Every easter, we go from door to door and beat girl's backs with a whip made of braided rods. They give us sweets and alcohol for exchange.
26 0 ReplyCzech or Slovakia.
8 0 ReplyIt's Czechia, indeed
11 0 Reply
Slartibartfast won an award for something that is literally right outside my bedroom window.
18 0 ReplyNorway?
7 1 ReplyYup
4 0 Reply
If there's water to be manipulated in a way to either keep it out, or to make land appear where water once was, they are going to hire people from here.
17 0 ReplySwamp Germany!
11 1 ReplyNetherlands? Or Denmark.
7 0 ReplyDing ding ding! Netherlands indeed.
6 0 Reply
We had the highest sheep:human ratio of any country. I think we still do, but I'm not sure.
17 0 ReplyNew Zealand? Iceland?
9 0 ReplyNZ
5 0 Reply
It's probably one of the best countries to live in but also comes with a big tradeoff in the form of a bad climate. People keep to themselves and avoid interacting with strangers. We're also known for being quiet, humble and honest.
16 0 ReplyFinland
11 0 ReplyCorrect
5 0 Reply
Iceland
2 0 ReplyEstonia?
1 0 Reply
There's a word coined in this town's specific dialect that means "catty corner, kitty corner, or diagonal".
Hint: the first two syllables of that word are "anti", though the "t" is not a full fricative stop.
12 0 ReplyThis one is too tough for me!
4 0 ReplyWhat do I win? 🤩🥳
2 1 Reply
The only possible word that comes to mind is “anticlockwise” used in (some parts of?) the UK instead of “counterclockwise”… but that doesn’t exactly match “diagonally”. Is it the word though?
2 0 ReplyThe word is "antigogglin'", pronounced: any-goggln. 🤓
Bonus hint: the area fought for the North in the Civil War.
2 0 Reply
Nice try fed won't get my location that easily
10 1 ReplyNew York?
5 0 ReplyFlorida?
4 0 ReplyIdaho?
1 0 ReplyThis and that post about dating yourself seem awfully sus
1 0 Reply
We lost a land war against birds.
8 0 ReplyEmu?
5 0 ReplyAustralia
1 0 ReplyNew Zealand?
2 1 Reply
we've been the cause of two world wars
7 0 ReplyGermany?
5 1 Replynot quite
1 0 Reply
Only two?
3 0 Replyso far
2 0 Reply
Austria? Based on Franz Ferdinand and the painter?
3 0 Replyding ding ding we have a winner
1 0 Reply
We have two animals on our coat of arms neither of which can walk backwards.
7 0 ReplyAustralia. I feel I've seen a kangaroo shuffle backwards in a fighting stance. But hearing an emu can't walk backwards sounds ludicrous.
3 0 ReplyI've been told that this way they have no choice but to hold up the coat of arms.
1 0 ReplyAnd we eat them
1 0 Reply
Despite New being in the name of it, the “old” place was named many years after.
6 0 ReplyNewport? (if by "old" you mean British!)
1 0 ReplyNew Mexico
2 0 Reply
New Brunswick?
1 0 ReplyA lot further south and west.
2 0 Reply
We have a 1/2 scale copy of the Leaning Tower of Pisa
6 0 ReplyLas Vegas? Seems like they have a half scale version of everything.
2 0 ReplyNope, but its true, Vegas does seem to have every monument you can think of.
3 0 Reply
Niles, IL
2 0 ReplyThis wizard wins the cookie
3 0 Reply
I don’t know the scale, but Saugus, Massachusetts - “Leaning Tower of Pizza”
1 0 Reply
I can go regular skiing on snow and water skiing on the ocean in the same day.
6 0 ReplyItaly?
4 0 ReplyVancouver?
3 0 ReplyYou're closer but unfortunately you went over. (I'm in California)
4 0 Reply
We have a small desert with cactii in a region that has snow 6 months, extreme cold for 2 months of the year.
6 0 ReplyA bit vague but there's a handful of areas that more or less meet that description around Canada.
3 0 Reply
We allow a marmot to predict our weather.
6 1 ReplyPunxsutawney, Pennsylvania
1 0 Reply
We don't call them steamed hams.
5 0 ReplyNew York, perhaps Albany?
3 0 ReplyClose, but no.
1 0 Reply
Springfield
2 0 ReplySadly no.
1 0 Reply
Small children are taught to be afraid of the devil, but not THE Devil (in the US).
5 0 ReplyNJ
1 0 ReplyDing ding ding
Watch out for the Jersey Devil.
2 0 Reply
We have scammers
5 0 ReplyThat narrows it down to Earth
9 0 ReplyIndia
5 0 ReplyGot it
6 0 Reply
We have a local legend who plays bagpipes while riding a unicycle
6 1 ReplyPortland, Oregon?
4 0 ReplyYeah, that one's super easy. I know him personally, even. 🤪
3 0 Reply
One of our sports teams shocked the world in 2016 by doing the impossible.
The team in question wasn't the Tigers.
6 1 ReplyIceland?
2 0 ReplyNope.
1 0 Reply
1 0 ReplyThat'll be it.
Team in question being Leicester City Football Club who won the Premier League title in that year.
4 0 Reply
Footscray?
1 0 ReplyCzech Republic?
1 0 ReplyNope.
I've added a clue to the comment.
1 0 Reply
NBA Warriors 73 wins?
If so, which locale would you claim them for? Oakland, SF where they play now, or just California in general?
(if not, I have no other guesses)
1 0 Reply
I'm from an area where we have a specific night of the year called "Devil's night". Easily googlable, but it's interesting that I didn't realize that few other areas seem to call it that from what I can tell?
4 0 ReplyDetroit?
3 0 ReplyYup!
2 0 Reply
How many times does the digit 2 appear in the local crappy pizza 7 digit phone number?
1 0 ReplyI wouldn't know that lol
1 0 Reply
One of the worlds most useless canals goes through my town (on it's path to crossing the entire width of the country). It was built largely with russian POW's. However, roughly eight years before it was completed, steam locomitives became a thing, making it obsolete.
4 0 ReplyI think you're referring to the Masurian Canal, so you could be in either Russia or Poland.
4 0 ReplyClose, but no dice. This one was built a fair while earlier , and is part of a 390km long waterway (of which the majority is natural). It's still maintained today, but not used for any commercial traffic.
3 0 Reply
I’ve got a few but I’ll go with:
The Guinness World Record Largest Open Sandwich; It was a barbecue pork bun (as of July 2010; dunno if the record still stands)
4 0 ReplyOk. In retrospect this was way too obscure.
How about the town Pepsi was invented in?
1 0 Reply
More navigable waterways than any other US state. (From there but no longer live there).
4 0 ReplyLouisiana?
2 0 ReplyNo…
2 0 Reply
Minnesota?
1 0 ReplyNo you are second guess of Minnesota. The answer is Alabama.
1 0 Reply
When I lived there, it was the city with the most parkland per capita in the US.
4 0 ReplyThe US!
Nailed it.
20 0 Reply
Potpie is a soup, not a pie.
4 0 ReplyPennsylvania?
2 0 ReplyIndeed! It may even be enough to get down to a specific region too.
2 0 Reply
We've got one of the oldest, largest, and most used transit systems in the world.
4 0 ReplyNew York City?
2 0 ReplyYessir.
2 0 Reply
London?
1 2 Reply
A century ago, we had a disaster caused by a tsunami of molasses 25 ft high, going 35 mph
3 0 ReplyBoston
1 0 ReplyI don’t know if you’re from here or I gave too many hints, making it too easy to search, but YES
2 0 Reply
Our first ever ruler from when we became an independent nation was known to carry pieces of roasted chicken in his suit pockets to sneak in snacks during the day.
3 0 ReplyWhat the hell? 😂
1 0 ReplyHe was a bit of
A character
History remembers him as a buffoon. History is wrong. He was a sly old fox and his bumbling antics were masking quite the sharp mind.
4 0 Reply
In the city where I live there are two train stations, next to each other, and with different track gauges.
3 0 ReplyI'd guess somewhere near the Spanish-French border, because I happen to know that Spain uses a different gauge to the rest of Europe.
2 0 ReplyIt's in Spain. Because for some reason (probably a war?) in some regions we have the standard gauge as well as the "narrow" one.
1 0 Reply
Eastern Europe somewhere?
2 0 ReplyBuenos Aires?
1 0 Reply
It has Asia's largest saltwater lake
3 0 ReplyKazakhstan?
1 0 ReplyNope, try again
1 0 Reply
There's a catholic cathedral that was designed by a protestant and a protestant cathedral that was designed by a catholic.
2 0 ReplyThe church I grew up attending was built in 1727
2 0 ReplyThat doesn't narrow it down much - sounds like you are in one of:
- Alsace (Saint Maurice)
- Bohol, Philippines (Baclayon)
- Bratislava (the cathedral)
- Carpeneto (San Giorgio)
- Cingoli (San Domenico)
- Derbyshire (St Swithin's)
- Gothenburg (Nödinge)
- Hasselt (Virga Jesse)
- Lillehammer (Fåberg)
- Malta (St Anthony of Padua)
- Racconigi (Santa Maria Maggiore)
- Žďár nad Sázavou (Saint John of Nepomuk)
I'm going to guess Holmesfield?
2 0 ReplyImpressive list. This one is in the United States though.
2 0 Reply
We had a tea party during the revolutionary war, no not that tea party.
2 0 ReplyThe city I'm from has more bridges than Venice and Amsterdam combined.
2 0 Replyroot beer flavored milk for $0.25 a cup among other flavors like chocolate and banana
2 0 ReplyA song from my country is used in Hollywood, in instrumental form, as an exotic romantic dance. It's actually, according to the lyrics, about a gambling addict comparing his horse race obsession with the intense nature of his romantic infatuations.
Edit: come on! No takers?
2 0 ReplyWat
1 0 Reply
The first airplane was flown here.
2 0 ReplyBrasil?
2 0 ReplyI had to look it up: I never knew there were still so many claims to have been first
1 0 Reply
North Carolina?
1 0 ReplyYup. Outer banks specifically
2 0 Reply
We had the most powerful earthquake ever recorded.
1 0 ReplyWe won three wars against the UK in the 19th century.
1 0 ReplyMy city is build around 60 volcanic hills.
1 0 ReplyAuckland, NZ?
2 0 ReplyBingo.
1 0 Reply
My hometown was most notable for a husband and wife serial killer pair who preyed on young girls in the area. This one will be easy to guess.
1 0 ReplySt. Catherine's?
1 0 ReplyWell you spelled it wrong but yes. Haha. St. Catharines.
1 0 Reply
We’ve decriminalized magic mushrooms.
1 0 ReplyNetherlands?
1 0 ReplyPortugal?
1 0 Reply
My hometown was a well-known regional port and was the home of a "medical" serial killer (both in the early 20th century) who was responsible for over 15 deaths over 4 years.
1 0 ReplyGRANDPA'S CHEESE BARN
1 0 ReplyMy city has the most strip clubs per capita in the USA
1 0 ReplyPortland Oregon
2 0 ReplyWhat up, neighbor. Which of the 5 quadrants?
1 0 ReplyThe area formerly known as felony flats
1 0 Reply
An island of three sides.
2 1 ReplyEither Cyprus if you mean three bits controlled by different powers, or St Martin, which is sort of triangular?
1 0 ReplyClose, it's Bermuda (Bermuda triangle reference)
2 0 Reply
I've heard the sound of a Lancaster bomber with all 4 Merlin engines flying over my rural home many times.
2 2 ReplyI live near Main Street USA, but not in Florida or Missouri.
1 1 ReplyLobsters are a MAJOR thing so much so they host festivals and such. They're world famous as well selling over in Japan I believe being the primary buyer
1 1 ReplyMaine?
1 0 Reply