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Hello everybody this is Jack from
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tofluency.com and we are back for
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another conversation. If this is your
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first time here then this is my wife
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Kate, Hi! And what we like to do is we like
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to have a conversation about specific
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topic so that you can follow
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along, improve your listening and learn new
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words and phrases. And as always I'll
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leave some phrases or the phrases that
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we use in the video in the description.
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So, we are going to talk about housing
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today and houses in general. Now
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something that you might not know about
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Kate is that she is obsessed with real
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estate. It's true. Just tell everyone what you do on a
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daily basis.
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In terms of real estate. In terms
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of real estate. Well really i'm just
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interested in all of the houses that are
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around us. The way that people live.
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The way that they sell houses.
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I don't want to be a realtor but I love
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seeing what people do with their spaces
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and just you know especially in a place
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like Asheville which has so many neat old homes
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in the craftsman style and then city
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apartments.
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It's just interesting to see kind of how
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people live and how they make places
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their homes. I'm a little bit
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obsessed.
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That's cool. And you use an app called Zillow.
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I do use Zillow - yes. And Zillow is this app
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that you can have on your phone. You can
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access on your computer too and it just
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shows exactly what's available now, what
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sold for what price, you know in the last
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couple of years. We are not affiliated with Zillow.
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No, we use it a lot. And we
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thought we'd talk about housing today and
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Kate mentioned you know craftsman style
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houses, maybe apartments. So we are going to talk
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about the different types of houses that
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people live in. In the U.K. , in America.
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We're going to look at some of the
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differences with the language as well
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with British and American English. I thought
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good place to start would be talking
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about the places that we grew up in.
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Ok. So that the type of house that you grew up
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in. So, maybe you can just lead up with that.
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Well the house that I grew up in was kind of
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special because my father built it. So
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I grew up in a really small town and
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my grandparents had some land that
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they gave to my parents when they were
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young and starting a family. And my dad
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built us this house which was just a
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magical place to grow up. It was filled with
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light, it was quite large and
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tucked away back in the woods. And my
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mom recently sold it but it was, it was
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such a special home
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i've grown up in and very
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quiet and suburban which is really different
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than how you grew up right? Yeah, it
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was definitely different because your
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house was situated in the woods in a very
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quiet and small town. And you felt like
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you were, you know, out in the country.
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Yes. I mean you were out in the country.
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Absolutely. Even though it was close to the
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main center of the town you were in but there
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wasn't anything going on. No. There was
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nothing going on. Literally nothing. But the house is
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beautiful. As you said it was filled with
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light, it was spacious and it had this
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area outside as well which was just
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incredible. Yeah. Yeah. By the way we
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have our baby along again today and
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she might be a little bit louder today
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so hopefully it won't distract you too much.
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Poor little thing has a cold so she might
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sound a little bit stuffed up. Yeah.
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So, yeah, and you talked about how
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that was different to where I grew
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up. I grew up just outside the center
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of Preston. So it was like in a
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neighborhood called Fulwood which is
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a very nice neighborhood. And we had what
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we call the detached house because in
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the U.K. and we're going to look at this
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in a second but we have housing such as
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terraced houses and semi-detached
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houses too. So a detached house means
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that it was there and not attached to a
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different house.
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Oh Ok. So it had its own like land and
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property. And it was a big house it was
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quite big. And I have so many fond
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memories growing up there but it was a
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very traditional brick style house. There
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were I think three, no there were four bedrooms
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upstairs. And then we had an extension
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put on there I think when I was about ten.
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And that became my bedroom when I was about
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14 or 15. So I slept downstairs away from
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everyone else in this big bedroom because
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the two bedrooms we had we're really
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small. But I have so many fond memories
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of that place and my parents sold it
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in, I think about 2001-2002. And then they moved to
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Blackburn which was a town very close by but I
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was at University then and then you know
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we met and I, you know, we moved to Spain.
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We're going to talk about Spain and
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places that we lived. Just to say also I
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know that you mentioned a lot of
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vocabulary. The vocabulary for housing is
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completely different in America. Yes. So, I
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think that we don't even say detached
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houses because we just assume that if
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you have a house you are not attached to
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anything else. It's just a free
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standing house. And then if it is attached
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to another house on two floors that's
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usually a townhouse.
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Yes, townhouse. And then did you mention
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flats?
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Well I think the equivalent of a
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townhouse in the U.K. will be a terrace
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house. Right. But the style is different. I
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feel like a townhouse here is more
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modern. Right. And you know it's like city
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living. Whereas a terrace house in
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the U.K. means like an old brick style
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- we'll leave links to pictures below too -
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but this was mainly done during the
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industrial revolution to house workers
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in a very efficient way. So they are quite
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historic. Yeah, yeah, a lot of them are old
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and I was reading about this before. They
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went out of favor during the beginning
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of the 20th century. Just around
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World War One I feel when
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semi-detached houses became the thing.
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And a semi-detached house is
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basically two houses in one
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structure.
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Ok. But yeah the terrace houses were
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there for a reason to put workers in
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close proximity to the factory.
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And i was thinking about when I was at
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University in Leeds. Leeds is full of
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terraced houses. And I stayed in a couple
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of those you know when I was at University there.
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We have lived in all sorts of places though. We have lived in
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so many places together. So when
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we were five years into our
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relationship. So we had been together
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for five years.
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Yeah. We calculated - do you remember doing this? Yes. And we
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realized that we had lived in ten
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different houses. Yeah. We had moved all
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of our belongings ten different times and our
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dog - all over the world.
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Yeah cuz there was - there was
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a house in Athens, Georgia. In Blackburn
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in England, in France.
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Three houses or three apartments in
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Valencia. Two in Bilbao. And we'll
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talk about those in a second I just want
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to talk about the style of houses in the
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U.K., in America. So we talked about
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terraced houses and how they're different.
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And they're not as popular here.
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It's more like a townhouse. But also the material that
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builders use and people have for the houses.
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Yeah. So, what what difference do you see?
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Well, one thing was when I went to
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visit you in the U.K., I was amazed by how
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many stone and stonework houses there
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were. Because they're just most of the
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time people build out of wood here.
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So I guess stone and brick and it just
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looked incredibly fancy to me and I
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remember saying "Oh - this is amazing what a
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beautiful neighborhood!".
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And you said it was actually one of the
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worst neighborhoods in your whole town.
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It was really rundown and dangerous. We would call it
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a rough neighborhood. A rough neighborhood? Yeah.
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We could say that too. So that was a really rough
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neighborhood. Yeah. But they had very fancy
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and traditional terrace houses didn't they?
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Which were more Victorian style.
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Yeah. Do you remember? But I don't know if the
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houses themselves were fancy
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or if it was just me just looking at it as an
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American and saying "oh it's old and it's
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made out of stone - it has to be so fancy".
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Because the wood is probably the
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most common building material. And you
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know there's that story of the three
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pigs and of course the best house is
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the one that's made out of stone.
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Yeah. That will stand the test of time. I
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found it quite strange when I moved here
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to see so many wooden houses. And like you
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said you you didn't realize, you couldn't
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look an area and think oh this is an
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affluent area, this is a rough area, this is you
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know in between area. And I had that
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problem when we moved here too.
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Yeah. But I've got used to this now and I
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can I know areas you know I know if it's a
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family-friendly area, an up and coming
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area. All those different styles
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of places that you come across.
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Yeah, that's interesting. Let's look at the
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difference now between apartment, condo,
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and flat. Okay, well we've talked about some of it.
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Well no the actual difference to what these words mean.
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Oh ok - I don't know if I know this. Well I just did some research.
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Oh tell me. We call apartments flats.
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So apartment is American English and a
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flat is British English. Ok. But i was
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reading a condo the difference between
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an apartment and a condo is that the
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condo is owned by individual owners.
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So you buy a condo off someone but an
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apartment is part of housing authority
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or you know someone owns all these
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apartments
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and rents them out. Oh I didn't know that. I know, I thought that was
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new information for you and for
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everyone. This just leads us into Bilbao.
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Do you remember looking for a place
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in Bilbao and how naive we were? Yeah.
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Yes we were. We just - I think any
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time that you move to another country
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figuring out the basic things like how
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to rent a house, how to get a cell phone.
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It's really really challenging.
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Especially if you don't speak the
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language. Exactly.
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Because nobody can really explain
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it to you in different words. No, and also.....
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And we were new at Spanish, you know at