The Kings' Dessert
or how to create 16.000 honey strings in two minutes.
- Namdaemun Market, Seoul, Korea
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Comments
27 comments posted so far. Login to add a comment.
45
12. Excellence (admin) commented 13 years ago
loollin loollin loollin loooollliiinnn
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15. JohnMichael commented 13 years ago
16384 strings in <2min.. Damn.. I bet he even thinks in binary..
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17. TarasFromLviv commented 13 years ago
He could run his own children show
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20. Thanny commented 13 years ago
#3 It's not our fault. Almost all of us take foreign language classes in high school (also, Ich kann ein bisschen Deutsch), but there's no pressure in society to master anything but English. There's Spanish to the south (and a lot more Americans who live near the border speak it), but nothing but English elsewhere on the continent. Most of our entertainment imports are either from the UK, or English-language remakes. The occasional non-English movie that gains popularity gets by fine with subtitles.
It certainly doesn't help that someone competent in English is never more than a stone's throw away whenever one travels.
The simple fact is, most people who speak more than one language speak their native language and English, which is the de facto international language (and the official language of science). The Korean and German men weren't conversing in German or Korean, after all. The only language they shared a fluency in was English. So it's rather unfair to say that native English speakers only know one language, when there's no other language one has an incentive to learn, outside of some specific circumstance.
People in the UK aren't any better, despite being in proximity to a host of other languages, because they already know the one language they can expect to be understood almost anywhere.
It certainly doesn't help that someone competent in English is never more than a stone's throw away whenever one travels.
The simple fact is, most people who speak more than one language speak their native language and English, which is the de facto international language (and the official language of science). The Korean and German men weren't conversing in German or Korean, after all. The only language they shared a fluency in was English. So it's rather unfair to say that native English speakers only know one language, when there's no other language one has an incentive to learn, outside of some specific circumstance.
People in the UK aren't any better, despite being in proximity to a host of other languages, because they already know the one language they can expect to be understood almost anywhere.
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21. Hallsavenger commented 13 years ago
some1 has to tell this guy hes on the interwebs
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24. Betspanker commented 13 years ago
Not only do i want that honey stuff.
I want him.
Bring him to me.
I want him.
Bring him to me.
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27. Judge-Jake commented 4 years ago
I wonder what that guy is doing right now? My guess is he's either asleep or he's making those things.
+53 1. Nifen commented 13 years ago