dazedbyday wrote:misterstomach wrote:dazedbyday wrote:No idea. I just googled the JJ website and you can view the site in Russian so
that looks a lot more like czech to me than russian.
Sadly I am not well versed in the eastern European languages. I want to visit Prague though, so I should probably learn a little bit about Czech.
They have a badass clock tower
czech seems hard to really learn much about unless your super dedicated. i don't speak more than a couple of words. you just kind of get where you recognize languages you've been around a bunch even if you don't know them. i've been to czech republic probably 6 or 8 times at least from touring europe. the band i used to work for most doing guitar and stage tech work always rented their vehicle and gear from a spot in prague so we always had a few days at the beginning and the end of tour to hang out there. it was pretty awesome. i once tried to buy coke from some dude on the street there and it turned out to be fake and that was real disappointing, but i probably didn't need any coke anyway. another time i got lost on the train trying to go see the bone church and that was real weird i saw some really crazy eastern czech post soviet towns and it was cool. last time i was there i got attacked by a parrot while i was drunk at one in the afternoon and it really fucked my finger up. long story, but you've always got to be careful when you're drunk in the middle of the day, no matter where you are.
EDIT TO ADD: you'll be fine visiting prague without knowing czech. pretty english friendly there. just don't expect that in the rest of czech. my advice would be to not buy drugs on the street; always check with the bartenders about what to pay for cab fare, cause the cabbies will rip you the fuck off for real; be very wary of any tropical birds that you see, and do not under any circumstances fail to pay your subway fare, even if the machine that takes your fare is broken. walk around a bunch. go see a show a 007, the best underground venue in prague; and enjoy the food, have a cheeseburger, which in czech is a burger made of cheese, not one with cheese on it; and enjoy the company of czech and slovakian women if you can, or at least the sight of them.