After reading through this thread, I'm mostly just shocked at the things people expect others to know!
I'm shocked that you didn't know that!
After reading through this thread, I'm mostly just shocked at the things people expect others to know!
After reading through this thread, I'm mostly just shocked at the things people expect others to know!
I'm shocked that you didn't know that!
After reading through this thread, I'm mostly just shocked at the things people expect others to know!
I'm shocked that you didn't know that!
I'm shocked that you're shocked!
I really have to ask: why does that make someone a dumbass? Aside from the fact that the rest of the continent speaks Spanish, why should people memorize the national languages of random countries, particularly when the language isn't obvious.We don't speak Spanish in Brazil.
(Honeslty, if I won a penny to every dumbass who thought so...)
No kidding.After reading through this thread, I'm mostly just shocked at the things people expect others to know!
Co-worker was talking today in the BR, profoundly confused why so many people today had "dirt on their foreheads."
I swore she was taking the piss but she was serious -and she's not nearly bright enough to act this stupid. She really is this stupid. I just didn't think she was that stupid.
So she was confused and wondering why so many people had this dirt on their foreheads and thought maybe there was a shelf or a door or something in the store that was dirty and people were resting/touching their heads on it while getting product.
Me: "It's Ash Wednesday."
Her: "What's that?"
Me: :facepalm:
This woman is in her late 20s, possibly early or mid 30s.
Her elevator obviously doesn't go to the penthouse.
I only learned about it a couple of years ago and I'm 24. She, like me, probably hasn't come into contact with many people who celebrate it before. I'd say that the majority of people I grew up around were Mormon or Atheist and I know practically nothing of religious ceremonies/traditions.
Mmm. Those aren't shock-worthy. They are too trival to be common knowledge.The top of Mount Chimborazo, in the Andes is a mile and a half farther from the center of the Earth than the top of Mount Everest, and so is the highest mountain (Latin pride kicks in).
Because the 180th longitude line passes through the Aleutian islands, Alaska is both the most eastern and the most western state (I've won money in bars with that one).
Co-worker was talking today in the BR, profoundly confused why so many people today had "dirt on their foreheads."
I swore she was taking the piss but she was serious -and she's not nearly bright enough to act this stupid. She really is this stupid. I just didn't think she was that stupid.
So she was confused and wondering why so many people had this dirt on their foreheads and thought maybe there was a shelf or a door or something in the store that was dirty and people were resting/touching their heads on it while getting product.
Me: "It's Ash Wednesday."
Her: "What's that?"
Me: :facepalm:
This woman is in her late 20s, possibly early or mid 30s.
Her elevator obviously doesn't go to the penthouse.
I only learned about it a couple of years ago and I'm 24. She, like me, probably hasn't come into contact with many people who celebrate it before. I'd say that the majority of people I grew up around were Mormon or Atheist and I know practically nothing of religious ceremonies/traditions.
Ditto. I grew up in Seattle and never saw ash on anyone's forehead until I moved to NYC in my thirties. I was completely baffled until someone explained it to me.
Heck, I'd never even heard of communion wafers until I read DRACULA in sixth grade . . . .
I really have to ask: why does that make someone a dumbass? Aside from the fact that the rest of the continent speaks Spanish, why should people memorize the national languages of random countries, particularly when the language isn't obvious.We don't speak Spanish in Brazil.
(Honeslty, if I won a penny to every dumbass who thought so...)
People from England speak English.
People from Germany speak German.
People from Brazil speak...what? Brazilian? Spanish? Nope, neither of those.
I really have to ask: why does that make someone a dumbass? Aside from the fact that the rest of the continent speaks Spanish, why should people memorize the national languages of random countries, particularly when the language isn't obvious.We don't speak Spanish in Brazil.
(Honeslty, if I won a penny to every dumbass who thought so...)
People from England speak English.
People from Germany speak German.
People from Brazil speak...what? Brazilian? Spanish? Nope, neither of those.
Because that's the kind of stuff you learn in like 5th grade. I'm not saying you have to know what language people speak in every single country -I don't know plenty myself- but History Class for me back then included History from different countries (Other than our own.) (Mostly important history twists, colonizations, wars, revolutions and stuff), that including their language. Besides, Brazil was colonized by the Portuguese. They speak Portuguese in Portugal. Oh well.
I mean I still meet grown adults who regularly interchange the words "Hindu" and "Hindi". It's annoying, but hardly shocking.
I really have to ask: why does that make someone a dumbass? Aside from the fact that the rest of the continent speaks Spanish, why should people memorize the national languages of random countries, particularly when the language isn't obvious.
People from England speak English.
People from Germany speak German.
People from Brazil speak...what? Brazilian? Spanish? Nope, neither of those.
Because that's the kind of stuff you learn in like 5th grade. I'm not saying you have to know what language people speak in every single country -I don't know plenty myself- but History Class for me back then included History from different countries (Other than our own.) (Mostly important history twists, colonizations, wars, revolutions and stuff), that including their language. Besides, Brazil was colonized by the Portuguese. They speak Portuguese in Portugal. Oh well.
5th grade where, though? I definitely never had any reason to learn about Brazil, nor did I really learn anything about South America in general.
I didn't learn that Brazilians spoke Portuguese until high school when I started studying Spanish.
I was only taught about Brazil being colonized by Portugal in college. As for its importance: the line "it's taught in the 5th grade" isn't much of an argument.
I mean I still meet grown adults who regularly interchange the words "Hindu" and "Hindi". It's annoying, but hardly shocking.
I have no idea what the difference is.
As a child I gained a lot of knowledge by reading through the Encyclopedia Britannica. I though many nerdish kids did this. I am quite sure that this would have been how I learnt that the national language of Brazil was Portuguese.
I know that except for a brief mention of Eric the Red/Leif Eriksson my school never mentioned Iceland yet from the age of 11 onwards I started to read everything I could on that country.
Ignorance shouldn't be simply excused by saying "my school never taught that".
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