I'm so confused about Indian Spider-Man's universe. The English exist and were able to steal all their stuff, they speak English and have so little cultural relevance that people say Chai Tea consistently enough for it to be that annoying? I assumed India was some kind of superpower but it feels more like all of India was crammed into Manhatten and the rest of the word is normal
>Modern Hollywood pajeet power fantasy pandering makes no sense
Color me shocked
But not that shocked. Of course even in a perfect Indian world they’ll still feel the need to whine about the Britbongs
At least, in a virtue signaling moron’s world
I'd ask for "sugar sugar" if I was offered sugar, brown sugar, sugar-free sweetener and molasses, assuming they didn't have malted milk powder (no one ever carries it).
spiderpoo, let me explain. Chai tea is black tea but with milk and spices. In the same way that texas tea is just iced black tea with sugar chai tea is black tea but with the aforementioned spices and milk i.e. it's its own dish and thus the name "chai" is used as a short hand for the original dish masala chai. Also a bit bold of him to assume that westerners know words in hindi.
Now imagine a movie with an Indian tourist coming to New Orleans and getting nagged and lectured for not understanding the niceties of Southern English
Yes, yes, Rajesh, I'm sorry the colloquialism is causing you so much pain
“Chai tea” and “naan bread” both mean a specific style of tea and bread.
Anyway, this is just a pointless Indian grievance that they like to bring up because being butthurt is in their nature.
The moron who never heard the phrase "Chai tea"
Would I ask you for a coffee coffee with some cream cream????
So, is "chai tea" more accurately "indian style tea"?
Yea but even then you’ll probably have comments quibbling that all tea is Indian tea
Yerba mate is technically a tea and it comes from South America (btw it mogs all the other kinds of tea and coffee in the world)
Yerba mate is made from entirely different plant. Black tea, green tea, white tea are one and the same plant (camellia sinensis).
Then where'd the phrase 'not for all the tea in China' come from?
Miles
>Onions sauce? What do you mean "sauce sauce"?
Why is this filter still a thing, caramelized onions do sound great though
Blame God Of War 2018
I'm so confused about Indian Spider-Man's universe. The English exist and were able to steal all their stuff, they speak English and have so little cultural relevance that people say Chai Tea consistently enough for it to be that annoying? I assumed India was some kind of superpower but it feels more like all of India was crammed into Manhatten and the rest of the word is normal
>Modern Hollywood pajeet power fantasy pandering makes no sense
Color me shocked
But not that shocked. Of course even in a perfect Indian world they’ll still feel the need to whine about the Britbongs
At least, in a virtue signaling moron’s world
pavitr, for assuming every other world is exactly like his own linguistically.
it seems more like an indan americans idea of what india is like than what an indian would make.
Pavitr was being pedantic. Of course, Miles did the same thing with the Spot, but that was more verbal musing/banter than actual correction.
how can chai mean tea if it refers to a specific blend
Chai is the word for the plant and drink in the broadest sense there
To western types it is associated with a specific style common in India
is that tea actually good?
What tea? He didn't specify the type, that's like asking is soda good or is juice good. Chai tea is aight tho
Juice is good. Juicy juice is just alright.
>tea tea
>machine machine
>cake cake
>miles...miles
It's all connected guys!
I'd ask for "sugar sugar" if I was offered sugar, brown sugar, sugar-free sweetener and molasses, assuming they didn't have malted milk powder (no one ever carries it).
Superpower by 2300!
I like to drink a nice glass of leche milk.
spiderpoo, let me explain. Chai tea is black tea but with milk and spices. In the same way that texas tea is just iced black tea with sugar chai tea is black tea but with the aforementioned spices and milk i.e. it's its own dish and thus the name "chai" is used as a short hand for the original dish masala chai. Also a bit bold of him to assume that westerners know words in hindi.
Typical burger moronation at play, it's called Masala Chai. "Chai" literally means just "tea".
Now imagine a movie with an Indian tourist coming to New Orleans and getting nagged and lectured for not understanding the niceties of Southern English
Yes, yes, Rajesh, I'm sorry the colloquialism is causing you so much pain
“Chai tea” and “naan bread” both mean a specific style of tea and bread.
Anyway, this is just a pointless Indian grievance that they like to bring up because being butthurt is in their nature.