Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-Americans like free bathrooms everywhere
-they like to tip
-they like to use credit cards and hate carrying cash
-air conditioning
Clean and with toilet paper too! Who doesn't like this?
Anonymous wrote:Spin off from the European myths thread, I am English (so soon I won't be European) and here are some of my stereotypes about Americans:
- Americans require EXTREMELY cold drinks. If it's a cold drink, it must be served filled with ice. Fridge-cold drinks without ice are not acceptable
- Americans can be identified in the summer by their shorts. Shorts are worn in some places in Europe in the summer but not very commonly outside the beach. Extra American points if there is a shirt tucked into the shorts and a belt, with white socks and running shoes.
- This doesn't apply to people in NYC, but Americans love their cars, have enormous cars (even the ones many people consider to be "small" or "average" are big to me) and drive everywhere. This is a function of low gas prices and poor public transport/infrastructure
- Americans eat at really weird (to me!) times - really early. Lunch at 12, sometimes even earlier. Dinner at 6, sometimes earlier. Before I moved here, the first time I encountered this was a client coming from here who I invited for dinner; he said yes but he'd be arriving late so did I mind having a late dinner.... at 7:30. I thought he was joking, but no!
I will think of more but I think that's a start!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm half American and half Asian, and grew up in both countries. To natives of my Asian country, Americans are very loud. They talk loud and do things loudly (big gestures, etc.). Everything is big-big people, big cars, big houses, big TVs, etc.
Hell, I'm American and feel this way. I also think sometimes there are too many choices. What would it be like if there were only four types of bread to chose from? Would our shopping go faster? I'd like to find out.

Anonymous wrote:When we've been traveling in Eastern Europe, many people immediately peg us as Americans. I've asked a couple different people how they they knew and they said some variation of , "You have straight, giant, white teeth and you awkwardly smile at seemingly nothing."
Anonymous wrote:I see a trend with "smiling". Is smiling a bad thing? I suppose they see it as inauthentic?
Anonymous wrote:Anything that is not burger, fries, a burrito is "ethnic". Along the same lines, Chinese food = general tsao/sesame chicken/egg rolls/the works.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Spin off from the European myths thread, I am English (so soon I won't be European) and here are some of my stereotypes about Americans:
- Americans require EXTREMELY cold drinks. If it's a cold drink, it must be served filled with ice. Fridge-cold drinks without ice are not acceptable
- Americans can be identified in the summer by their shorts. Shorts are worn in some places in Europe in the summer but not very commonly outside the beach. Extra American points if there is a shirt tucked into the shorts and a belt, with white socks and running shoes.
- This doesn't apply to people in NYC, but Americans love their cars, have enormous cars (even the ones many people consider to be "small" or "average" are big to me) and drive everywhere. This is a function of low gas prices and poor public transport/infrastructure
- Americans eat at really weird (to me!) times - really early. Lunch at 12, sometimes even earlier. Dinner at 6, sometimes earlier. Before I moved here, the first time I encountered this was a client coming from here who I invited for dinner; he said yes but he'd be arriving late so did I mind having a late dinner.... at 7:30. I thought he was joking, but no!
I will think of more but I think that's a start!
I see shorts--a LOT of shorts--in London every summer on young women. Up North, I see shorts ALL WINTER (with tights) in Manchester. A few years ago Next and other high street stores were pushing suiting for young women that consisted of shorts and blazes. And I know multiple little boys for whom shorts are part of the school uniform (in UK). Have you maybe not been home in a really long time?
Anonymous wrote:I see a trend with "smiling". Is smiling a bad thing? I suppose they see it as inauthentic?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-Americans like free bathrooms everywhere
-they like to tip
-they like to use credit cards and hate carrying cash
-air conditioning
OP here. Yes to all of these! The tipping thing - they expect to tip for everything and are happy to tip 20%+. I still can't get used to having to do this and also find the idea of actually handing someone cash really awkward.
The credit card thing - yes also, I've started doing it here too, and it's because everything has an annoying price, because of the tax. So if you pay with cash you get so much annoying change because everything costs $3.68 or whatever.
And yes, everywhere is extremely air-conditioned and I find it hard to get used to that - both the way it is SO cold inside when it is hot outside, so that you actually need extra layers, and the drying effect of the a/c.
I lived in Germany and a lot of the locals thought that AC wasn't healthy. French friends said the same. I've never, ever heard an American think AC was unhealthy.
OP here - yes I think I sort of feel that way. I accept it as a necessary evil, but if I were building a house from scratch I'd use alternatives such as underfloor cooling, like my parents have in the hot country they live in.
I think it depends on where you live. If you live in Northern Europe, it doesn't get hot enough for a long enough time to warrant AC. I grew up in New England and we never has AC. Living here in DC with 90'+ day after day and really high humidity- I am a born again lover of the AC. When we retire back to NE, I don't know that we will turn it on very much.
I want to add that we were in London during a "heat wave" and it was in the 80's - they were admonishing people on the Tube to keep drinking water to avoid dehydration. We were fine. We went to Paris and it was in the mid 90's an everyone was complaining (Parisians and tourists).
Anonymous wrote:Spin off from the European myths thread, I am English (so soon I won't be European) and here are some of my stereotypes about Americans:
- Americans require EXTREMELY cold drinks. If it's a cold drink, it must be served filled with ice. Fridge-cold drinks without ice are not acceptable
- Americans can be identified in the summer by their shorts. Shorts are worn in some places in Europe in the summer but not very commonly outside the beach. Extra American points if there is a shirt tucked into the shorts and a belt, with white socks and running shoes.
- This doesn't apply to people in NYC, but Americans love their cars, have enormous cars (even the ones many people consider to be "small" or "average" are big to me) and drive everywhere. This is a function of low gas prices and poor public transport/infrastructure
- Americans eat at really weird (to me!) times - really early. Lunch at 12, sometimes even earlier. Dinner at 6, sometimes earlier. Before I moved here, the first time I encountered this was a client coming from here who I invited for dinner; he said yes but he'd be arriving late so did I mind having a late dinner.... at 7:30. I thought he was joking, but no!
I will think of more but I think that's a start!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-Americans like free bathrooms everywhere
-they like to tip
-they like to use credit cards and hate carrying cash
-air conditioning
OP here. Yes to all of these! The tipping thing - they expect to tip for everything and are happy to tip 20%+. I still can't get used to having to do this and also find the idea of actually handing someone cash really awkward.
The credit card thing - yes also, I've started doing it here too, and it's because everything has an annoying price, because of the tax. So if you pay with cash you get so much annoying change because everything costs $3.68 or whatever.
And yes, everywhere is extremely air-conditioned and I find it hard to get used to that - both the way it is SO cold inside when it is hot outside, so that you actually need extra layers, and the drying effect of the a/c.
I lived in Germany and a lot of the locals thought that AC wasn't healthy. French friends said the same. I've never, ever heard an American think AC was unhealthy.
OP here - yes I think I sort of feel that way. I accept it as a necessary evil, but if I were building a house from scratch I'd use alternatives such as underfloor cooling, like my parents have in the hot country they live in.
I think it depends on where you live. If you live in Northern Europe, it doesn't get hot enough for a long enough time to warrant AC. I grew up in New England and we never has AC. Living here in DC with 90'+ day after day and really high humidity- I am a born again lover of the AC. When we retire back to NE, I don't know that we will turn it on very much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we all own guns, ALL of us. in fact, the reason Americans keep their hands on/above the dining table is to show everyone that you're not holding a firearm. (explained to me by a slightly inebriated French hostess, some years ago)
I think the opposite? Americans keep left hand in our laps while eating. Europeans eat with both hands holding knife and fork.
Haha I agree with the gun comment but also yes, the American style of eating, with only one hand! I find this so strange!
crap, I was possibly also inebriated at the time. maybe it was that americans keep one hand in their lap to hide their firearm? apparently, I have bad American AND bad French table manners.