Advertisement:
Ohmygossip.com / Ohmygossip Couture / Celebrity Birthdays / Celebrity Deaths / Celebrity Baby News / Celebrity vacations / Reality TV news / Millionaires / Celebirty Travel News
NordenBladet.com / Society & Business / Travel & Culture / Home & Kids / Health & Spirituality / Helena-Reet Ennet´s blog / Daily news from Scandinavia / Royals / Climate crises
OHMYGOSSIP

10 Things you should never say to a Spaniard

OHMYGOSSIP — Living in a foreign country is a minefield, and it’s easy to fall back on easy stereotypes about Spain. Whether it’s comments about lazy work habits, UK outposts (think Gibraltar!) or macho men, there are plenty of things it’s better to leave unsaid on the south side of the Pyrenees, The Local mediates.

If you want to hold onto your Spanish friends then check out this list of ten things you should never say to a Spaniard:

1.”Aren’t you too old to be living with your mum and dad?” Close family ties, mama’s cooking and a tradition of attending the local university instead of moving away mean that many Spaniards remain ‘in the nest’ longer than their counterparts elsewhere. But the financial crisis left many Spanish 30-somethings unable to pay their mortgage payments and forced them to move back in with their parents, an arrangement that often pleases no one.

2.”You Spaniards are all so lazy!” We all know the stereotype of relaxed, siesta-sleeping Spaniards. Statistics tell a different story though: according to the OECD, people in Spain actually spend more hours at work a year than the Germans (1,665 versus 1,388). In fact, many Spaniards wish they could shorten their working day, a move supported by Spain’s ARHOE organization which says the country would be more productive if people spent less time on the job.

3.”Everything here’s really cheap!”
With over one in four people in Spain unemployed and many of the rest working for rock-bottom wages, the odds are good that a comment like this will upset someone within earshot. In a country where many university graduates are ‘mileuristas’, working for €1,000 ($1,250) per month, shopping sprees are not a common leisure activity.

4. “Spanish men are all such machos!” While you’ll still see plenty of facial hair around in Spain, it’s just as likely to belong to a laid-back hipster as a traditional Spanish macho man. Indeed, in recent decades Spain has made great strides in fighting domestic violence, and in promoting acceptance of homosexuality, making it one of the world’s more socially liberal societies.

5. “Which side of the Civil War did your family fight on?” Spain’s bloody Civil War (1936-1939) between the nationalists of Francisco Franco and the left-wing republicans remains a very sensitive issue in Spain. After Franco died in 1975, Spain tried to close the book on a dark time with a ‘pact of forgetting’ and a 1977 Amnesty Law which blocked legal punishment of any Franco-era crime. People are still reluctant to pick at these not-so-old wounds. Take this topic on at your own risk.

6. “What’s with the lisp?” Ah, the famous ‘th’ sound of the letters ‘c’ and ‘z’ (and sometimes ‘s’) in Spain. The tongue-biting accent of some regions of the country (but not Latin America) is often explained by an urban myth that Spaniards adopted it to please a king who spoke with a lisp. Nice story, but completely untrue.

7. “Why are you all so corrupt?”
While it’s true that bribes seem to have been as commonplace as breakfast bocadillos among Spanish politicians in recent years, accusing ordinary, tax-paying Spaniards of dishonesty is unlikely to make you any friends. All that money in Swiss bank accounts was taken from the public coffers, remember.

8. “Italian Parma ham is the best in the world.” It’s especially important to never say this to a Spaniard who’s wielding a ham-carving knife. Cured bellota ham from acorn-fed ibérico pigs is savoured by many Spaniards with almost religious reverence. Suggesting that hams elsewhere might rival it let alone surpass it is enough to get you chucked out of the charcutería.

9. “Isn’t Spain being hypocritical about Gibraltar being British when it has Ceuta and Melilla?”
If you want to get a Spanish politician worked up try comparing Gibraltar with Spain’s two North African enclaves. Spaniards argue, perhaps unconvincingly, that the two cities of Ceuta and Melilla were unoccupied before being Spanish, and that neither of them are colonies like Gibraltar, but rather full members of Spain with representatives in Madrid. A real can of worms this one.

10. “So where are all the sombreros?”
Sorry people, but Spain is not Mexico, no matter how much you might want it to be. You won’t see many cactuses here, and you’ll spot even fewer sombreros than you would in Mexico City. You’re also in for a let-down if you come expecting to eat chili: most Spaniards can’t deal with spicy food at all.

Look also:
10 Things you should never say to a French person
OHMYGOSSIP — Ah, France. The land of lazy workers, surrender and adulterers. Come again? Say that stuff to a French person’s face and chances are you’ve made them really angry. Here we’ve listed some of the worst things you can say to a French man or woman, The Local mediates.





Advertisement:





High quality & nature friendly luxury cosmetics from Scandinavia - ElishevaShoshana.com

Copyright © NordenBladet 2008-2023 All Rights Reserved.
Scandinavian / Nordic news and info in English.
Nordic News Service & Link Directory