در حالی که سایر کشور های اروپایی انتقال به جوامع بدون پول را انجام می دهند ، آلمان هنوز هم محبت سرسختانه به جیب پر از تغییر سست و سخت دارد. راشل استوارت نگرش بسیار ویژه آلمانی به پول را بررسی می کند.

راشل استوارت در مأموریتی برای تحقیق در مورد علائم عجیب و غریب زندگی روزمره در آلمان است. هر دو هفته یکبار او موضوع جدیدی را بررسی می کند – از آبجو گرفته تا برهنگی تا دستور زبان پیچیده – و سر می زند تا نکاتی را از خود آلمانی ها دریافت کند.

راشل در سال 2016 از انگلستان به آلمان نقل مکان کرد. او به عنوان یک تازه وارد نسبی ، چشم تازه ای به کلیشه های آلمانی می زند و تجربیات خود در مورد زندگی در آلمان را به اشتراک می گذارد. اطلاعات بیشتری را از Meet آلمانی ها در YouTube یا در dw.com/MeettheGermans پیدا خواهید کرد.
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37 پاسخ به “نحوه برخورد با پول مانند یک آلمانی | با آلمانی ها ملاقات کنید”

  1. "Schuld" does indeed mean both guilt and debt, but for the latter meaning usually the plural form "Schulden" is used

  2. One thing many people do or did, which were born in the 90s and before that: Still convert the price from Euro to Mark. xD

    Also, just carrying ~10€ with me, for the time, I decied to go to a Dönerbude. 😀

  3. I am still trying to figure out how the average German can carry such large quantities of money that they can be mistaken for drug dealers. This has got to be the only country where flashing huge quantities of cash does not garner attention from the police or even would be muggers. You couldn't do this in a million year in most other countries. In Canada, withdrawing $400 in cash is enough to have the police called on you.

  4. I´m also from Germany and i have also never heard "Pinkepinke" bevor today

  5. Well, honestly, "pinkepinke" has bothered me a lot. 'cause it's SOOOO MUUUUCH small coins that could be used no where!!!!!!

  6. Geld, Kohle or Pinkepinke, however you slice it, it's still bread

  7. Guess need to stop watching your videos when you got so much dough XD

  8. As a tourist, i spent 2 days in berlin and every shop and restaurants received credit card, when i saw this video, i am surprised alittle bit honestly and think that maybe berlin doesnt belong to germany😝

  9. Germans are tight like prison booty 😂

  10. Einziges Mal, an dem das Wort „Pinkepinke“ benutzt wurde war in dem Lied „Wer soll das bezahlen“ von Jupp Schmitz..

    Wer soll das bezahlen, wer hat das bestellt?
    Wer hat so viel Pinke-Pinke, wer soll das bezahlen?

  11. I'm 19 years old, a German native. I own a debit and a credit card. I used my debit card 2 times in 2019 and my credit card 1 time (for purchasing concert tickets on a UK website)
    I don't like it if I can't see how much money I already spent so I stick to cash 😂

  12. Geld, Kohle, Zaster, Knete, Mause, Moneten, Schotter, Kies, Asche, Pinke, Patte, Moos…

    Why there are so many german slang words for money? O.o

  13. Recorded in the beautiful city of Bonn 🙂 Has the money been picked up after the recording?

  14. She looks and sounds like a socialist.

  15. Wie kann man das Wort Pinkepinke nicht kennen? Wo lebt ihr…

  16. where the fuc did you find pinkepinke

  17. I have a better feeling of how much I'm spending when paying in cash so I prefer it over card payment
    also I'm pretty sure there are mainly Germans watching this

  18. Bis zu 20 € zahle ich auch lieber bar, weil ich da einen besseren Überblick habe. Außerdem mag ich es immer noch, mein Restgeld ins Sparschwein zu tun und damit alle paar Monate zur Bank zu gehen oder mir von dem Geparten etwas zu gönnen.

  19. Smart Germans, for knowing that privacy is far more valuable than convenience !

  20. 2:45 When you're on a date, talking about the price of vegetables 😂

  21. I think Pinkepinke is exclusively a term from Berlin.

  22. German impact on cash and cashless:
    In the 16th century "Guldengroschen" – a silver coin – minted in Joachimsthal were nicknamed "Thaler". Under this name it became the most common silver coin in Europe for four hundred years. And the name was adopted in many languages, e.g. in English as Dollar.

    The chip card or smart card was invented 1967 in Germany.

  23. Pinkepinke is my homie now.

  24. dept and guilt are actually not the same. Talking of dept, you translate it always into the plural form of guilt (Schuld) translated into "Schulden". Nobody in germany connects these words in his mind and the only thing that connects them is the origin where the german word for dept comes from.

  25. debt and guilty is not the same word in other countries? just recognized it the first time …
    strange …

  26. It amazes me how much us Singaporeans and Germans have in common. Both practical, both very much love a deal, both love complaining about the weather… 😂

  27. I personally prefer cash because you get a better feel of how much you are spending.

  28. Wer soll das bezahlen? Wer hat soviel Pinkepinke?

  29. What I would actually like to see is what the Netherlands did – don't make 99er prices and such. It leads to tons of small coin, more effort at the checkout, and to further extend the madness, a local supermarket has now put up a small coin exchange machine where you get a coupon that you can use at the checkout including getting it paid out. Oh and they also offer cash payout service there at the checkout now, like an ATM, as if the queues weren't long enough already. Strangely, there just putting up a machine was not their choice.
    And then you have even more pressure towards checkout machines to destroy even more jobs. The shituation is escalating. This is all concerted to push people towards compliance with cashless.

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