I had never come across servers greeting customers in their native tongue until I moved to Australia, where this happens in rare cases to me at Thai restaurants with either a hello or thank you. Normally, this would happen only if you are in a group and never by yourself. Only rarely, have I ever received the Thai greetings when alone since I don’t even look Thai. I did receive a mixed greeting once around 3 weeks ago and that was “thank you ka”. In Thai, the phrase for thank you ends with “ka”, so the “ka” was redundant anyways.
@@bereng4719 Catherine’s frequent catchphrase. I feel like this was pre-recorded cause it’s always said in the exact same tone. This along with “No way”, “my god”, and “No”.
@@gregory64963 Arabic food can vary by country the same way Hispanic food varies by country. A lot of people in USA think Hispanic food is just burritos and tacos, but that’s just Mexican food. Spain has a different type of cuisine despite also Hispanic like Mexico. I had only been to Morocco, and they have great French tacos, which is basically like a burrito.
Unless the restaurant has a rule against letting people under 12 have kids meals. I remember this old buffet called Hometown Buffet which allowed kids to eat for free, but once you were an adolescent, you had to pay an adult price.