HorseGirlAbby
Enabler
Houston was never on thereI suggest permanently crossing Houston off your list then.![]()

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Houston was never on thereI suggest permanently crossing Houston off your list then.![]()
Ha! Yeah, that all is in America too, ya know. I was raised in a pocket of America that speaks a European dialect that no longer exists in Europe. Linguists from their country came here to interview us to rediscover their roots. American Indians, Orthodox Jews, Muslim communities, Korean enclaves, southern Baptists, Polish Catholics, Amish, Hindus, Wiccans, Creole, Black communities, Hispanic communities, Samoans, Inuit, hillbillies, yuppies, rich, poor . . . That's not even getting into the land: tundra, temperate forest, desert, plains, subtropical wilderness, mountain ranges, canyons, sand dunes, beaches, extinct and active volcanoes, Pacific Islands, etc., all for the low low price of exploring my own country, with enough new to see, hear, and do that I'd need several lifetimes to explore it all before even thinking about needing to go to another country to find something new. Most people don't even bother exploring everything in their own state, let alone country. The fact that other folks can't always see the incalculable variety in their own backyards is of no concern or interest to me.
Which is how us Buckeyes like itantarctica, because the entire continent is cold, and there's less to do there than in rural Ohio................. which, if you ignore the Dollar General and the restaurant, isn't much.
Fair point!
most countries at this point have people and cultures from all around the world living within their borders. The majority of those have been assimilated (to an extent) the culture of the country they are in. Greek American food tastes very different to "authentic" Greek food, for example. I feel like visiting another country is when I can truly get a feel for another culture. I may be able to speak English, or have close friends from other ethnicities, but I can't say I know the ins and outs of their culture.
I hope I don't come off as rude; all this is my personal opinion as a European, whose culture heavily encourages traveling. The US is a very different place than what we have here in Europe. I cannot fathom how vast, and diverse it is; its vastness alone may be enough for diversity to stay, well...diverse. Not as easy to do here. I'm totally with you on finding the beauty within our countries first
I am interested though, what's that European dialect no longer spoken in Europe?