noesdeayer,
European host countries' people speak their own official languages just as L.A countries do. The French speak French to me unless I'm in the tourists' area that's a 20 minute walk away. I respect how workers there have to switch languages every minute. That's hard to do on call for 16 hours a day. I feel sorry for them. I cited the latter scenario to 'Redbeanz' so that she'd see things from that Parisian lady's position rather than feel disrespected. Nothing good comes from sweating the small stuff in a country where you aren't even a legal resident.
I envy your speaking Spanish and Portuguese. Thanks for all your inrfo. I didn't know that Colombians speak the best LA Spanish. (Lyon speaks the best French.)
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To those who find distinguishing nationalities "psychedelic" (meaning 'psychic' perhaps?), it isn't. It's called observing others.-how they dress and style themselves (although jeans seem ubiquitous), their physical features, gestures, builds, how they interact with others, move and negotiate public space. Different languages use different facial muscles even. No national culinary emblems need be worn!
Look at how street thieves choose targets, for example. Or at how as our economies change or suffer, we see newer and more visitors from Asia. In the past 2 years, we've had more coverage about and with different African countries and their peoples. This summer with the refugees' crises, we've become better able to notice which refugees are from exactly where in Africa and the Middle East.