• Your Huckleberry
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    781 year ago

    I went to college with a Spanish guy, Milo I watched this exchange.

    Girl: “What kind of Spanish are you?”

    Milo: …

    Girl: “You know, like Mexican or Colombian or Puerto Rican?”

    Milo “No no, I’m from España”

    Girl: “But like, which country did you grow up in?”

    Milo: " España…uh Spain"

    Girl: …

    Me: “There’s a country in Europe called Spain, its the place where spanish originated, like England is where english originated.”

    Girl: “Duh”

    Me: “That’s where he’s from.”

    Girl: *suddenly realizes how dumb this whole exchange has been and dies of embarrassment.

    • Blaze (he/him)
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      421 year ago

      At least she acknowledged it, that’s better than other people in this situation

      • Your Huckleberry
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        191 year ago

        Yeah, she was a very smart person, IIRC she was studying aeronautical engineering, literally a rocket scientist. Just one of those weird ways that you don’t think about your bias until it smacks you in the face.

    • Poot
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      491 year ago

      No, can confirm there are far too many people this ignorant. I work with a good number of them. I’m in North Georgia, and some of these people literally can’t find themselves on a map of the United States and believe the English folks stole English from the Americans…

      • Blaze (he/him)
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        241 year ago

        That’s just crazy to me. Remembers me one time I was in Canada, and we were visiting a museum with First Nation People depicted.

        A woman I was with asked me “So, do you also have First Nations in Europe?”

        Well…

        • @[email protected]
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          241 year ago

          We have the Sami in Sweden/Norway/Finland/Russia.

          They where treated like shit here as well… not genocide bad, but forcefull eradication of culture/language/religion during the 20th century bad.

        • IWantToFuckSpez
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          101 year ago

          Maybe the Basque are sorta culturally first nations. The language they speak is not related to any other language spoken in Europe. It’s the only surviving language that descended from pre-indo-European languages of prehistoric Europe.

          • Blaze (he/him)
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            71 year ago

            I mean, current Basque people are descendants of the original Basque people it’s not like someone arrived from another continent and slaughtered them.

            About the language, there are a few other non Indo-European languages: Finnic languages (including Finnish, Estonian) and Ugric languages (Hungarian)

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_Europe

        • @CurlyMoustache
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          21 year ago

          Yes. I am a sami, what you would call “first nation”. There are many, many other kinds of indigenous peoples here in the Nordics

          • @spirinolas
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            1 year ago

            I’m very passionate about the Sami and very interested in their culture. There’s no doubt they are a historically oppressed people and indigenous to Sapmi.

            But let’s be rigorous here. They weren’t in Europe before everyone else like the First Nations in Canada. The Sami arrived in Europe, from the Urals in the 2nd millenium BC. By this time the Indo-Europeans and their languages were already spreading through Europe. The Neolithic farmers who mixed with the Indo-Europeans were there since the 7th millenium BC. The hunter gatherers they mixed with…were there since before the last ice age.

            You could make the case that the Basques are our first nations. That would be true of their language and culture. But the fact is, genetically, they are pretty much the same as their neighbors due to millenia of intermixing and contact.

            • @CurlyMoustache
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              11 year ago

              That’s why we don’t call ourselves “first nation”. We’re indigenous people

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 year ago

                  Ok I looked a bit further, the evidence for the first inhabitants of the region being ancestors of the Sami is based on linguistic studies with other Uralic languages. But it’s far from direct evidence. I always assumed it was based on archeological evidence.

      • @cmbabul
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        1 year ago

        I live in Seattle but I hail from the atl metro, I can confirm this is not uncommon, my mother asked me where Canada “ended” yesterday… she thought it was just above nyc

      • @orphiebaby
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        41 year ago

        My sister-in-law said she couldn’t have mayonnaise because she was intolerant to dairy.

        People are just dumb these days.

  • @dreadedsemi
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    231 year ago

    People in Spain don’t speak Spanish, they speak Mexicanish.

    • @Downcount
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      101 year ago

      Well to be fair: Some regions in Spain really like to prefer to call it “Castellano”.

      • Blaze (he/him)
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        81 year ago

        That’s the name used in the language itself, in English they would mostly use “Spanish”

        • teft's transporter clone
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          11 year ago

          They call it español here in Colombia. I have heard spanish referred to as castellano but not generally from the locals here.

          • Blaze (he/him)
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            41 year ago

            Indeed, it’s more used in Spain to differentiate it from Galician, Catalan, Basque, etc. In South America there is no need for that

            • @wieson
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              21 year ago

              In Paraguay they call it Castellano

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        Yes, because there are multiple Romance languages spoken in Spain, and they’re all “Spanish” to people who live there. Castellano is the one spoken in Madrid, so it’s what the rest of the world thinks of as Spanish, kind of like how Mandarin is often referred to as Chinese even though other dialects are equally Chinese.

  • @spirinolas
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    91 year ago

    I was expecting something else when I clicked this post. “En España se habla español” is something you would expect to hear from a Spanish Nationalist as a way of attacking Spain’s other languages.

    • @SomeoneElseOPM
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      31 year ago

      I initially wrote “hablan español en España” but I was corrected in the comments. I’m just a beginner!

  • chuso
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    1 year ago

    I had the opposite argument with one Indian guy when I was living in the UK.
    He was saying what people speak in countries like Mexico, Argentina, etc. cannot be called Spanish because they are not from Spain and instead they speak Mexican, Argentinian…
    I told him what they speak in those countries is still Spanish the same way that what they speak in the US is English even when they are not in England. He replied that what they speak in America is not English either but American instead.
    Then I realized how stubborn he was in his wrongness and just gave up.

  • @orphiebaby
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    31 year ago

    Every bit of this is glorious. ♥

  • @samus12345
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    21 year ago

    And it’s not like there’s a place called Englia where they speak English, either!

    • beanz
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      21 year ago

      i legitimately thought this for 3 years…

      …then i turned 4

  • beanz
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    11 year ago

    so no one is going to mention the fake moustaches on the eyebrows