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Things thai people do that make no sense

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56 minutes ago, kwilco said:

BTW - to those "thumbs down" people ---- 

The thumbs down icon is the digital equivalent of a grunt — no effort, no reasoning, and no contribution. If you've got a point, make it. Otherwise, it's just drive-by disapproval.

Let's see who continues to grunt!


Ignore the grunters. It diminishes your otherwise good points when you start complaining about emojis.

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  • This will be another Thai bashing thread. I am guessing you can’t understand Thai language so everything they say you can’t make sense out of? The list will be endless.

  • scubascuba3
    scubascuba3

    Pulling out onto a busy road without looking

  • Nah, someone will find a way to turn it in a Trump bashing thread somehow.

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Insisting they cancel swimming lessons because its raining.

 

Also, another raining one I could never get my head around whilst working at a tec college .. "Teacher, we have to go home .. its raining" - Surely if its raining, you want to stay indoors and not chase off down the road on your motorbike?

My pet peeve with any nationalities who's first language is not English.  When speaking English please speak slower - especially first language Spanish speakers.  In most cases they have a wonderful  vocabulary but my mind does not translate their accent fast enough to keep up.  

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8 minutes ago, recom273 said:

Insisting they cancel swimming lessons because its raining.

 

Also, another raining one I could never get my head around whilst working at a tec college .. "Teacher, we have to go home .. its raining" - Surely if its raining, you want to stay indoors and not chase off down the road on your motorbike?

Maybe its a newer mechanism due to the polluted air

1 minute ago, Suetape said:

my mind does not translate their accent fast enough to keep up.  

"your mind" - is the key to the problem

6 hours ago, kwilco said:

sounds like you need to learn more Thai and how greetings and small talk work and why you seldom hear Thai people saying yes or know.

Interesting. 

Could you please explain this a bit more?

12 hours ago, sikishrory said:

Sitting on the floor to eat when there's tables and chairs.

A nonsensical thing farang do: sitting on a chair if there's a perfectly clean floor to sit

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1 hour ago, Lorry said:

Interesting. 

Could you please explain this a bit more?

 

Comes from China and in many S.E. Asian cultures - people seldom say hello or yes or no.

 The Thai greeting "sawatdee, khrap" is an artificial express derived from the sanskrit - the language used with royalty, (and the same origin as the word "swastika".)

When greeting you say some thing about the bleeding obvious - like "going shopping!" the reply being "going shopping" or just "shopping". If you are being asked a question, you generally say YES, by repeating the key word back to the person asking, or you negate that word to say NO, you are not doing that verb. - The affirmative instead of yes one tends to repeat what the other person says  "is this pork"? The answer is - "pork, khap" not yes it is - If someone says "it's raining" the answer is "raining, khrap" Obviously you also add "khrp/Kha" - to these simple phrase or sometimes just the polite ending particle, Do you like pizza? A-  like (it), or not...  (I) don’t like (it). THe pronouns are usually removed and just the key verb or noun left

THen as in China if you don't actually no what the other person is doing, you fall back on "Have you had your rice yet" -  friend of mine once misunderstood this and replied no - they practia;ly stopped the train to find him some food.

3 minutes ago, kwilco said:

Coms from China and in many S.E. Asian cutlures - people weldom say hello or yes or no.

That's true. 

And I was recently told that all these 'polite nothings' (like when an American buying a coke at 7/11 says 5 or 10 times 'thank you') were not the norm in my home-country either,  about 100 years ago.

Pull their motorbike away from the kerb into traffic, before starting the engine....very minor ... but also very stupid....

35 minutes ago, Lorry said:

That's true. 

And I was recently told that all these 'polite nothings' (like when an American buying a coke at 7/11 says 5 or 10 times 'thank you') were not the norm in my home-country either,  about 100 years ago.

most "manners" were adopted by Georgian royalty in Britain to keep te aristocrats under control.... most "manners" were adopted by Georgian royalty in Britain to keep the aristocrats under control....mannes, sense and common sense are all cultural constructs and a lot of self-centred expats have no idea that their idea of sense and sensibilities are not the same as th ountry they are living in - hence the rubbish posted on this thread

 

just ravel around western Europe and you'll see a huge variation in what people call "manners"

A lot of the language in this thread leans heavily on classic racist tropes. For example, the constant overuse of  the 3rd person - “they,” “them,” and “their” to generalize about an entire nationality creates an “us vs. them” narrative — as in “They always do this” or “They come here to...”, "they do this", "they do that")

You also see “thai” written with a lowercase "t", which isn't just lazy — it’s often used deliberately to dehumanize or stereotype, lumping a whole population into one negative caricature.

The underlying message seems to be that Thai people are somehow irrational or inferior, while "Westerners" are the benchmark for sense, logic, and reason — a tired and occido-centric arrogant comparison that says more about the poster than the people they’re describing.

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41 minutes ago, kwilco said:

most "manners" were adopted by Georgian royalty in Britain to keep te aristocrats under control.... most "manners" were adopted by Georgian royalty in Britain to keep the aristocrats under control....mannes, sense and common sense are all cultural constructs and a lot of self-centred expats have no idea that their idea of sense and sensibilities are not the same as th ountry they are living in - hence the rubbish posted on this thread

 

just ravel around western Europe and you'll see a huge variation in what people call "manners"

With all due respect, have you had a few sherries tonight?

30 minutes ago, roo860 said:

With all due respect, have you had a few sherries tonight?

I don’t drink. But I do read — you should try it sometime.  So, I’m  sober enough to see through cultural arrogance.

"With all due respect"… usually means none is coming, right? In reality it’s a form of passive-aggression - you’re about  to disagree or belittle, but don’t want to look openly hostile. Do you really think that using this  rhetorical shield works or are you intentionally trying to be confrontational? Respect is something you earn - as this is a discussion about Thai culture I find it hard to respect your contribution.

image.png.d4a05b5d31c4db243dd7c790f2c3df04.png = "grunter" - I see that someone  (x2) even grunted at an empty post.

On 7/8/2025 at 11:27 PM, kwilco said:

I see "grunter" is back.

I get them. Trump haters.

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