Xièxiè, Taiwan!

To continue where we left off in the previous post on Taiwan, let’s have a look at some of the notable buildings and architecture. Taipei is a big city, and as one would expect, there is a variety of height, quality, and spacing of buildings. Ben and I stayed in an older, denser neighborhood called […]

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Taiwan, You Had Me At Ni Hao

Bao down to what may be East Asia’s friendliest and hippest country, especially the cool capital city of Taipei. Compared to other regional destinations like Japan, South Korea, and Hong Kong, Taiwan prices are much more reasonable, and English is spoken relatively well. Americans are welcomed there, and it’s not yet a tourist hotspot, at […]

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Wordplay – analytic vs synthetic

As mentioned in an earlier post, English is a mostly analytic language, while Czech is mainly synthetic. The core difference is how grammar is expressed. In analytic languages, grammar is indicated mostly through separate words and strict word order, which you can see in English. Synthetic languages express grammar mostly through changes to the words […]

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Czech, Please

I’m back in Prague, and things are the same but different in this dynamic place. After having been in Asheville for a few months, Prague feels more crowded and hectic than I recalled, and I suppose it might just be, as it continues its huge growth as a very popular city both to move to […]

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From Baku with Plov

I was blown away by Baku, figuratively and literally, and it sometimes wasn’t good, and I don’t plan to ever return. Azerbaijan is ranked as the most corrupt country in Europe, and after being compelled to pay my first-ever bribe to a police officer, I would believe it. But at the same time, I’m glad […]

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Bucharest, not Budapest

Friend (?) of the blog Vlad the Impaler founded Bucharest in the mid-1400s, so it’s a relatively young city in this region of the world. Its population is over 2 million, and despite still recovering from WWII and decades of crushing communist policies and neglect, it’s now quickly regaining ground. It’s even ranked as one […]

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Staking out Transylvania

I was surprised to learn that the main tourist hotspot cities in Romania’s Transylvania are historically German: Brașov, Sighișoara, and Sibiu. The Transylvanian Saxons dominated the region after merchants and craftsmen from today’s Luxembourg, Belgium, and Germany were invited by the Hungarian leadership in the 1100s to establish towns and trade in the region and […]

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Dan Brown in Town

Coincidentally, Dan Brown’s latest book, The Secret of Secrets, just released this month, is based in Prague. I bought an English language copy (surprisingly, it was less expensive than the Czech language version) and read it in five days, in time to finish it before a big book tour event held in Prague. I didn’t […]

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