Just as an anecdotal aside with money. In Ukraine, I could count with two fingers the number of places that did NOT welcome American money instead of the local gryvna, including the small town that was off the beaten path of tourists.
That said, very few of them spoke English, which made the value of having a translator ever more handy (though I found myself saying ‘Spasiba’ frequently, along with ‘pazhalista’, and even more importantly ‘peva’).
I can top that easily with an anecdote recollected on British TV the other day by none other than the Duke of Edinburgh (incidentally, the author of some spectacular gaffes himself). Apparently an American visitor to Windsor Castle once said something like: “nice place, but why did they build it so close to the airport?” You couldn’t make it up…
<splutters and coughs on lunch>
We need a good laughing smiley.
I do hope the Duke replied with something along the lines of…“but I wanted to watch the planes as they take off and land…”
not to defend ignorant americans (i’m the girl that refuses to step on foreign soil without knowing the langage), but our two neighbors accept american dollars willingly. changing money is entirely optional the closer you are to the border. americans are just used to using the same money over a large area, unlike europe where there is a new country every five minutes (or so i hear).
For fuck sake. So last month I was supposed to learn both Dutch and Czech before I could go on my business trip which was four or five days in each country and where I may never go again. Sure I learned thank you and hello and such but that was the extent of it.
Let me tell you, I’ve been to almost 40 countries on every continent except Antarctica. If there is one language that you must know to get around in this world, it’s English. I can speak enough Spanish to get around, I used to speak some Malay when I spent a lot of time in Malaysia and I can order a beer in twenty different tongues but the most usefull thing for me is being polite and speaking English.
Uh… a number of businesses may, indeed, do so, entirely at their option and choice of exchange rate… but if you choose not to change your money, you may be in for some disappointment. Also, you’ll most probably get your change back in Canadian.
Yep, that’s the ticket. Nobody should be expected to learn every language of every country they visit, but a nice, friendly smile and a well placed “tak/thanks/merci/gracias/gracie” would do the trick.
I have never worked in the tourism industry, but I did work in international commerce. I met my share of idiots who had been transfered here for working at local factories of international companies that refused to learn the language even though they would be “stuck” here for a number of years. How stupid is that?
Liberia actually uses the U.S. dollar as their standard currency, and a few years ago there was a trend among some Latin American countries of “dollarization”, or pegging their currency to the dollar. Then their central bank reserves would be dollars, and I imagine that dollars would be acceptable there. Now that the dollar isn’t doing so well I don’t know to what extent this still being done.
Besides that, I imagine that many poorer countries would use dollars in everyday commerce due to their own currencies’ collapse, but I expect they would gladly accept Euros or Sterling or any first-world currency.
Not countries, but I understand most hotels in Europe, the Caribbean, and the better ones in South America and Asia will accept dollars. So do many restaurants, though for obvious reasons change it’s not guarranteed to get you american currency in change.
Or saying the possessive form in English. I suppose it would be the plural form, too, but we don’t get very many of those.
Well, my husband, who has been in Liberia many times, would disagree of your portraying it as “developed”. Same goes for most of Latin America. Nowhere in Europe have my dollars been accepted. You get local money or you have no money. Maybe your experience is different though.
In many semi-developed countries, small-time vendors who deal with tourists do so; China and Thailand, for two. IIRC, vendors in Hong Kong and Korea also asked me if I wanted to pay in dollars (though clearly they were the minority).
Many, if not most, of the islands in the Caribbean also take U.S. dollars willingly. Many places post the prices in both currencies and those that don’t will usually calculate the exchange for you.
Several years ago we were on a tiny island called Maupiti, near Tahiti, staying at a local place that was basically a collection of grass huts. We paid for our stay using American Express travelers’ checks. The owner (who spoke no English, BTW) phoned the bank to get the current exchange rate, whipped out her calculator and wrote down the correct amount we owed in U.S. dollars. And she smiled as she did so.
On earlier points, I concur completely that while one cannot be expected to be conversationally fluent in the language of every country one visits, it is a wonderful idea to know how to ask for the bathroom, the menu, and how much something costs. Most people appreciate your efforts if they can see you’re trying, and will meet you well beyond halfway. Also take along a phrase book or a translating dictionary. As a last resort you can point to the salient word or phrase if your pronunciation is so poor that you’re incomprehensible. We’ve found that to work, literally, all over the world. Except once, in Germany, where a snobby waiter pretended not to understand our pronunciation of the German word for “menu.”