
Hey bros austriaci,
Un mistero culturale divertente ha inventato un mio amico studentesco di Kosovar. Vengo dall’Ungheria ed era inorridita dal fatto che gli ungheresi afferrassero un tessuto e soffivano il naso proprio in classe. Secondo lei, รจ impensabile a casa, le persone continuano a annusare invece e vai in bagno per soffiare il naso.
Ora stiamo cercando di mappare la “etichetta del naso” in Europa. Va bene suonare il clacson in un tessuto in pubblico o le persone ti guardano come se avessi appena commesso un crimine?
Aiutaci a sistemarci una volta per tutte: chi ha ragione: gli soffiatori o gli sniffer?
https://i.redd.it/qzauvsjl40mf1.png
di TheSantiHD
10 commenti
Blowing
Blowing normal, sniffling not. If you sniffle too much you get told to blow your nose.
Blowing like into a napkin/tissue or like you do on a construction site?
The former is ok, the latter not so much.
If you sniff to much someone will hand you tissues, tell you to go get some or that it will get stuck in your brain (mostly old people say that)
Picking the saltmine
Blowjobs are allowed in Austria, but definitely not in public ๐
Blowing your nose is the thing you do… but I tell my students to step out of the classroom and wash their hands before they sit down again. It’s the only way I don’t get sick every other week as a teacher.
Blowing, because sniffling is viewed here as bad manners and is annoying to others.
Sniffing acceptable, if not > sniffing preferred over blowing. Blowing if nothing else helps, or if you get a tissue from someone
Blowing also goes for Italy. If you’re sniffing in public, like in the train or bus, you will soon get offered a “tempo” to finally blow your nose. What a strange cultural difference ๐
+1 for blowing, I don’t mind sniffing but in a professional setting blowing is always preferable (I know how wrong that sounds)