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  1. Ahoj!

    We mostly don’t know anything about you. Our interactions with Czechs are limited to woefully unprepared tourists (hiking in the Alps in sandals) who need to be rescued by helicopter.

    You have a funny language that we occassionally make fun of.

    “Češka roba” (Czech stuff) means cheap and/or low-quality products.

  2. Ahoj! Big fan of Czechs, always super kind when I was there. Just confused why none of you speak English. My favourite long lost cousins though

  3. Beer, pečeni kureci with honey, white socks with sandals and I like Praha, most prolly will go again.

  4. If you say something is done the czech way, “ po češko” it is a bad thing,

    Also there is a stereotype of czech turists being very under equiped for slovenian hiking and they need to be rescued from a mountain in flip flops with a broken leg

  5. Weird_Cake3647 on

    We liked going to Prague and Brno, the food is familiar, the beer is good, no need to speak a foreign language (we spoke Slovene or Serbian), shared history, and it used to be quite cheap. Then the prices went up, so it’s now like Austria/Germany, which are closer.

    We used to tell ourselves we were ahead economically, that of course no longer holds true.

    In my field, a few students went to Prague for Erasmus and had a great time. People study Czech at Uni, I even learned it myself (wanted to read fluently because I found some good books in my field).

  6. Gold-Program-3509 on

    historically we percieve anything czech as low quality because of ussr influence. we see something made badly we say its czech made lol. except beer, we like czech alco

  7. I would say 99% of Slovenes perceive you as friendly, intelligent and industrious Slavic bros.
    We can also mostly understand what you’re saying, except in the end, the actual meaning is always something else.