It is not an architecture influenced by Germany, it is an architecture that is still very present in Troye for example. It was very present in a large part of France in the Middle Ages. There are still a few buildings of this type (half-timbering) scattered throughout France, including in Paris
I actually did go to Colmar and it’s indeed beautiful but I found it to be very boring and honestly just a smaller version of Strasbourg. Decided not to include it in the video but I’m glad I went to check it out :)
Ce n'est pas une architecture influencé par l'Allemagne, c'est une architecture que l'on retrouve encore très présente à Troye par exemple. Elle était très présente dans une grande partie de la France au moyen âge. On retrouve encore quelques bâtiments de ce type (colombage) un peu partout disséminée en France y compris à Paris.
Lol, those Swedish elderly ladies were definitely having a panic attack when you were talking to them. The Swedes and Finns are really the introverts of Europe.
C'est un style médiéval, comme partout en france .... Et la cathédrale est de style gothique, un style inventé par les français ... Donc ... L'influence allemande, se retrouve surtout dans le langage, certains plats, et l'amour de la biere 😁😁
@@adamjmatheson Don't get influenced by this random guy haha you were right - yes Strasbourg and the whole region did belong to the German empire in the past
As a tourist you absolutely don't have to be fluent in French, but for Christ, use at least Google Translate on your phone to hear the right pronunciation of the city you're traveling in.
@@DannyZahnstein I don't give a shit how you pronounce it in English. He spoke French to French people. There's not tricky sound here. It's "boor" not "burg" When i'm in England, I talk about London, not Londres.
That Moroccan guy is definitely 'sus'. Unless you're a Moroccan of Jewish origin, which I assume he isn't, it's very strange that he decided to learn Yiddish. I don't know whether he's Muslim or not but I'd be cautious with this individual.
It is not an architecture influenced by Germany, it is an architecture that is still very present in Troye for example. It was very present in a large part of France in the Middle Ages. There are still a few buildings of this type (half-timbering) scattered throughout France, including in Paris
regarding the alcohol metal guy, he is a legend, everybody knows him in strasbourg, he's been around for decades
dude made me wanna start drinking again
You should visit Colmar too, it's a lovely place
I actually did go to Colmar and it’s indeed beautiful but I found it to be very boring and honestly just a smaller version of Strasbourg. Decided not to include it in the video but I’m glad I went to check it out :)
Ce n'est pas une architecture influencé par l'Allemagne, c'est une architecture que l'on retrouve encore très présente à Troye par exemple. Elle était très présente dans une grande partie de la France au moyen âge. On retrouve encore quelques bâtiments de ce type (colombage) un peu partout disséminée en France y compris à Paris.
Lol, those Swedish elderly ladies were definitely having a panic attack when you were talking to them. The Swedes and Finns are really the introverts of Europe.
can't wait to go film videos there
Love your videos man. Part of the reason I've gotten into learning languages.
thank you man I'm so happy to hear that
I am from Alsace and the place has its own identity
The cathedral of Strasbourg was the tallest bulding in the world from 1647 to 1874.
wow I didn't know that
It was a pleasure to meet you
בהצלחה
likewise my friend. תודה רבה :)
C'est un style médiéval, comme partout en france .... Et la cathédrale est de style gothique, un style inventé par les français ... Donc ... L'influence allemande, se retrouve surtout dans le langage, certains plats, et l'amour de la biere 😁😁
Strasbourg!
where was the ending to the food review
Food was mediocre and also took way too long to arrive but the design of the place was super cool.
🇷🇸🦅💪🏼
The architecture is alsacian not german and Alsace never belonged to Germany even :back in the day".
this is why I love youtube I get to make mistakes and even learn from 'em sometimes. thank you:)
Ever heard of Elsass-Lothringen?????
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alsace%E2%80%93Lorraine
@@adamjmatheson Don't get influenced by this random guy haha you were right - yes Strasbourg and the whole region did belong to the German empire in the past
Pourtant les mots c'est quasiment les mêmes désolée
LFG
As a tourist you absolutely don't have to be fluent in French, but for Christ, use at least Google Translate on your phone to hear the right pronunciation of the city you're traveling in.
That's how you pronounce Strasbourg in English. Go lecture French people on how to pronounce "New York"...
@@DannyZahnstein I don't give a shit how you pronounce it in English. He spoke French to French people. There's not tricky sound here. It's "boor" not "burg"
When i'm in England, I talk about London, not Londres.
You and your friend mention the local Jewish community but why didn't you actually show it on your video?????
classic american dumping on the person with least in life.
@ 🙄
That Moroccan guy is definitely 'sus'. Unless you're a Moroccan of Jewish origin, which I assume he isn't, it's very strange that he decided to learn Yiddish. I don't know whether he's Muslim or not but I'd be cautious with this individual.
The Moroccan guy never learned Yiddish, he learned Hebrew. How is that "sus"?
Btw I am the Moroccan guy.