Venezuelans (委内瑞拉人) usually invite only close friends and relatives to their homes. At home, they always offer guests a cup of strong, black coffee. Visitors usually bring a gift, like flowers. At meals they sit around a table. They eat with knives and forks, though many people just...
Limit on How Much Venezuelans Can Charge on Their Credit Cards in FloridaBroderSinger, Rochelle
阅读理解 It is unbelievable how popular English is in Venezuela . Now we have a kind of language mixture between English and Spanish. In the Venezuelans' daily conversations, they often use English words with Spanish verb endings. For example, if they
Venezuela is not “hell on earth,” but there is no denying that many Venezuelans are suffering right now, something top government officials have been far too reticent and slow in acknowledging. “The situation is hard, and it’s gotten worse over the last two years,” says Jesus Rojas, ...
"We have to keep living." Bifano, who is also the president of the Latin American Academy of Sciences, spoke to Nature about how Venezuelan scientists are coping with the turmoil. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. What is daily life like for Venezuelans? There is a...
Venezuela is not the only country that treats time offhandedly. Disdain for the clock seems the rule in most Latin nations and many other countries. Foreigners accustomed to living in nations ruled by the sweep of the second hand find it difficult to shak...
Venezuela (委内瑞拉) Venezuelans usually invite only close friends and relatives( 亲戚) to their homes. At home, they always offer guests a cup of strong, black coffee. Visitors usually bring a gift, like flowers. At meals they sit on chairs around a table. They eat with knives and forks...
Venezuelans have continued to move since then and many settle in North Miami Beach and nearby Aventura, a Miami suburb. Venezuelan Jews are also highly active in the Jewish community. The North Miami Beach JCC has tailored its programs to the Latin American community. It has a department calle...
MIAMI (AP) — Having fled economic and political chaos in Venezuela, Luisana Silva now loads carpets for a South Carolina rug company. She earns enough to pay rent, buy groceries, gas up her car — and send money home to her parents.
“The Venezuelan bolivar loses value so fast that if you have bolivares, you need to change it as soon as you can to protect them,” she explained, adding the example that if she’s in Colombia and her father is in Venezuela, but “I needed to pay for...