Are you kidding? It's very often available on tap in the UK, is available bottled all over Belgium, Luxembourg and France, and is one of the most popular beers in Spain.
You are mixing Spanish and French there. "Vive la Belgique" if you want to go that route. (I think, didn't check it and it was ages ago I studied French)
well, bugs isn't far off, bringing spanish into the equation. some say mayonnaise comes from 'mahonesa', which means 'from mahon', a town in menorca, one of the balearic islands, where the sauce supposedly comes from.
@ddddan all of the Netherlands was the Spanish Netherlands at one point, though indeed the Spanish stayed longer in control of the territory that's now roughly Belgium.
glad I scored 24/24 as a Dutchman :) Good questions! I was a bit disappointed that 'Willem' was sufficient for the king. But Antonie van Leeuwenhoek made up for that!
Can NOT believe I remembered Leeuwenhoek!!! (though I did miss the "u") I must've learned about him in 8th grade, which is several decades in my rear view mirror. Okay, that made my night.
^ In that case translate van Leeuwenhoek, Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Polder into English as well. Picking and choosing what to leave in the original language and what to translate into English is confusing.
somehow I allways assumed we shared a border with luxembourg aswell. Since we have the drielandenpunt (three-countries-point) where... ahum ok while typing I see the flaw in my logic (I never consciously thought about it, that's the problem)
I wanted to type the three countries but then thought hey if I type luxembour, belgium and germany, the netherlands isnt there haha.
My original point was gonna be something like: " I guess we share a point with luxembourg,not a border"
But we dont at all haha. Some things you just never have take a moment to think about. (like I dunno how many letters does the word municipality have... you probably don't know untill you count them. ) If I would ve lived in limburg (provence) I definitely would ve known
Easy to assume from an outsider view. Similar flag (just a different shade of blue) and Luxembourg was actually a part of the Netherlands until 1879, much longer than Belgium (1830).
Actually at one point the 'drielandenpunt' was a 'vierlandenpunt' (four corners point), as it was also touched by Neutral Moresnet which existed between 1816 and 1920.
How do you measure "most famous" for the beer? Most of the time I see that on this site, it's in a context in which there is no possible alternative to the right answer. In this case, I think Amstel is a viable answer. It is also a very popular beer, and I encountered it much more during my travels in Europe than I encountered Heineken. Ancedotal to be sure, but I think the question could be clarified. Either consider accepting Amstel, or re-word it, as the Heineken company brews both Amstel and Heineken brands.
Then the question should just ask which is the best-selling brand of beer. The best-selling version of something is usually the most famous, but not always. Pink Floyd has sold more albums than the Rolling Stones have, but I suspect the Stones are more famous. It just seems like a needless and easily corrected ambiguity.
I tried Fritessaus, Frietsaus, Joppiesaus, Fry sauce, Frenchfry sauce, potatsaus, potato sauce, french fried potato sauce, and then, out of desperation, tried mayo.
I learned to prefer Mayonnaise on my fries because of my Mom, who drowned her fries in it. My brother and sister preferred ketchup and my Dad wouldn't eat fries at all! Whatever he ate had to include a bowl of rice! Dysfunctional family?
I knew it. I still remember the first time I ever saw someone put mayonnaise on a french fry. It was at a little falafel stand near the train station in downtown Amsterdam. But I don't think I realized what it was, such a foreign concept it was, until I saw people doing it again later at a McDonald's.
It just irks me a little to see European and other First World countries getting such silly country quizzes ("Wooden shoe", "Most popular french fry topping"). Why can't we just have a normal country quiz for every country, regardless of its location or reputation? Sure, the First World countries would be easy then, but where does it say a quiz has to be hard? Why can't we see normal geographic questions in these quizzes?
Maybe replace/update the Shell question? Shell already dropped the "Royal Dutch" part after giving up the dual-share structure and moving its head office to London.
Anyways, 14/24, not bad for a American.
I wanted to type the three countries but then thought hey if I type luxembour, belgium and germany, the netherlands isnt there haha.
My original point was gonna be something like: " I guess we share a point with luxembourg,not a border"
But we dont at all haha. Some things you just never have take a moment to think about. (like I dunno how many letters does the word municipality have... you probably don't know untill you count them. ) If I would ve lived in limburg (provence) I definitely would ve known
I don't mean to sound harsh but I like your quizzes a lot and this sort of question is silly.
Nice
nice