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Kharnifex posted:they were made using crushed seashell, seaweed extract and a rubber bouncy ball. see, it just amazes me that doing that works out cheaper than real eggs
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:03 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:22 |
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As far as I know I haven't encountered fake food. My friend who runs a wine business told me most of the fake wine is actually wine, it's just cheap garbage that's poured into bottles taken from good wine and then sold as such.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:07 |
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to fair most wine drinkers wouldnt know the difference. The ones that come to terms with their poo poo taste are much happier since they get to enjoy boxed wine with no shame
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:14 |
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ladron posted:If I never have to hear another Korean do that "OooohhAAAHHH" stupid fake amazed poo poo they do at my using chopsticks or speaking korean it'll be too soon.... ive worked at my school in korea for 3 years. a student i have had in class for about 6 months, twice weekly, realized i spoke korean. this is a first grade class so i often code-switch. she spoke in wonder to her friend "teacher can speak korean!" her friend was the youngest person ive ever seen do an eyeroll
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:19 |
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Two Worlds posted:shut up gently caress off. i want to know about chinese in the uk and how they immigrate and where from mostly. i assume hong kong because of the past ties makes it easier for them to do so, but im not going to start questioning them while they run a busy shop also the "china town" in london was just like a row restaurants, i was disappointed
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:20 |
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Some of Canadian photographer Greg Girard's photos of Kowloon Walled City. The rest of the gallery is behind the link: http://www.businessinsider.com/inside-kowloon-walled-city-2016-10//??r=AU&IR=T
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:22 |
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Fauxtool posted:to fair most wine drinkers wouldnt know the difference. The ones that come to terms with their poo poo taste are much happier since they get to enjoy boxed wine with no shame If you've ever had domestic Chinese wine, you'd know the difference. My students in Korea never figured out I could speak any Korean. I'd get them in trouble nearly every day for cussing me or each other out in Korean, or when I could I'd put up their vocab words with Korean translations, but none of them ever seemed to connect the dots to me having any knowledge of the language and were always shocked when I understood them.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:22 |
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My new neighbour has a 24 hour wine delivery racket, illegal where I live but they are making some made cash
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:23 |
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Drunk & Ugly posted:gently caress off. i want to know about chinese in the uk and how they immigrate and where from mostly. i assume hong kong because of the past ties makes it easier for them to do so, but im not going to start questioning them while they run a busy shop Mostly from HK and Guangdong, but also ethnic Chinese from Malaysia.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:30 |
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Old Chinese communities come largely from Guangdong and some from Fujian. In the 70s there started to be a lot more migration from all over China, that's why you started getting real Sichuan restaurants and stuff around then. If you're talking like Chinatowns that trace back to the 1800s or early 1900s that's going to be almost entirely Cantonese, with some Fujianese and Hakka mixed in (there are always Hakka somewhere).
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:35 |
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ladron posted:the food and poon are not bad
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:47 |
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im visiting relatives in korea sometime early 2017. Im looking forward to being told I should get surgery to do better in work, getting blackout drunk. Not sleeping with a fan on. Getting offered a greencard marriage from their friends and a chance to smuggle/launder money back to the US.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:50 |
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Drunk & Ugly posted:gently caress off. i want to know about chinese in the uk and how they immigrate and where from mostly. i assume hong kong because of the past ties makes it easier for them to do so, but im not going to start questioning them while they run a busy shop I was in London last Christmas. China town used to be immigrants from Hong Kong / Guang Dong Province / Fujian Province. But nowadays the new immigrants are from North Eastern China and Interior China like Sichuan. So the Chinese restaurants are shifting flavours and catering the food to new immigrants and students from the rest of the Mainland. You get a lot more spicy hotpot and dumplings. The food is also unforgettably bad because the chefs are now students making some extra cash and winging it. loving blows. If you want to try Chinese food in London, try A Wong.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:53 |
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Haier posted:From this thread and the Female Rasputin thread, all I can summarize from previous Korea-havers is that the only thing to talk about is alcohol. Does the country suck that much, or are the foreigners there that bored/boring? No but alcohol is central to Korean culture so it is involved with a great many things. Korea is the midwest of Asia. It's pleasant enough to live there but there isn't a lot to talk about or to sell it when compared with neighbors. It's a very good place to party, the food is repetitive when you live there but good. There's very little culture to speak of.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:54 |
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Haier posted:From this thread and the Female Rasputin thread, all I can summarize from previous Korea-havers is that the only thing to talk about is alcohol. Does the country suck that much, or are the foreigners there that bored/boring? Goonsgiving is great. I attended once and I loved it. Korean goons are the best goon hosts in the whole wide world. I only knew a few people from hosting them in Hong Kong but when I went to korea the goons offered me their homes. As for the country itself, it's wedged between China and Japan so it does get neglected in terms of history/culture/tourism. So Korea is always trying to prove themselves. One wise goon said "Think of it like Canada" and as a Canadian I totally understood what he meant At worse, you can call Korea - "Looks like Japan, but feels like China" but it's really modernizing and developing its own scene pretty quickly. Kpop is still bad but they grew out of Jpop and new Korean cuisine is actually amazing.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:58 |
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Grand Fromage posted:No but alcohol is central to Korean culture so it is involved with a great many things. I rather stay in Korea than West Lafayette or anywhere in Indiana.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 11:59 |
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caberham posted:I rather stay in Korea than West Lafayette or anywhere in Indiana. Indiana is bad, yes.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 12:02 |
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caberham posted:I rather stay in Korea than West Lafayette or anywhere in Indiana. in all fairness you went to where else? in WL lol irl
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 12:06 |
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I would rather stay in Korea for one week - three weeks I would rather stay in west Lafayette for three weeks - eternity
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 12:08 |
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The Great Autismo! posted:in all fairness you went to where else? in WL lol irl Also went to Indianapolis. The comedy stop over is Gary.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 12:14 |
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gary is from west lafayette to chicago. the comedy stop over from indianapolis to west lafayette is whitestown via zionsville, two huge hubs of the KKK. lol!
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 12:31 |
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Kharnifex posted:Last time I was in Hong Kong there was two scams running, one was smuggling meat in to beat some 0.002 cent tax per kilo and the other was fake eggs. Re: Chinese diaspora. Chinese stuff in Japan kinda has a more Cantonese pronunciation. Does anyone know what's up with that? I'm thinking of how place names in HK sounded similar to the Japanese readings of the same characters, compared to me not being able to guess the Shanghai station names at all.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 12:39 |
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How dare you insult glorious 200 year history of Indiana. Other unnamed states salivate at the idea of being the birthplace of Larry Bird, do you know?
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 12:40 |
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peanut posted:
Cantonese was the kind that traveled. Mandarin wasn't a thing beyond a small part of the northeast until the CCP forced it on everyone.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 12:50 |
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Kharnifex posted:Last time I was in Hong Kong there was two scams running, one was smuggling meat in to beat some 0.002 cent tax per kilo and the other was fake eggs. Ehh? That has to be BS or the decimal is in the wrong place as you would have to smuggle 1 ton of meat to "Save" 2 dollars and the costs of collecting that tax would far outweigh the income. But then this is China BS, there really could be some dude smuggling a ton of meat for 2 extra dollars.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 12:53 |
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oohhboy posted:Ehh? That has to be BS or the decimal is in the wrong place as you would have to smuggle 1 ton of meat to "Save" 2 dollars and the costs of collecting that tax would far outweigh the income. Ever heard of the saying "Penny-wise, Pound-foolish"? People will waste large amounts of time and effort to save amounts that come out to less than their time and effort cost them.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 13:04 |
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Wrong thread lol
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 13:18 |
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https://news.vice.com/story/china-shows-off-j-20-stealth-fighter-jet-its-answer-to-the-f-22 So they have their version of our F22 but it actually flies? this flies in the face of everything I was told about competency in engineering in china in this thread in fact it is us who have lost face
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 13:24 |
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Drunk & Ugly posted:https://news.vice.com/story/china-shows-off-j-20-stealth-fighter-jet-its-answer-to-the-f-22 Yes, if you take whatever People’s Liberation Army says at face value then yes.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 13:32 |
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Also one of the lesser known things about jets is the engines are really hard to make. The engineering and metallurgy is a very limited technology and the US/UK produce almost all of the good engines in the world. That's why so many planes, no matter where they're manufactured, buy the engines from those countries. An engine on a Chinese fighter is trashed and has to be replaced every couple of flights.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 13:35 |
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Just lol "A canard fighter resembles the F22" Who is paid to write this poo poo?
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 13:36 |
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unrelated
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 13:36 |
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Those Canards can't be stealthy. No vectored thrust and I doubt the engines are any good since they can't even do civilian engines right. The nose shape is the only thing they could copy directly. The rest looks like a mash up of F35, Typhoon, Rafeel and a mig 25.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 13:42 |
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you have it wrong, the f35 is the turd. The f22 is a technological wonder designed to fight an enemy that doesnt exist
Fauxtool fucked around with this message at 13:51 on Nov 3, 2016 |
# ? Nov 3, 2016 13:48 |
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the f-35 is good for what its meant to be: a stealth fighter we can sell to allies
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 13:54 |
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caberham posted:Goonsgiving is great. I attended once and I loved it. Korean goons are the best goon hosts in the whole wide world. I only knew a few people from hosting them in Hong Kong but when I went to korea the goons offered me their homes. Darkman Fanpage posted:the f-35 is good for what its meant to be: a stealth fighter we can sell to allies The F-35 is the kind of plane you do wish upon your enemies because it is super expensive hot garbage
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 14:11 |
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Think of Japanesepeanut posted:
Think of Japanese loanwords from Chinese, Cantonese, and modern Mandarin as having an origin point from Middle Chinese during the Tang dynasty. Cantonese and Japanese followed a similar digression so if you swap a few vowels and change consonants from voiced to unvoiced you can see the similarity very quickly, like English beef vs French boeuf. Mandarin is Chinese corrupted by horse nomad language from the north.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 14:11 |
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Grand Fromage posted:No but alcohol is central to Korean culture so it is involved with a great many things. Living in Korea for more than a year will get really repetitive if you don't make a serious point to look for different things to do. Like Grand Fromage hinted at, most things are limited in their variety (food, music, past-times, etc.). Korea really buys into the "hive-mind" effect, as as such there is a really, really, massive groupthink going on which really limits things that westerners are used to having nearly limitless variety in (food, music, shows, movies, beers, shops, hobbies, sports, etc...). When I was there I took advantage of every micro-niche hobby and sport that was available in Korea. I went downhill skiing, played hockey, tennis, went swimming, tried my hand at model-making, urban-exploration, geocaching, painting, etc. Variety is not one of Korea's strong points (unless it involves fashion/makeup), so people visiting Korea for longer than the standard year can start to feel like they're being limited to 2-3 things to do/eat/drink/see. This is one reason why you can find so many foreign products, themed restaurants, and expat groups doing things like organizing sports/hobbies/events. If they didn't, they'd go crazy. The funny thing is that once you get through the Korean cultural veneer, they will freely admit that life gets pretty boring, really fast in Korea, and that's one reason why they have a national obsession with travelling overseas.
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 14:19 |
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 15:12 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:22 |
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http://m.koreatimes.co.kr/phone/news/view.jsp?req_newsidx=217472 guess which country's tourists are trashing the Jeju airport? I'll give you a hint: it's somewhat topical for this thread
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# ? Nov 3, 2016 15:25 |