U.S. AMERICAN REACTS to 5 Lies About Germany

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Hello friends! Have you ever been lied to about a different country? Let me know in the comments!

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Art is the lie that enables us to see the truth. – Pablo Picasso
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Nate's wife still showing German pride love it well done no offence.
Also if you're wife reads this? you have nothing to be ashamed of Germany is an awesome and beautiful country and that's comming from a Dutch person who has been there plenty of times myself once again awesome and beautiful country.
Once again a great video/reaction keep up the great work Nate👍
And greetings from the Netherlands🇳🇱

DidierWierdsma
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I used to live in Germany as a US military dependent. My family went to Dachau to see first hand the concentration camp. We then moved back to the states for a few years, while back in school in the US I had a teacher who tried telling the class there were no longer any building standing in the former concentration camps. I, like the outspoken child I was, raised my hand immediately and told the teacher outright she was wrong. Mind you I have not been back to Germany since the early 1990's. But now as an adult, I have been looking into moving back.

CeryniceWalker
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Cheers from Zell/Mosel. I moved here 15 years ago and will never ever leave from here

dyter
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Great Guy! Vera calm and informed, such a Joy to watch

Feine_Leberwurst
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Someone pointed out, that the reason, why so many foreigners associate germany with specific bavarian tropes is, that after WWII the GIs were mainly stationed there. And so they got their impression of Germany from Bavaria. Subsequently this was then exported from the US via pop culture into the whole world.

klausjuergen
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Glory to the Czechs for the beer! You guys made the "Reinheitsgebot" in Germany possible. Greetings from Northern Germany where we love "Pilsener" or "Pils" coming from the city of Plzeň

alexs
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The guy in the video adopted really quickly to typical German culture. He wears white socks in sandals. Well done, mate!

hugohabicht
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Hi Nate, the word "Brät" or "Wurstbrät" does exist. But not in the context of "Hause". "Brät" is, among other things, the basis for a sausage.

rolfoleynik
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Topic yards: some people that live in a city and don´t have their own yard where they can grow fruits and plats have a "Schrebergarten" (invented by Mr Schreber in the 1800s). Typical for Germans there is a "Schrebergartenverein", where many yards are together. Most of them have a small cabin where tools and equipments are stored and where to hide from rain. The idea behind was to get fresh fruits and vegetables for the kids of poor families. That´s a spot tourists will never see, I think.

thorstenkoethe
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Regarding umlauts, it's even worse with Swedish, where Å, Ä, and Ö are separate letters placed in the alphabet after Z.
I've heard of a US metal band called Trojan, who wanted the name to look cooler, so they spelled it Tröjan, Tröjan means "the shirt"...

matshjalmarsson
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As always well done Nate. I really appreciate your Videos. Kind regards from Germany ❤️🇩🇪🇺🇸

pattate
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I love your open mindedness Nate. The English have always had a love of the German Gewüztraminer grape. England imported gallons of it. It was called sack and competed very well against English ale especially around the port of Hull in Hansiatic League times.

alan-dxzf
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The German "Umlauts" are actually just 3 more vowels. The term is derived from the fact that many nouns "switch" their vowel sound when you form a plural to one of those three sounds. That's actually something English has as well (though not as frequently any more), for example mouse-mice

Alias_Anybody
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I'd rather have a German alcohol free beer than the average American beer. Somehow America reshaped the world to their, particular, vision.

Paul_C
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It’s neither the German alphabet, nor the English one (like mentioned in the original video). It’s simply the Latin alphabet most Western countries use. But the Latin from the ancient Romans. ;)

stckl
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I live in the urban area of a city, a little village, we all have a yard, mostly not split up, its more around the houses,
In the nearby city with around 70-80 thousand citizens there are lots of "backyards", you simply just dont see them.
One of my friends lives in the middle of the city and they own the building, in the lower 2 floors are shops and above they live in 2 or three levels and when you look out the backwindows there is a yard, some parts have lots of trees some are just for chilling and some grow vegetables or have some rabbits living there in cages, big ones, more like their own little space.

The best thing is, back there with all these wall at wall packed buildings around it, the yards are so quiet, you cant even hear whats going on outside.
Its almost like having a bit of yountryside in the middle of the city.
I learned that most cities have that that grew naturally, Berlin has these "Hinterhöfe" sometimes more concrete and others like gardens, in some they even built additional houses, thats called "Verdichtung", squeezing every little square meter out of the plot for rent.

Just use google maps satellite view and you see what i mean!

nicosteffen
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when people in europe want to get drunk, they also reach for beer, which can sometimes happen quite quickly if you can't stand it, but in most cases you tend to use harder spirits, such as schnaps or Jägermeister, or mixed drinks with vodka or similar

ChaosGo
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Germany has definitely some of the best white wines in the world, but I'm personally more a fan of red wines, especially the sun soaked heavy ones from Spain, Argentina and Chile.
Greetings from Switzerland 🇨🇭

mina_en_suiza
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Just randomly found your channel and I'm really getting hooked on this content. I live right across of Rüdesheim (after having lived in Rüdesheim itself a few years) so a lot of the video was fairly relevant to me and I found it really interesting!

SteceSama
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I absolutely agree with your wife on the Umlaut thing. It's a pet peeve of mine as well.

moreconstantthanthegods
welcome to shbcf.ru