by Flack » Thu Apr 01, 2010 7:17 am
Aw, shucks.
I was expecting the people of New York to be brunt and rude, but instead they just ignore you. If I took too long in a crosswalk or on a sidewalk, they just walk around you. I don't think I had anyone yell at me specifically or be directly rude to me.
I had trouble understanding some of the people I ordered food from (especially foreign vendors running food carts) but I saw other people having trouble as well so I didn't feel bad. I saw a Chinese guy trying to order food from a Croatian vendor and the conversation digressed into them just saying "What?" and "Huh?" back and forth for a few minutes.
I also learned the word "stayogo", which really means "stay-or-go", which really means "Is that for here or to go?" They don't even ask it like a question like "stayogo?", it's just l ike "stayogo". If you say "for here" that throws them off -- you're supposed to say "stay". Oh, and at Burger King I said "stay" and later I checked the receipt and saw a 75 cent "dine in tax". Shoulda said "go".
The town I live in (Yukon, a suburb of Oklahoma City) is 25 square miles and has 20,000 people. Manhattan is 22 square miles and has 2.8 million people. Actually they have 1.6 million at night and 2.8 million during the day because 1.2 million people come into the city every day. The biggest thing I noticed other than the traffic and the skyscrapers were the people.
Aw, shucks.
I was expecting the people of New York to be brunt and rude, but instead they just ignore you. If I took too long in a crosswalk or on a sidewalk, they just walk around you. I don't think I had anyone yell at me specifically or be directly rude to me.
I had trouble understanding some of the people I ordered food from (especially foreign vendors running food carts) but I saw other people having trouble as well so I didn't feel bad. I saw a Chinese guy trying to order food from a Croatian vendor and the conversation digressed into them just saying "What?" and "Huh?" back and forth for a few minutes.
I also learned the word "stayogo", which really means "stay-or-go", which really means "Is that for here or to go?" They don't even ask it like a question like "stayogo?", it's just l ike "stayogo". If you say "for here" that throws them off -- you're supposed to say "stay". Oh, and at Burger King I said "stay" and later I checked the receipt and saw a 75 cent "dine in tax". Shoulda said "go".
The town I live in (Yukon, a suburb of Oklahoma City) is 25 square miles and has 20,000 people. Manhattan is 22 square miles and has 2.8 million people. Actually they have 1.6 million at night and 2.8 million during the day because 1.2 million people come into the city every day. The biggest thing I noticed other than the traffic and the skyscrapers were the people.