It's good to see you back again, Piotr! The photos are amazing. Uzbekistan appears to be a beautiful and interesting country. Also, I admire anyone who can communicate in two languages that have no common origin and even different letters.
Hi Tom, Thank you very much for your kind words. Oh, the letters are not so different. Grammar is also similar. Whether Russian or English, both are Indo-European languages. 🙂
Since there are so many languages in a relatively small area, we are used to be multilingual in Europe. Many of us speak two or three languages on a daily basis: at work, in the town, with a spouse, they can all be different.
I always envied the British and the Americans: one language that everyone understands. What a saving on tuition fees 😁.
For most unknown. Love the paintings. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteHi Peter, This was such a long awaited trip. I liked Uzbekistan very much and hope to see more of Central Asia.
DeleteLoved reading the post and looking at your captures. So glad you shared such a great post.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, Camellia. I think my next Central Asian destination will be Kazakhstan.
DeleteAlways looking at the device
ReplyDeleteThough of the same 😁.
Delete*thought
DeleteIt's good to see you back again, Piotr! The photos are amazing. Uzbekistan appears to be a beautiful and interesting country. Also, I admire anyone who can communicate in two languages that have no common origin and even different letters.
ReplyDeleteHi Tom, Thank you very much for your kind words. Oh, the letters are not so different. Grammar is also similar. Whether Russian or English, both are Indo-European languages. 🙂
DeleteSince there are so many languages in a relatively small area, we are used to be multilingual in Europe. Many of us speak two or three languages on a daily basis: at work, in the town, with a spouse, they can all be different.
I always envied the British and the Americans: one language that everyone understands. What a saving on tuition fees 😁.