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Americanized

   Well! I read most of the comments here, 18-Jan-02 jira
     Really, americanized. specially caugh 19-Jan-02 HahooGuru


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jira Posted on 18-Jan-02 10:52 AM

Well! I read most of the comments here, can not ignore any of them ...
just to add more on it,

You can be easily americanized if you intentionally make grammatical mistakes and do not bother to go through spell checker eventhough you know that you are poor speller. But it all happens as soon as you spend six months in US.

You are often condemned being Americanized when you say (after realizing) that the spices you put in your masu-bhat smells so bad if you do not change clothes after approaching kitchen.

I found one of my friend eating masu-bhat with semi-nude body because he said that he had to go back to his office after lunch. If our elders in Nepal hear this, that will be americanized.

When you go to Nepal in vaccation, you go on hiking like other guys in nepal and this is americanized.

If you do not bother to talk with cheap guys often spend their time talking about ..this muntri would have been the best..that is americanized.
HahooGuru Posted on 19-Jan-02 01:19 AM

Really, americanized.

specially caught me:
1. Spicy Dal-Bhat-Masu: Its true in Japan too. you surely
have to make sure that your clean your hand even if you
eaten with kata-chamcha. Make sure you you brush well,
or have xylthol. Its better you have dark Japanese styled coffee.

Lasson (garlic) and pyaaz will turn you real pakhe Nepali.
If you avoid eating, you are real Japanized in Japan,
and americanized in America. In Japan, Garlic chiken
item in restaurant comes with one CHEWING GUM stick.

2.
When you go to Nepal in vaccation, you go on hiking like other guys in nepal and this is americanized.