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AustriaBernd2020-10-18 10:57:35 · 6yNo. 103608reply
Nothing is comparable to the satisfaction of an "educated"American when he gets to type:
 
>Zip. Zilch.
United StatesBernd2020-10-19 03:24:56 · 6yNo. 103616reply
Zip. Zilch.
KansasBernd2020-10-19 15:09:11 · 6yNo. 103634reply
What happens when Europeans or Russians type this? Do they feel satisfaction or happiness?
GermanyBernd2020-10-19 15:17:29 · 6yNo. 103635reply
For me it's just a weird way of saying nothing, nada, zero, if I understand correctly.
RussiaBernd2020-10-19 15:19:39 · 6yNo. 103636reply
Eggsplain
KansasBernd2020-10-19 21:00:47 · 6yNo. 103650reply
I do not know, I am not educated enough to receive satisfaction from typing these words.
such cases
RussiaBernd2020-10-20 12:11:29 · 6yNo. 103668reply
i doubt its educational issue, maybe you are not bydlo enough? )
AustriaBernd2020-10-20 17:49:04 · 6yNo. 103671reply
Yeah, it is when they are very excited about something yielding Nothing. Zero. Nada. Zip. Zilch.
 
I assume it just feel similarly sophisticated to the recent fashion of putting emphasis on something by starting several consecutive sentences with the same expression.
 
This X is Y. This X is Z. This X is a, b and c. THIS X IS ALL OF THIS!
 
And sometimes this spans even a while paragraph. They must feel so accomplished.
United StatesBernd2020-10-21 04:26:13 · 6yNo. 103685reply
Go on and tell us the story behind your extrapolation
United StatesBernd2020-10-21 04:30:40 · 6yNo. 103686reply
Seems like more of a millennial thing. I agree it seems to track education though, in that I’ve only seen millennial women with college degrees do this.
TexasBernd2020-10-21 23:12:11 · 6yNo. 103694reply
I work in academia and I've never seen anyone type this
United StatesBernd2020-10-26 12:17:34 · 6yNo. 103809reply
There's a large potential gap between academics/intellugentsia and "people with degrees". I have a degree and I wouldn't consider myelf part of the former.
It's definitely a woman thing though. It's some kind of self-assurance.
GermanyBernd2020-10-26 12:20:11 · 6yNo. 103810reply
It's always so ridiculous when I hear about what's going on in American "universities" and colleges. They really are glorified schools in comparison to what we have in the Old World.
United StatesBernd2020-10-26 12:33:13 · 6yNo. 103811reply
It depends on where you go and what you study. I found it less like the usual horror stories you hear online, though that may have been due to my field of study and lack of social interaction. Can't say I can compare them to Euro schools though, no experience there.
KansasBernd2020-10-27 21:48:45 · 6yNo. 103848reply
This depends entirely on the school, the department, and your classmates. If there is a pro to the American system is that it offers a substantial amount of flexibility. In my PhD program in biochemistry there was someone that studied Greek classics for an undergraduate degree and someone who spent seven years as a bartender before going back to study for his PhD.
 
Both of those people are nontraditional students and have done really well, both publishing a lot as well as getting teaching/post docs at nice institutions.
 
Such a move would be impossible in say, the French or nordic systems.
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