Using Pasporta Servo to visit English-speaking countries
ya guyjohnston, 27 Februari 2008
Ujumbe: 20
Lugha: English
erinja (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 11 Machi 2008 7:59:19 alasiri
They are selling Bloater Paste, remember (heavy British influence) and they import much of their food (4 condiments from 4 different countries on a table, none of which are the country I'm in)
Rope (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 11 Machi 2008 10:14:17 alasiri
erinja:You're generally in the right region of the world, but try again.Ah, is it Misr? I will be there in June.
They are selling Bloater Paste, remember (heavy British influence) and they import much of their food (4 condiments from 4 different countries on a table, none of which are the country I'm in)
I shal make a point of looking.
erinja (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 12 Machi 2008 9:04:03 alasiri
Miland (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 12 Machi 2008 9:09:29 alasiri
Taciturn_ (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 12 Machi 2008 9:17:46 alasiri
erinja (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 12 Machi 2008 10:06:04 alasiri
Good guess!
Rope (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2008 8:13:06 asubuhi
erinja (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2008 3:56:27 alasiri
Rope:Doh, should have got that one. I did not know that Maltese was a Semitic language.Maltese is a Semitic language but it is written in Latin characters (it is the only Semitic language that is written with Latin characters in its standard form, in fact)
The Arabic written on packaging actually was Arabic. This was a surprise to me because I simply didn't expect to see that. But if you look at where Malta is geographically, it's very close to North Africa (Libya in particular). I think that they get many of the same exported products that goes to much of North Africa. That packaging was mostly dual language Arabic and English (and often produced in Germany). There were many, many products with packaging in Italian only, clearly made for the Italian market. And there was a large assortment of products made all over Europe. There were a very few things made in Malta, which seemed mostly to be local snack foods, plus some staples like bread and milk.
mnlg (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2008 4:02:32 alasiri
erinja:There were a very few things made in Malta, which seemed mostly to be local snack foods, plus some staples like bread and milk.That, and Kinnie!
erinja (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2008 4:56:01 alasiri
mnlg:I included that in the "local snack foods" category.erinja:There were a very few things made in Malta, which seemed mostly to be local snack foods, plus some staples like bread and milk.That, and Kinnie!
(Kinnie is their local soda. It's very much like the Italian chinotto. It's a soda made of bitter orange and herbs. It tastes... bitter and herby. And orangey.)
There is a second local drink I saw around but its name escapes me and I never got to try it.