Sunday, January 24, 2010

I am a culinary school graduate in Las Vegas, and want to find work in Italy...any Ideas

I am a culinary school graduate in Las Vegas, and want to find work in Italy...any Ideas?

Cooking & Recipes - 1 Answers
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1 :
before u graduated from school u should have taken a followship or some kind of internship over there you should have talked with ur chief or a counsler to help u with that



Saturday, January 16, 2010

Is Italy dangerous for women

Is Italy dangerous for women?
I'm 16, and going to Italy for school, some people have told me that I should try and stay with a guy, like a guy in my class, or at least with a big group of girls because the men there can be dangerous, I'm not saying they are, thats just what someone told me. I'm kinda scared now that imma be like kidnapped or something, is this true? Is italy dangerous for women?
Other - Italy - 9 Answers
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1 :
My sister and I were in Rome, Florence and Venice. We didn't have any problems, but then we were going places together, but in the nice neighborhoods, even after dark we were fine. Just be careful, don't do stupid things.
2 :
i think the italian men could be dangerous if the women given the opportunity to be.............. i dont know where do you live but sure in italy we dont have this safety problems, tou can go where you want....use your head and you are save in and out your and my country cheers
3 :
Italians are not dangerous people. Be smart and you'll be ok. Italians are actually very helpful individuals. Don't worry and enjoy Italia. Veni Vidi Vinci
4 :
Italian men are not dangerous at all! They will flirt with you and talk to you and give you compliments, but if you don't like it, just ignore and they will not harass you. Even when they flirt, they do not do it in a harassing way so don't be scared. I love going to Italy... beautiful country, good food, nice people and the men are very good looking :)
5 :
italy is not dangerous,..there r a lot of foreigners in italy from the balcans, albania ans checoslovakia that r refugees and sometimes they r still not adjusted to that new enviroronment and cannot find jobs and struggle there a lot so they look very desperate and might do something desperate, but everyone is pretty much very nice and cordial...have fun and fall in love! nothng to worry
6 :
Oh for goodness sake, Italy is probably safer for women than your home town. Just go and enjoy yourself, and mix with the kids you normally mix with, you don't need 'protection'. The only thing you need to be careful of pickpocketing. So make sure your bag/purse is with you at all times. When sitting in a cafe, wrap the strap around your wrist or ankle, don't put it on a cafe table or leave it beside your chair. Other than that you'll be fine.
7 :
ciao I am an italian girl and trust me it isn't true the italian men don't be dangerous.!!! don't be scared and enjoy italy it is wonderful!!!! ciao ciao
8 :
I was there last year and it didn't seem anymore dangerous than American cities of similar size. If you really need help, tons of people spoke English.
9 :
i'm an italian man and i'm waiting for a woman from usa to kidnap her and after doing blowjob withiut consens



Friday, January 8, 2010

How can I locate english schools/universities/trade schools in Italy

How can I locate english schools/universities/trade schools in Italy?
My boyfriend of 5 years and I want to go to Italy for a few years before settling back down in the US. I want to participate in the study abroad program available at UConn, but he wants to do something with holistic health (massage, acupressure, chiropractic, etc.) I'm graduating soon and would like to move sometime next summer or so, but for him to start a two-year program here would set us back, time-wise. How can I locate schools in Europe that teach in english? We are learning Italian (I took three years in high school), but taking classes in Italian would make the workload gruelling.
Studying Abroad - 1 Answers
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1 :
Do an online search or contact english universities in Italy and ask them.



Friday, January 1, 2010

How would you say these phrases in Japanese

How would you say these phrases in Japanese?
"I went skiing twice with my school, in Italy and Austria. I want to go skiing in Japan one day!" "Make sure you're well prepared. Don't forget anything!" <-(as in packing to go somewhere) "Have you ever skiied before?" "Either way, I hope you have fun! And be careful!" Thank you!
Languages - 3 Answers
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1 :
"私は日本の一日のうちにスキーに行きたいイタリア、オーストリアでは、私の学校で二回スキーに行った!" -> "I went skiing twice with my school, in Italy and Austria. I want to go skiing in Japan one day!" "あなたはよく準備していることを確認します。何かを詰めることを忘れてはいけない!" -> "Make sure you're well prepared. Don't forget to pack anything!" "あなたは今までマリファナに酔ったことがありますか?" -> "Have you ever skiied before?" "いずれにせよ、私はあなたが楽しいと思っている!そして、注意してください!" -> "Either way, I hope you have fun! And be careful!"
2 :
I'm assuming casual conversation. 「私は学校で2回スキーした。イタリアとオーストリアで。いつか日本でスキーしたいな!」 「ちゃんと準備して、忘れ物のないようにね!」 「スキーしたことある?」 「どっちにしろ楽しんでね!気をつけてね!」
3 :
English sentence structures work a bit differently from Japanese ones. As such, the ordering (as well as some wording) has to be altered for it to make sense. But don't worry: the meaning will still be pretty much the same. (1) "I went skiing twice with my school, in Italy and Austria. I want to go skiing in Japan one day!" --> (polite) イタリアとオーストリアで学校のみんなと2回スキーをしました。 いつか日本でもスキーをしたいです! [itaria to oosutoria de gakkou no minna to ni-kai sukii wo shimashita. itsuka nihon de mo sukii wo shitai desu!] --> (casual) イタリアとオーストリアで学校のみんなと2回スキーをした。 いつか日本でもスキーをしたいな! [itaria to oosutoria de gakkou no minna to ni-kai sukii wo shita. itsuka nihon de mo sukii wo shitai na!] ***The 'wo' in "sukii wo shita/shimashita" and "sukii wo shitai" can be omitted when speaking.*** In Japanese, it wouldn't make much sense to say "...with my school" (it can, but it'd sound really odd), so it's been substituted with "...with everyone from school". ---Ignore the line breaks in the sentences, I only did it to prevent them from getting cut off--- (2) "Make sure you're well prepared. Don't forget anything!" --> (polite) よく準備して、何も忘れないで下さい。 [yoku junbi shite, nanimo wasurenaide kudasai.] --> (casual) ちゃんと準備してよ。何も忘れるな!(rougher, guy's way of talk) /or/ 何も忘れないでね!(softer, girl's way of talk) [chanto junbi shite yo. nanimo wasureru na! /or/ nanimo wasurenaide ne!] (3) "Have you ever skiied before?" --> (polite) スキーをしたことがありますか? [sukii wo shita koto ga arimasu ka?] --> (casual) スキーをしたことがある(の)? [sukii wo shita koto ga aru (no)?] ***The 'no' is there because there are people who choose to end their sentences with it. I can't really explain what it's FOR (usually for emphasis), but it wouldn't make a difference whether it's there or not. And again, the 'wo' can be dropped.*** (4) "Either way, I hope you have fun! And be careful!" --> (polite) とにかく、楽しむといいですね。それと気をつけて下さい! [tonikaku tanoshimu to ii desu ne. soreto ki wo tsukete kudasai!] --> (casual) とにかく、楽しんでね。それと気をつけてね! [tonikaku tanoshinde ne. soreto ki wo tsukete ne!] ***You could use どっちみち [docchimichi] also for 'either way', but I don't like the way it sounds and it might not fit in well here. "tonikaku" means more along the lines of 'anyway'. In a casual conversation, I'd feel more comfy using ま [ma] which is like "well..." (i.e. "well, I hope you have fun!"). I hope that helped!