It says:I have no idea what it says, other than maybe... Apple Punch with alcohol, and Cocoa and some kind of tea?
I've only ever been to a German x-mas market when there's a lot (I mean: A LOT) of people in the streets -maybe that's what slowed me down!?!?I don't know about other Christmas markets, but in my region you don't have to walk 3 mins between those stands but hardly ever more than 10 yards. Usually, every second booth offers mulled wine and punch.
Thanks, I guess, but, you know, German is so much easier to understand than, say, Swedish or Norwegian*. And while I don't write it I do read and speak it well enough to get by and sometimes have strange things happen to me on that account: Sales clerks eventually asking me what Landsmann I am and German people telling their (also German) friends that my German is more grammatically correct than theirs (which probably means that I sound like a tourist but is phrased in a way as to not offend someone who would understand itTD, your German is obviousely far better than I thought!
Oh, I'm positive it wasIt was a genuine compliment that was payed to you.
I spend quite a few summers in Frankfurt (Main) (close enough to Bayern for the locals to speak something that doesn't sound like the German they speak on TV!)with friends of my grandparents but still found the Tatorts from the deep south rather more difficult to understand than any of the othersYou might have problems here in Bavaria, though. Our language differs a lot from High German or Northern German dialects. High German developed gradually from ancient and medieval German into an almost completely new and differently structured language. We Bavarians however still use a lot of Celtic words and the medieval grammar and pronounciation. Add to it that every village has its own peculiar dialect and you can get rather desperate LOL. (Don't worry, though: all Bavarians can speak High German - they are just too lazy to do it, usually. And we love to torture Northern Germans this way. Never tourists from abroad, though. We like those)
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Sounds like a Long Island Iced Tea.Hunter's tea is tea with rum. It has 12-15 vol% alcohol, so it's quite dangerous stuff.
(would menu be the right word for a list of liquids??).
It says:I have no idea what it says, other than maybe... Apple Punch with alcohol, and Cocoa and some kind of tea?
punch
apple punch (non-alcoholic)
baked-apple punch
cocoa
hunter's tea
Hunter's tea is tea with rum. It has 12-15 vol% alcohol, so it's quite dangerous stuff.
Baked-apple punch is hot apple wine with spices (cinnamon, cloves, vanilla, perhaps a hint of cardamom or star anise). Often it contains a good deal of apple brandy as well.
I don't know about other Christmas markets, but in my region you don't have to walk 3 mins between those stands but hardly ever more than 10 yards. Usually, every second booth offers mulled wine and punch.
TD, your German is obviousely far better than I thought!
Eh, we fixed that Prohibition fiasco 80 years ago. And there's nothing a Bostonian can't do with tea.^ *gasp* an alcoholic beverage from the land of prohibition where the beer has only half as much alcohol than Bavarian one?
Hmm, on the other hand, when you throw tea into the sea, you have to stretch the leftovers a bit to last till the next shipment arrives. So it does make sense after all.
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