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Things that frustrate us all

I am starting to hate when a customer comes into the shop and starts talking into the phone using Google translate.
Them trying to communicate what needs to be done vs me trying to explain it gets frustrating.
Case in point, just had a customer come in speaking Vietnamese asking if we could do work on his car. He kept repeating 'Oil', which I took to mean he wanted an oil change. Turns out he wanted to buy a quart of oil, which we don't sell. Sent him down the street to O'Reilly. Hope they can help him.

I have something of a reverse frustration: I don't like having to speak English in my own country when I go to shops or restaurants because the personnel can't speak our national language.

(Let me explain: Many part time jobs these days go to foreign students and I understand they'll have to make a living, too, so I don't begrudge them their jobs; I'm just not sure they should be in client facing roles. I also can understand they don't bother learning our language when they expect to be here for only a year or a few years at most.)

It's not that I don't like to extend the courtesy of speaking English to foreigners in my country; it's just that I don't like to be forced to do so by the lackadaisical attitude of restaurants and shops, who'll hire them under the assumption 'well most people can speak English anyway'.
 
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Whose bright idea was it to tie key fobs to the push button start on a car?
Twice this week a car has come in for service and the battery on the key fob has died and the technician can't start the vehicle to move it; so, the car sits in the bay taking up space until a replacement battery can be ordered, then the fob has to opened, the battery replaced, and fingers crossed, hope that replacing the battery didn't reset the system so that the key isn't recognized.
Give me an old fashioned key in the ignition switch every day.
 
My car has a key like that. The battery is one of those coin-shaped '2032' batteries and is easily replaced. It doesn't reset the system or anything like that.
 
Whose bright idea was it to tie key fobs to the push button start on a car?
Twice this week a car has come in for service and the battery on the key fob has died and the technician can't start the vehicle to move it; so, the car sits in the bay taking up space until a replacement battery can be ordered, then the fob has to opened, the battery replaced, and fingers crossed, hope that replacing the battery didn't reset the system so that the key isn't recognized.
Give me an old fashioned key in the ignition switch every day.

I bolded the part of your post I am in 1,000 percent agreement with.
 
I have something of a reverse frustration: I don't like having to speak English in my own country when I go to shops or restaurants because the personnel can't speak our national language.

(Let me explain: Many part time jobs these days go to foreign students and I understand they'll have to make a living, too, so I don't begrudge them their jobs; I'm just not sure they should be in client facing roles. I also can understand they don't bother learning our language when they expect to be here for only a year or a few years at most.)

It's not that I don't like to extend the courtesy of speaking English to foreigners in my country; it's just that I don't like to be forced to do so by the lackadaisical attitude of restaurants and shops, who'll hire them under the assumption 'well most people can speak English anyway'.
I couldn't imagine being in a country for more than a few days and not speaking the primary language. My top priority the moment I learned I would be going there would be to become as close to fluent as possible.
I worked with a lady at Wal-Mart for a while who had been living here in the US consistently for decades, and still barely spoke English. I usually worked with her alone and trying to give her instructions or ask her to help with something was incredibly frustrating. We worked in the crafts and celebrations department, and she'd usually spend her entire 4+ hour shift rearranging and organizing the fabric and it was really hard to get her to do anything else.
 
I couldn't imagine being in a country for more than a few days and not speaking the primary language. My top priority the moment I learned I would be going there would be to become as close to fluent as possible.
I worked with a lady at Wal-Mart for a while who had been living here in the US consistently for decades, and still barely spoke English. I usually worked with her alone and trying to give her instructions or ask her to help with something was incredibly frustrating. We worked in the crafts and celebrations department, and she'd usually spend her entire 4+ hour shift rearranging and organizing the fabric and it was really hard to get her to do anything else.

Generally I would prefer to do so myself, for both reasons of respecting the local population and improving my own position while I'm there, but I won't condemn people who don't. After all, I cannot know their reasons for not doing so.

Also, I'd like to add a few 'weighing' qualifications. If I knew I was going to be somewhere for only three months, obviously I wouldn't learn the language to the same level as if I knew I'd be there for five years. Learning any language well (let's say B2/C1 or higher in the CEFR system) will take a considerable time investment after all. Global importance of the language might be of interest, too. If I knew I were going to Spain for just a few months, I might invest more time into learning Spanish than into learning Georgian if I were going to be in Georgia (the country, not the state) - simply because Spanish in some form or another is spoken by a lot more people, in many more countries.

When I went to France for a few months on short notice, I chose to speak English in my working environment and French in all other environments. The reasons for speaking English in my working environment being 1) academic environment so level of English was comparatively high 2) had to communicate very intricate and technical issues precisely and 3) couldn't always reasonably expect my busy colleagues to take the time and patience to extract meaning from my insufficient French by querying on. Spoke French outside work as much as possible (informal meetings with those same colleagues or other groups of people, shops, wherever I went), to try to pick up as much as possible, only resorting to English when I found I really couldn't get my point across (and then asking how to say that in French). I guess I eventually would have switched to French in my working environment too, had I stayed there long enough. By the end of my 3-4 month stay I figured I could follow about half of what was being said between people, on radio and TV, my active language skills (speaking and writing) obviously lagging somewhat behind that.
 
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Let me explain: Many part time jobs these days go to foreign students and I understand they'll have to make a living, too, so I don't begrudge them their jobs; I'm just not sure they should be in client facing roles. I also can understand they don't bother learning our language when they expect to be here for only a year or a few years at most.
Do you hail from the EU, North America or Asia? In all of these regions students are required to do a language test before they are admitted to an students exchange programme.
It's different, alas, for those who take a sabatical year and go abroad to work there.

You could get some fun out of the situation by adressing these foreign students in some exotic language like Latin. That'd be the point, I think, where even a good translation app would break down and they'd have to use their brains to find out what you want :devil:
 
If you're going to bring your vehicle in for service, take a minute to clean up after yourself.
There have been a few vehicles where I feel like I need a tetanus shot after sitting in them.
I would hate to see what the interior of your house looks like.
 
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Dear retailers,

Just... don't do this.

ten-weeks-till-christmas.jpg
 
My mom and I went to Big Lots the other day and they had a big poster in the front window advertising Hallo-thanks-mas or something like that. And on top of that, Hallmark Movies & Mysteries is already about to start their 24/7 Christmas movies, and they'll keeping going until around New Years. And that is all just wrong, IMO they should not be allowed to start selling Christmas merchandise or showing Christmas movies or anything like that until after Thanksgiving.
 
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