| Q. | Europe!!?? | Related Search: Other - Europe | | | ok so my family is planning a vacation to europe and i was wondering where do you think we should go and see??
thanks!
| | A. | I think you should visit to Europe following this route:
Portugal - Porto, Lisbon
Spain - Madrid, Barcelona
France - Saint-Tropez, Cannes, Nice, Monaco
Italy - Milano, Turin, Verona, Vinezia, Bologna, Firenza, Roma
This are amazing places, and if you do that trip you can exparience a nightlife, beach and cultural holliday... it's amazing, and if you have more time, you should visit Switzerland, Holland (Amsterdam), Belgium (Bruxelles), Austria, and amzing Denmark, Sweden, and Norwega. | | | |
| Q. | How is Europe going to combat the influx of Middle Eastern immigrants? | Related Search: Other - Europe | | | I can't see how if they keep on their current path, that Europe will still be Europe in a few decades. Perhaps another Arabia though.
| | A. | Greece, as an important EU member state, started the combat first: by putting into sea the African emigrants.
Must be an EU standard or EU Directive. | | | |
| Q. | Why is Europe considered a separate continent while India is considered part of Asia? | Related Search: Geography | | | Europe and Asia have been together for much longer than India and Asia and the boundary between Europe and Asia is less substantial than the boundary between India and Asia.
KT Dyke: did you just make that up or do you have some support for your statement?
| | A. | The accepted boundaries of Europe and Asia came about for cultural reasons, not essentially geographic. It began with the ancient Greeks who recognised a boundary between their cultures and others in Asia Minor.
As the geography of the region became more understood, the arbitrary division of Europe and Asia extended along cultural lines, between societies viewed as 'Asian' or 'European'. Some of the boundaries follow geographic features such as mountain ranges and lakes, but that's because it also it marked tribal boundaries.
The accepted boundaries were established before the advent of modern geology and the understanding of plate tectonics. | | | |
| Q. | Where in Europe should my husband and I visit in March in Europe? | Related Search: Other - Europe | | | My husband works with the United Nations and he has been gone from the United States since last May. He came home for a visit (we have 4 children) in December and I'm planning to meet him somewhere in Europe in March for a little get-a-away for only the two of us. I would like to go somewhere with a lot of history to it but also romantic. We both love the Sea and learning history of ancient times and worlds.
| | A. | I really liked Dubrovnik in Croatia....its right next to the sea and has stunning coastlines with crystal clear waters!!
The town is quite small so only a few days is needed....if you want Split is only a few hours up the road and also on the coast.
I was really surprised at the history that these places have....like Split has the earliest or one of the earliest cathedrals dating back to the 4th C or something like that!
I went in April and found the weather warm, so I would say that it will be plesant I guess in March and maybe a little cool.
I really loved Croatia.....I hear the islands are wonderful there ( I missed out on them) and the National Lakes are great too ( again I missed out on them).
if you don;t mind travelling the area, then Lake Bled in Slovenia is really lovely and quite picturesque....but it depends on how much time you have. | | | |
| Q. | How can a student from Europe study abroad in America for college? | Related Search: Studying Abroad | | | Hi there, My cousin from europe really wants to study in america for college. She will be a senior this upcoming semester at her high school in europe. She is fluent and natural in english but most sschools in Europe or where she lives ;Brussels, dont teach in primary english but in french and what not. How can she find out about schools that accept international students and all the jibberish and what not she needs to know about the payments and admission criteria and stuff. Thanks.
| | A. | Almost every college and university in the US accept international students -- most even have a special office for that purpose. They will have to pay out of state tuition fees however. She'll also need to take the TOEFL test in Belgium. Some colleges may also require the SAT. You might have her start looking at colleges she'd like to attend and then contacting their international student offices directly. Once she has been accepted, she'll use that acceptance to go to the US Embassy and apply for her F1 visa. | | | |
| Q. | What related to Europe can be a theme for my term paper? | Related Search: Other - Visual Arts | | | I am going to Europe to study abroad for the semester. We have to write a term paper and have to visit 5 places in Europe to do "research" on the topic. What could be a good topic that would be easy to write about? The places I am already planning to visit are Vienna, Austria; Italy; Prague; Greece; Cinque Terre; and Paris.
| | A. | how about what European youth manage to do easily or get out of thinking about, by asking others to think for them. (or not) | | | |
| Q. | As Europe becomes more unified, do you think the Europeans will revert back to their imperialistic ways? | Related Search: Other - Cultures & Groups | | | In other words, will they strive to take back their former colonies, maybe not by military means (what military do they have really???) but by commercial/cultural means?
I see Europe becoming more and more controlling in a not so good way.
| | A. | the EU is an undemocratic union which wants to turn europe into a massive melting pot so we all lose our identity and become "europeans".
when the UK leaves the EU the better! it costs us money, they govern us, and they want to take away our heritage! its already under attack my scumbag politicians, ethnic minorities and rivalries between ethnic brits | | | |
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