1) 8 glasses of water a day is not standard. Water isn't free in restaurants and people don't serve it in their houses frequently. I don't understand how the porteños (residents of Buenos Aires - I have to teach you all vocabulary somehow!) don't suffer from dehydration.
2) Napkins aren't too popular either. They aren't part of the regular place settings in a restaurant or a house. And when there are any on the table at a restaurant they're small and plastic-y. My host family seems to think that I use an oddly large amount of paper napkins.
3) Talking on the phone during a performance is perfectly acceptable. Last night my host mom took me to the Ballet Folklorico (not actually a ballet, just a dance performance of traditional Argentine dances) and I didn't realize that we hadn't been asked to silence our phones until I heard several ring and one man even have a rather loud, and long, phone conversation.
4) Staying out until 5 in the morning is expected even when you're 40. I knew before getting here that Argentines like to live a nocturnal life, but I didn't quite understand the extent to which this was true. Dinner is at 10 or 11 pm, then everyone goes to a bar or discoteca at 12 pm or 1 am and stays out until 4 or 5 am -- and this isn't just teenagers. This then makes it perfectly acceptable to sleep in until noon; besides, lunch isn't until 2 pm anyway.
5) Traffic lanes don't exist. I've traveled to South America several times before and have always known that driving looks like a death wish, but I've never been inside a normal car driving around. What I quickly noticed was the lack of traffic lanes -- as long as you stay on the street (which is a rule that buses apparently don't have to follow all the time) you're fine. Just don't run into the car next you.
Have you started aspirating your 's' yet?
ReplyDelete(5) sounds just like my experiences of India!
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