🎶
In Colombia, it’s the same with car financing. You pay payments without having it. Then the financiar will decide at what point they give it to you. Sometimes you have to lay it all before you get it, others they give it to you with some left to pay.
You can't buy anything beyond locally produced goods in Argentina without feeling like you've been ripped off. The food is not my cup of tea either, but to each his own - for me, it's mostly plain and got boring very quickly (the exception is el locro, which they don't sell anywhere outside of national holidays). The beef is indeed good, but it's as good as good beef anywhere else in the world - nothing out of the ordinary. In most of Argentina, you've also got to be ok with there being seasons, including fairly miserable winters. In Buenos Aires, you feel like you're in Europe (especially Spain, France or Italy) - there's nothing very exotic about it for a Westerner, which could be a pro or a con, depending on what you're looking for. The wine is excellent - world-class quality, in my opinion. As a yerba mate addict, it's good to be able to find a wide selection within 50 metres of my doorstep. The Argentinian people - the country must have one of the highest concentrations of good and decent people in the world. Buenos Aires is also very culturally rich, so if you're into art, literature, music, theatre, that's something to consider.
Thanks for your honest comment. Stay safe.
@jenniferkelly6931 thanks, Jen. You too 🙏
como que la comida es plana? flaco vivis en estados unidos, la mejor comida ahi es un paty lleno de grasa que te haces el q sabe de comida
@@nachopve Nunca he estado en Estados Unidos. Para mí la mayoría de la comida argentina (no toda) es un poco aburrida y falta de sabor. Pero a cada uno lo suyo. Todos tenemos nuestros propios gustos. Pero si quieres que mienta sobre mis preferencias y te dé una respuesta políticamente correcta, puedo hacerlo.
@@nachopveamo la comida argentina, pero tampoco nos podemos mentir así jsjajajaj los argentinos tenemos el paladar bastante soso. Hasta los Yankees le ponen más pimienta a la comida jajajaj
Dude, awesome video. Idk if it's your tone or what but i really enjoyed this video a lot more than most "living abroad" content. Very refreshing : )
Looks like pretty soon we will also have big tariffs in the US.
Bro stop spreading misinformation,they speak the same spanish in Argentina than in any country in South America,of course they speak with a different accent and have different slangs of ways to speak it like in Colombia,Chile or Peru
Agree. I'm from Argentina. As you have differences between American, British, Australian and Canadian English, there are different accents in all countries who speak Spanish, but we pretty understand all of them.
Bueno tampoco es que este "desparramando desinformación " fake news o alguno de esos términos más de batalla cultural. A mi más que nada me pareció leer entre líneas que en realidad esta como advirtiendo a sus compatriotas, y esto es lo sorprendente, que van a venir en este caso a Argentina...y la gente no va a hablar SU IDIOMA😂. En realidad sería sorprendente para cualquier otro habitante de cualquier otro país país mundo...pero el americano se mueve diferente y tiene otra visión del mundo que el resto. Si conoces un poco su cultura lo vas a entender. Sin dudas para nosotros y el resto del mundo hay cosas que son obvias...pero para ellos parece que no.😂 saludos
Hey, thanks for the information. We love the beach but wanted to be away from a big city with warm temperatures and less humidity. What do you think of Mendoza to live and come to the beaches in the warm season? Thank you from Washington State 😊
el auto es caro, si, yo tambien me quejo de eso. Aun así, y a diferencia de USA, la salud es muy accesible y buena. Prefiero eso a un auto. La educación tambien es accesible. Y si queres, la educación publica, a nivel universitarios, es la mejor.
Is importing a car from the United States allowed in Argentina. Can you imagine bringing a new F-150 into Argentina, I bet even after the cost of shipping it in you’d still make a huge profit even if you drove it for 5 years in Argentina then sold it later.
It is not yet allowed but it will soon be possible, the new government is releasing everything and right now the import of vehicles by private people is about to be released.
100 años de crisis no fueron gratis. De a poco las cosas cambiaran y tendremos precios normales. Saludos!
100 años de crisis? es verdad, causados por 70 años en los que goberno la derecha, entre dictaduras y democracias neoliberales, como los que estan gobernando ahora, a pura bicicleta financiera y endeudamiento. Eso no es gratis. Saludos!
I lived in Buenos Aires Argentina for 10 years. You don't seem you are happy in Argentina. You sound like you would be better off in the United States. I own a house a Mar del Plata. I will be in Mar Del Plata in December. I love Buenos Aires. 😢
New sub here, Thanks for the info. I would just move and bring at least 200k buy a small home and a car
Expect at least 150k for the home in BA
Also, to get electronics there are companies that sell them pretty close to the US prices (5-10% difference). Gotta look though.
Sounds .... surprising
@@eastcoastnewyork2010 I mostly researched cellphones!
Very cool information….
I rented a car when I went to Mar Del Plata and it wasn't that bad at all but then again I am a Boston driver where we have the worse drivers and traffic.
That’s true
Being born in mar del plata, and living in the states, I can tell you that the difference is that, in argentina, people really know how to drive, but off course, traffic is a mess! Is like miami! Lol
lo primero que america es todo un continente no solo un pais!!!
I understand that the Argentine Spanish accent originates from the area of Spain called Extremadura, where many of the first Spanish settlers came from.
The Spanish of Argentina, particularly around Buenos Aires, was heavily influenced by Galician and Italian. For decades, Buenos Aires was the city with the most Galicians in the world, even more than in Galicia itself.
Appreciate the info! What are the rents now in Mar del Plata since Milie became president? Have they gone up or stayed pretty much the same? I'm from the United States and am looking for a cheaper cost of living.
Buying a decent car in Argentina is an impossible mission. No credit for starters, raffle is something close to a scam an even you have the chance to buy, delivery is not immediate and don't even think you can register it yourself. In a few words, a nightmare even paying in cash. Oh btw, minor correction to your video: Capital of Buenos Aires is La Plata, not CABA which stands for Ciudad Autónoma Buenos Aires, kinda Washington DC. Other than that, good video with useful tips.
Its not a different dialect, its all Spanish, castellano and spanish are the same thing since castilla is in Spain. The difference you point out isnt language, its region. Like NY english vs LA or Texas english, its only accept.
You are simply noticing the difference between barely knowing the language from school/dualingo and actually knowing the language and being fluent.
Castellano is the same as Spanish...in Argentina there is a distinct type of Spanish, with some word differences but basically with a different accent, like the difference between British English and American English 👌🏻
is there an Italian influence in the language?
@@MisterCrabs-mg6gqSi !
Can you do runs into nearby countries and bring things in cheaper?
Yes, Chile
@@fichinesonlineParaguay wouldn't be a better option?
Yes..Brasil.
Depends on where you live. Mendoza is just a drive away from Santiago de Chile. People in Misiones and Formosa are just across the border from Paraguay and Brazil. Entre Rios is also a drive away from Uruguay, Buenos Aires is an hour away from Montevideo in Buquebus (boat ride).
In general, Uruguay is as expensive if not more expensive than Argentina in all ways.
Chile is similar in terms of daily life expenses (food, rent, bills, transport, etc) but they have cheaper tech and clothing (and they have more foreign brands).
Paraguay has by far the cheapest tech and imported goods (nobody pays taxes there lol)
Brazil is not too different to Argentina. It’s cheaper to go on holidays there, but that’s it.
Dear Friend,
Thanks for sharing your experience. I'm an Argentine man who has lived in the US, and like you, I love both places. Please let me offer a piece of advice to you while in Argentina: make friends, make connections. That's how our culture works and how you'll be able to navigate our particular system, rules, etc. Your acquaintances will become the doorway to easier processes, knowledge, and know-how. For most of the problems/challenges/opportunities you'll encounter as an American, if I were your friend, someone you've learned to trust, I would help you right away, and you would definitely find an easy way around.
For example, I know that buying a car could be experienced as being more complex and problematic here in Argentina. But I know people who buy and sell all the time, and it really is quite simple for them. I've learned that skill, too. (I would say, the best way is to buy a very good used car which hasn't been used too much, you can get pretty good deals.) But you will learn to trust the invisible loving force that allows Argentinians to find their way around and get everything you need to enjoy your life here.
I admire people like you who make the decision to move to a new culture and have their experiences. Rest assured you'll learn a lot and grow as a person in ways you would not have imagined.
Have fun opening up, being who you are; people love getting to know those who can see them from a different vantage point, like you.
Abrazo y buena suerte.
They don’t speak castilian spanish, is more spanish with italian influence
i asked the question "is there an Italian influence in the language" and all I had to do was just read the next post that you wrote...🤪
Yendo a Mardel pronto!!
Prices are crazy here 😂
as far as driving, to me it SEEMED at first that they drive crazy in Argentina, but in Capital, they drive sooo slow, it does not matter what they do, you have ample time to react. Much better than in Mexico, I thought. BUT...most cars are teeeeeeerrible.
It's called "Rioplatense Spanish", "Castellano" it's the same as Spanish, but many people calls the language "Castellano" rather than "Español".
Note: Argentina is also an American country
necesito que hagas un video hablando en español, siento que hablas muy similar a dustin luke
The dialect is called Rioplatense , Castellano is just what they call the Spanish language there. Spanish and Castellano are synonyms. In some countries it's called Español, while in other countries it's Castellano. Same thing. It's just the Argentinian accent and pronunciation that makes it a little difficult to understand if you come from an English speaking country.
Yep, Spanish and Castellano are two words for the same thing (Spain has different languages, and "Castellano", i.e. Spanish, is the main one).
@@ba8898 The reason Spanish is called Castellano as well, it's because the language originated in the area of Castille Spain.
@@loumcast exactamente
Strange he doesn't know that given he's living there for years. But why is the Argentine accent so distinct? Is it all the Italian immigration?
@@vmoses1979 60% of Argentines descends from Italy. 30% Germans, Jews, etc. It is actually surprising Argentina still speaks at least some version of Spanish.
The worst things for driving are the dmn cameras and radars if one is a fast driver like me
How's the water temp in summerin Mar del Plata? How's the café life? Open, friendly?
Water is cold! Plenty of coffee life!
We are friendly people .Without walls for Mexican...Warm....we also Cook at Home.. Not fat in general. ( S/ M/L)
La temperatura del agua en mar del plata es temperatura pingüino
@@maritegonzalez5234 en el verano también?
@@DanielFernandez-jv7jx y... Pensa que en esas aguas en la zona del puerto hay lobos marinos. En verano en general es de 18 grados, con mucho calor puede llegar a 24 grados. En invierno es de unos 9.8 grados
I wanted to subscribe but realized I already subscribed a while back. Keep it up man... Or should I say , boludo...
Naah Este tipo es de Saavedra y se hace el estadounidense. Fijate como pronuncia perfecto "Castellano", "Mar del Plata"😂
Great takes overall bro, hope you enjoy your time here and be able to transmit some of the "it's gonna be okay, don't worry" mindset to people back home.
Good Luck!
Welcome to reality brother this is 3 world country, this is how country works when is broke
Te gusta Argentina
"Castellano" is not the Argentine dialect. Castellano is in fact the true name for the Spanish language. Spanish as is spoken in Argentina is the Río de la Plata dialect (in Buenos Aires and many other areas, though not all of Argentina).
English should be the second official language in Argentina. English is taught in our schools, not so much from the USA, but more from the UK. So please dont hesitate to use your language, were, we're and will be immigrants like u and everybody here and personally english dominates the whole world, it's the right thing to do. Of course, spanish IS the main language.
(even though its ironic cause were more "Italian" than spanish)
If you drive in Argentina you can drive anywhere.
I think you never heard about the traffic in India.
Claro que no, yo vi como conducen en Paraguay, era una esquina sin semáforo, las avenidas eran anchas y de mucho tránsito, todos querían cruzar el mismo tiempo y nos quedamos todos bloqueados unos minutos hasta que de a poco se empezó a destrabar, si vez un video de la India, Paquistán, Bangladesh, esos paises son un desastre, nada se compara a eso, es un montón de gente, autos, moto taxis y vacas en la calle.
yes the prices are ridiculous in uruguay is the same ...it ridiculous to go back i dont accept to pay 3 or 4 times the real value of the product
Nooo, i just bought a 2023, payed for it, took it to my house, one month later I got all the papers, I guess everything is karma, my brother did the same thing without any problems, I never had a problem selling or bying a car....I insist, not all karmas are the same...
How cold is it right now there that you had to move back on that spot?
Mar del plata has a similar weather to Western Europe (For example Paris, but with both a slightly milder summer and winter. Same amount of rainy days, but more rainfall overall, and with considerably more hours of sunshine. It’s very windy btw). Its comparable to the climate in New Zealand.
Castellano is not a dialect, It´s just a different way of calling our language which is Spanish, It is exactly the same thing. Stop repeating that dialect thing which is totally wrong.
Nice beach! is it affordable to retire?
Unless you're wealthy, absolutely!
With the great president Milei in just a couple of years all the problems will end and just the good stuff will remain in Argentina
Otra Trump 😂😂
Solo para Ricos 😂
We were in BA two months ago. The prices were ridiculously high. Eating out, for lunch, mind you, would set you back between $60 and $80, and that is with no alcohol included. Awful! Never again. The people in general were very nice.
Prices depend heavily on the districts the shops are located (it's not the same in downtown than in most neighborhoods). the rating of the restaurant (5 stars - 1 star), the place atmosphere, the sort of fancy dishes they offer, etc....If their prices are too much for your wallet (you can check them out in the menus at the joint's entrance) you'll find thousands of cheap diners with more than reasonable prices. No doubt you chose in BA the best places if you paid that much. It will happen the same to you anywhere else in the world.
did you eat gold? It is expensive but no more than other countries in terms of food.
What? Only in the very best places you will pay that! Normal food prices are about $12. I'm here now and even with delivery to my house I'm paying half of what I will pay in the states! And the food quality is 10 times better!
@@12masterr - The only possible explanation is that they had lunch at one of the most exclusive restaurants (in Puerto Madero, most likely) and with a bottle of the finest wines ! Plus the tip.
@jenniferkelly6931 yep! I'm having lunch delivered to my house today, sorrentinos with meat sauce, that I can not get even at the best restaurants in the States (and if you get it will be $25), and is $12!!!!!! That's with a tip for the driver! Lol
"Castellano" = "Spanish", they're synonims, not only argentina speak it, every hispanic country speaks it.
Is more accurately to call the dialect "Castellano" because it comes from the spanish kingdom of "Castilla", but people started to call it "spanish" because if the frenchs speak french, the german speak german, and the englands speak english... then for sure the spaniards had to speak spanish; but this is wrong because there where MANY dialects in spain (and even to modern days, there are a considerable amount of), like "catalan" or "Vasco" (euskera)), so desmite them being spaniards, they don't speak spanish.
What you tried to refeer to is "Castellano rioplatense" speaked in argentina, uruguay and some parts of chile; if you're from any other hispanic country you can understand it just fine, but I can see someone who dosn't speak castellano has his first language can get confused..
Castellano is the name of the language franca utilized by all Iberian tribes. The Iberoamericans are forgetting how to speak and write correctly the Castilian language ( Spanish ) this include my self. saludos Iberoamericano
Para mi la denominacion correcta es castellano, porque es el idioma de la zona de castilla, españa tiene varios idiomas.
@@maritegonzalez5234 si correcto es su comentario. Castellano idioma el Reino de Castilla, creado y modernizado por los IberoVisigods en la peninsula Iberica, lengua franca del Imperio del Reino de España, todas las tribos de la peninsula Iberica, al rededor del mundo y Iberoamericana. mariteGonzalez5234 vos sois fuerte IberoVisigoda, Saludos Maja
@pavelavietor1 la acertaste, mis padres eran de galicia pero los origenes de parte de mi familia llegan hasta la epoca visigoda. En la familia decian que el rey wamba era un antepasado y ese rey fue del año 890 aprox.
@@maritegonzalez5234 si lo saves. Gracias a su biología por crear el mundo moderno. no olvideis. saludos Iberian
Owning a vehicle you will see your salary reduced 50%. Public transport is more availble in Argentina than it is in the US. Why own a car? There's no car culture here. You don't need a car to go to a mall on a faraway road, because you have everything at a walking distance (convenience stores, butchers, bakeries, supermarkets, kioscs, hairdressers, etc...).
In my neighbourhood in Buenos Aires, I have a 24 hours open bakery and supermarket close to home. It means, I can buy hot bread at 3 a.m., or whenever I want to.
Probably you did not speak as much Spanish as you thought you did... I have met tons of Argentinians and never had issues communicating with them. Native Spanish speaker here.
We’re sorry for all the nightmare you had to go through trying to buy basic things like you do in the US, but Peronism just destroyed almost all posibilites to achieve cheaper goods from outside. Hopefully Milei will begin to change all that shitty model for us to become a normal country once again.
Youre spanish accent is too good, like mother tongue level!
I daresay you're family is from Argentina...or you were born here and went to USA when you were very little!! 🧐🧐😁😁
Is there a company that would give you the ability to call the the USA from Argentina? I was in Buenos Aires, I used the Claro company to get phone and data access but claro did allow me to make calls to the USA. Whats app is not a solution for me because the people I was trying to contact do not use what’s app.
Vonage
Next time you're in the US, port your US number to Google Voice for a one-time $20 charge. Then you can text or call your friends in the US for free, and to them, you'll look like you're in the US, with your normal US caller ID, etc.
El título debió decir "Lo que los ESTADOUNIDENSES necesitan saber antes de viajar a Argentina en 2024". La obvia aclaración es porque Argentina está en América. Felicitaciones por el video. Saludos
Estados Unidos se llama Estados Unidos de AMERICA...! Entonces, por ser la denominación demasiado larga, EN TODO EL MUNDO se lo llama América. En inglés no existe la palabra "estadounidense". ASÍ DE SIMPLE.
Puede ser que no exista en inglés esa palabra, igualmente eso no anula el error de indeterminación semántica que implica nominar una parte con la referencia a la totalidad, que no abarca. No es tan difícil de entender, verdad?
Para ellos no existe America el continente, es Americas (norte y sudamerica).
Por eso se llaman a si mismos America, para abreviar y porque segun ellos no hay otro lugar que se llame asi.
@@santiagonp6679 quejate todo lo que quieras no van a dejar de llamarse americans como abreviatura de US of america.
@@John123-oe1sg - TODO EL MUNDO (en el idioma que sea) se refiere a un habitante de USA como "americano", porque el país se llama así, América...mientras que Argentina es sólo República Argentina, o Uruguay es República Oriental del Uruguay...En el continente americano hay UN SOLO PAÍS que se llame América, y ese es USA, aunque a usted le moleste tanto.
as Argentinian, I have no idea what is happening and why these videos
Te lo resumo así nomás: La situación económica y social de EE.UU está para el orto, asi que prefieren venirse para Argentina ya que les resulta medianamente mas asequible que en EE.UU
why would you go to Argentina especially now?
I’ve been living in Argentina for a couple years now it’s nothing new!
@ and that’s a problem. No betterment of the state. If anything it’s been getting worse. Especially for the coming folk. Americans can live anywhere especially if they’re remote. But that’s what worsens the problems.
A more specific title for this video is needed.
Don't! You'll regret it...
You weren't fluent my friend, if no one understands you... 😅 A fluent Spanish speaker with a broken accent it will be easily understood by my people. Perhaps you have a misconception about the meaning of "fluent". For the people who may be reading this, argentinian it's just like the regular spanish with a little twist 👌👍 you will be fine
Try Colombia or Mexico instead
Castellano is same thing as Spanish. No difference. Castellano ia just the official name from the Kingdom of Spain. It's all castellano from Mexico to Chile all over Íberoamerica except Brazil.
Given that psycho prime ministet of yours and 2oo+% inflation, I think ill take a pass on moving to Argentina. I really just dont think moving to other countries will solve your problems.
That Argentines are American 😂 JK
pobrecito el q se venga
vehicle = car
Not necessarily.
Si se queja tanto para que esta aca . ?
Lol he fakes he is american, but he is 100% no doubt Argentinean.
You have an accent in English why do you act like you’re American. Maybe you lived here for a while but you’re Argentinian.
Dude you are living in the worse place to buy a car, Argentina is not America everything is backwards I won’t live there even if I get it free , I live in Vancouver Canada my iPhone 14 I paid 1.800.00 and paid cash , I been in Bueno Aires I won’t live there everything is collapsing but if you like to live there you have to pay the price of inconvenience good luck
"Americans" from which country? Because América is a continent, not a country
Why would you move to argentina when you have your own Mini Trump 🤣
No serás un argentino que sabe inglés me pa😂
It is "rioplatense", not "castellano", that is the spanish of Spain (the original).
Te gusta Argentina
@@federicolopezcamelo7440 si me encanta!!