Anonymous wrote:Why do you drive on the wrong side of the road?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously. When I was studying abroad in Germany from an elite liberal arts college, the German professors thought our group was basically high school students and the kid from the University of Vermont who was along with our group was some kind of advanced academic.
I was attending an elite liberal arts college in the US and had a German visiting professor for Econ 101 who told us that if we were university students he would use calculus to teach us the supply/demand curve but since we were just college students he would graph it as a straight line. Took me a long time to figure out what he meant, eventually I realized he thought we were kind of dumb. Sorry, didn't just think it--told us to our faces.
Anonymous wrote:Seriously. When I was studying abroad in Germany from an elite liberal arts college, the German professors thought our group was basically high school students and the kid from the University of Vermont who was along with our group was some kind of advanced academic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And why is the main dinner course in American cuisine called an entree!
Why is laboratory pronounced differently in British and American English?
Maths vs Math as an abbreviation?
I demand answers to these eternal mysteries that Google can’t explain!!
NP. “Maths” is like nails on a chalkboard for me! Glad Americans changed that one.
Totally agree with this statement.
When a poster uses the word "maths", I tend to tune out.
Anonymous wrote:I know that “community colleges” and “liberal arts colleges” don’t offer master’s degrees or higher. But in other countries, college = high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And why is the main dinner course in American cuisine called an entree!
Why is laboratory pronounced differently in British and American English?
Maths vs Math as an abbreviation?
I demand answers to these eternal mysteries that Google can’t explain!!
NP. “Maths” is like nails on a chalkboard for me! Glad Americans changed that one.
Anonymous wrote:I read Emily Blunt’s Wikipedia page and it says the ages she was when she attended each school (“She started attending Hurtwood House at age 16”). I don’t understand. Are there cutoff dates there?
Anonymous wrote:Whenever somebody says that their child goes to University, I know they’re not from the US.
Anonymous wrote:Why is a sweet, carbonated beverage called “soda” in some places, “pop” in some places, or a “soft drink” in some places?
Why do different regions have different words for the same thing?