You inadvertently just gave me a tour of my new home in about 8 months. I was nervous about moving, but the beauty has me already packing. Danke/Grazie!
I don't know the countries of Europe, but this Italian city is an extraordinary city. May God give me the opportunity to go to Italy one day and especially to this luxury city.❤️❤️❤️❤️
Loved you volg.. i was wondering if i should stay in bolzano and after your video i definitely would ,, i will stay for 2 nights. I wanted to ask do you need i car inside bolzano?
Ho avuto la sfortuna di capitare a Bolzano un 30ina di anni fà (gita organizzata in pullman,Bz,Trento,Insbruck per i mercatini di natale) ,il ricordo migliore di Bz è stato un ristoratore che alla mia richiesta di un caffè in italiano ha finto di non capire (*),si lo sò anche per un tedesco la frase "posso avere un caffè?" può risultare incomprensibile,unico caso in cui ni sono sentito vittima di razzismo in italia,molto diverso il trattamento a Trento e Insbruck dove perfino gli austriaci parlavano un Italiano decente,immagino che ora la questione sia ulteriormente peggiorata a causa dei legaioli,no problem non sono più tornato e i miei soldi li ho spesi altrove... (*) la voglia di piantare un casino chiamando i vigili urbani è stata forte,poi ho immaginato che mi sarei trovato di fronte degli xenofobi in divisa,quindi ho lasciato perdere... PS Nato e cresciuto a Milano .
Sry for your experiences....I've heard that there is still at times tension. I do have to say that everyone was really kind, and I did love Bolzano, b/c even with so much blurred culture ( whh I love to) the people were very kind
@@fasullodavveroil 70% della popolazione di Bolzano è di lingua italiana. È in provincia che le cose sono completamente diverse, ovvero la maggioranza assoluta nelle valli parla tedesco come prima lingua
@@lorenzor2555 Ne prendo atto,se dovessi andare a Trento o Innsbruck in futuro eviterò bolzano come la peste,dopo >30 anni non mi è ancora passata e credo non passerà.
🇮🇹 🤓In the province of Bolzano, 69.4% of the population belongs to the German linguistic group, 26% of South Tyroleans belong to the Italian group, while Ladins represent approximately 4%. In the province of Bolzano only 5 municipalities out of 115 have an Italian majority. Another 8 have a Ladin majority. The 102 municipalities have a German majority, but that's not what you think: here they speak a variant of Bavarian German that changes from valley to valley (it may happen that someone from Prissiano and someone from Dobbiaco don't understand each other). Also, 95% of people will notice that you are not German and will therefore start speaking to you in Italian to help you (and "I want to speak German to learn" will not help you). Added to all this is the fact that many South Tyroleans sometimes do not understand standard German because it is different. The linguistic panorama of the city of Bolzano is quite varied. Since the significant part of the inhabitants comes from Southern Italy, Latin America and beyond, the language chosen is predominantly Italian (3/4 of the population). Despite this, the native inhabitants are mostly bilingual, as is the teaching in schools. German, however, is the predominant language in the neighboring towns, so you only need to travel a few kilometres. In Bolzano, for work reasons, a bilingual driving license is required to access public tenders, even less so in the commerce and catering sector. (Google Translate)
Every German speaker in South Tyrol can perfectly understand the standard German. We grow up with German TV and in school we also speak the standard German.
@mrHello420__ Oh, I'm sure. It's so interesting though b/c the 2 languages are so different. I was definitely so fascinated by the culture there, and the food & hospitality was amazing.
great vlog. thanks for sharing. at 17.35 you were referring to a 3rd language and named it 'ladin'. i have not been to Bolzano and i dont beleive there is a shot in the video about the sign you refer to with the 3 languages, but could the third language you are referring to be Latin language en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin
It's Ladin, I wrote it on the screen, along with pronunciation, and I give a bunch of info on it on my previous videos in the Dolomites. Our crazy drive the day (s) prior really did a job on my equilibrium. I also mentioned Ladin in the very beginning regarding languages & culture. Thanks for commenting 🙂 please be sure to subscribe ♥️
Very nice town and filming but the ending is just sad. Germans and Swiss have no idea how to cook. 2 hot dogs and a pile of french fries for probably 22 Euros.