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A safe response

Once in Germany when I was still a youngster, I was asked where I came from and I answered that I was a Parisian - ein Pariser. But I was told to avoid the word, which also apparently means a condom!

Editor's note: A Parisian can play it safe by saying Ich komme aus Paris - I come from Paris.

Sent by: Xavier

Comments

Edward 2010-12-24

Equally "Ich bin ein Engländer" means "I am an adjustable spanner" but "Ich bin Engländer" is "I am an English person".

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a german 2008-04-24

Kennedy said totally right when he said Ich bin ein Berliner because only in the other areas of germany a Berliner is someting to eat. in Berlin they use Pfannkuchen for this. So everyone understood what Kennedy wanted to say.

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Sinead 2008-05-04

What Kennedy said would be the English grammatical equivalent to saying "I am a Danish"- people would still have understood what it was that he meant.

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Joe 2006-06-30

I also made a similar mistake, when a German friend asked me where my father was from, I made the mistake of saying er ist Irin, he is an Irishwoman, instead of er ist Ire.

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Alanna 2006-07-06

That reminds me when I was about to leave on a trip to Paris, my Grandpa said Grüß die Pariser schön!- literally "greet the condoms", while what he meant of course, is "Give Parisians my regards". The rest of the assembled family had a good laugh, especially as I was going with my new boyfriend ...

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Schnee 2006-01-23

It's possible to say ich bin ein Berliner; or ich bin ein Pariser without getting strange looks, actually - people might remember Kennedy when they hear the first line, but there's no automatic connotations of jelly donuts or condoms in either case outside of that.

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Ken 2005-12-22

I also made a similar mistake. Instead of saying Ich bin Ire, I am Irish, I told them I was mad: Ich bin irre.

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Gwen 2005-11-18

Incidentally, the same faux pas was made by John F. Kennedy when he gave his famous speech in Berlin. Saying, ich bin ein Berliner translated into 'I am a jelly donu', although he meant to say he was a citizen of Berlin. The correct phrase would have been ich bin Berliner, without the definite article ein. Just as ein Pariser is a condom, ein Berliner is what the colloquial term for a jelly donut. Oh well, he had good intentions!

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