I've been living in Switzerland since the end of December. It's got me thinking of many of the things a new immigrant would have to deal with when getting used to living in the States.
Numbers and dry goods are today's topics, as yesterday I went to buy some fabric from a local shop. If you were lucky enough to live in an area already settled by 'your people', language wouldn't be too large of a problem, but I'd think you'd still need to purchase in American measurements.
If you weren't lucky enough, you'd certainly need to learn your numbers as well as the American systems of measurement -- alongside with all of the common politenesses that can be missing when you don't know the language or culture. (I can't small talk, so I might be seen as a Suspicious Young Person until they find out Swiss-German isn't my native language.)
It doesn't seem that difficult until you're thrust into buying items with different names, at different sizes, at which point you just have to wing it. One easier point than now is they trusted instinct more than a thermometer or temperature-dials when cooking. (For the record, my cookies were fine. They looked nothing like my grandmother's, but they were still quite edible!)
Did English/Other Language dictionaries exist during our time? Must look on eBay for period German lessons!
Numbers and dry goods are today's topics, as yesterday I went to buy some fabric from a local shop. If you were lucky enough to live in an area already settled by 'your people', language wouldn't be too large of a problem, but I'd think you'd still need to purchase in American measurements.
If you weren't lucky enough, you'd certainly need to learn your numbers as well as the American systems of measurement -- alongside with all of the common politenesses that can be missing when you don't know the language or culture. (I can't small talk, so I might be seen as a Suspicious Young Person until they find out Swiss-German isn't my native language.)
It doesn't seem that difficult until you're thrust into buying items with different names, at different sizes, at which point you just have to wing it. One easier point than now is they trusted instinct more than a thermometer or temperature-dials when cooking. (For the record, my cookies were fine. They looked nothing like my grandmother's, but they were still quite edible!)
Did English/Other Language dictionaries exist during our time? Must look on eBay for period German lessons!
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