I'm pretty sure I wouldn't be allowed to pack it in my carry-on luggage and that it had nothing to do with the new laws regarding liquids on planes.
I am so packing dry shampoo this year. I'd never even heard of the stuff until I went to Bloodstock. By the end of the festival I forgot for a few minutes that I hadn't bathed in 4 days. It was the mud all over my clothes that gave it away![]()
So you've used it? Is it really like actually washing your hair?
I've heard of it but it's hard to believe it works as well as it sounds.
Ah cool. I'd be interested to learn how it translates![]()
Why not?
I might be wrong, but from what I recall it had something to do with aerosols. I do remember them asking me not to pack batteries into my check-in luggage too. I aught to ask someone to check the regulations long before I head off.
So is it the letter B that Pontius Pilot is mispronouncing?
Finnchick is totally right. For German and Dutch people e.g. English is a very, very simple language to learn. For Spanish people it's way easier to learn French than English. For a Japanese person it will probably be easier to learn Chinese than English etc. It really depends on how similar the languages are to the first language, not only because it'll be easier to learn the vocab and grammar but mostly, because of the familiar way of thinking/verbalising your thinking.
Heb je een broodje ei met ui?
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Heb je een broodje ei met ui?
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The pronounciation isn't really what's stopping a person from learning a language well, the use of Dutch is still very familiar to me even if I can't ask for an onion without people looking at me weirdly![]()