What type do you think is Canada?
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What type do you think is Canada?
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Well I am back. How's everyone? Don't have as much time now, but glad to see some of the old gang are still here.
Never been there, never met any Canadians.
ENFp. Friendly, open, helpful, non-threatening, comforting, private, etc. (or maybe INFj).
EIE, ENFj, intuitive subtype.
E3 (probably 3w4)
Cool ILI hubbys are better than LSIs any time!
Old blog: http://firsttimeinusa.blogspot.com/
New blog: http://having-a-kid.blogspot.com/
Ummm, yes?Originally Posted by Joy
Well I am back. How's everyone? Don't have as much time now, but glad to see some of the old gang are still here.
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I don't like zoos either.
But I assume Canada was different from the states?Originally Posted by Diana
Well I am back. How's everyone? Don't have as much time now, but glad to see some of the old gang are still here.
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As is a base unit, the definition of the ampere is not tied to any other electrical unit. The definition for the ampere is equivalent to fixing a value of the permeability of vacuum to μ0 = 4π×10−7 H/m. Prior to 1948, the so-called "international ampere" was used, defined in terms of the electrolytic deposition rate of silver. The older unit is equal to 0.999 85 A.
The ampere is most accurately realized using an ampere balance, but is in practice maintained via Ohm's Law from the units of voltage and resistance, the volt and the ohm, since the latter two can be tied to physical phenomena that are relatively easy to reproduce, the Josephson junction and the quantum Hall effect, respectively.
The unit of electric charge, the coulomb, is defined in terms of the ampere: one coulomb is the amount of electric charge (formerly quantity of electricity) carried in a current of one ampere flowing for one second. Current (electricity), then, is the rate at which charge flows through a wire or surface. One ampere of current (I) is equal to a flow of one coulomb of charge (Q) per second of time (t).
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I know... but being there still makes me sadOriginally Posted by Diana
lol i know an INFp in winnepegOriginally Posted by Diana
No offense Diana but that is a superficial perspective in my view.Originally Posted by Diana
The nature of the economy in Canada, the cultural icons, what people seek in life, are quite different from the states.
One example are hockey and besaball:
its' impossible to make Canadians like baseball and quite hard to sell hockey to americans.
People in Canada make fun of the Americans about things like guns, arrogance, flag waving and the like. And they fun of those very same things whether in Winnipeg or Victoria.
By the way I lived in Victoria for a while. Did you stay there long Diana?
Well I am back. How's everyone? Don't have as much time now, but glad to see some of the old gang are still here.
By the way, Canada's national animal is the beaver, compare that to the Bold Eagle.
Well I am back. How's everyone? Don't have as much time now, but glad to see some of the old gang are still here.
Originally Posted by Dioklecian
nice smiley...Originally Posted by Joy
nice disclaimer ya got there joy.
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thanksOriginally Posted by cracka
It seems I should have put it there long ago. Apparently there are a lot of people who had no idea, and believe it or not, actually thought exactly the opposite.
Again, I still think that those similarities are superficial. If you live in landlocked cold plain like Dakota or Winipeg of course you will play hockey and not go out surfing much. Also the accents will become similar since people in the area interact on a daily basis, people go south for gass and americans come up for turism etc.
However, the main aspects like ideas of individual freedoms and rights, role of governent, role of the army and so forth are still quite different.
I would like to know your view of those differences.
People are people everywhere, but they don't live i nthe same away everywhere.
Well I am back. How's everyone? Don't have as much time now, but glad to see some of the old gang are still here.
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Your grammar and syntax often imply "exactly the opposite," so I don't see how you could possibly blame anyone other than yourself for this misperception.Originally Posted by Joy
But, for a certainty, back then,
We loved so many, yet hated so much,
We hurt others and were hurt ourselves...
Yet even then, we ran like the wind,
Whilst our laughter echoed,
Under cerulean skies...
That is not in cotradiction to my views, clearly Canada is not a monolith of identical world views. It varies within Canada too.Originally Posted by Diana
Well I am back. How's everyone? Don't have as much time now, but glad to see some of the old gang are still here.
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Nothing stops us from expressing view. You are right though: countries don't have types, you can't type them.
Well I am back. How's everyone? Don't have as much time now, but glad to see some of the old gang are still here.
so... It took 2 pages to come to this conclusion? I coulda said that in the 2nd post of this thread.Originally Posted by Dioklecian
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quit trying to type our country aye...
Guys the statement is nuanced: we can express a view of the type of a country, but the country is not human, so it can't be placed in a human category.Originally Posted by Diana
So go ahead, express an opinion, much in the same way as the opinion you expressed about Victoria and Winnipeg Diana.
Well I am back. How's everyone? Don't have as much time now, but glad to see some of the old gang are still here.
What's done is done. There shouldn't be any confusion anymore.Originally Posted by Gilligan
lol, you're from Canada? Cool. Now I'm twice as sure that Canada is delta NF.Originally Posted by Bionicgoat
EIE, ENFj, intuitive subtype.
E3 (probably 3w4)
Cool ILI hubbys are better than LSIs any time!
Old blog: http://firsttimeinusa.blogspot.com/
New blog: http://having-a-kid.blogspot.com/
That makes sense but Canada is geographically a BIG country so I hope you don't think all Canadians speak with that accent? people in the maritime provinces, Quebec, Major Urban centres and rural communities all have noticably different accents. Rather than splitting north america according to the US-Canadian border (horizontally) it makes more sense to ignore the border and instead divide the continent vertically (i.e. timezones) If you do this you notice, for example, people in BC are quite similar to people in Washington state (notice the rockies separate them from the east but not from eachother), people in Mantoba are similar to those in Minnesota, those in new brunswick are like those in maine.Originally Posted by Diana
In other words what you meant was that you couldn't tell a Manitoban from a North Dakotan (our provinces are kinda like states, we're not all the same, haha
and yah the only reason i corrected you was because i was bored and could sense your curiousity for candian history and culture, careful not to get too excited!
INFp-Ni
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