Cafe Europa Slavenka Drakuli

Advertisement



  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Café Europa Slavenka Drakulic, 2013-01-17 Europe is still a divided continent. In the place of a fallen Berlin wall, there is a chasm between the East and the West. Are these differences a communist legacy, or do they run even deeper? What divides us today? To say simply that it is the understanding of the past, or a different concept of time, is not enough. But a visitor to this part of the world will soon discover that we, the Eastern Europeans, live in another time zone. We live in the twentieth century, but at the same time we inhabit a past full of myths and fairy tales, of blood and national belonging, and the fact that most people are lying and cheating or that they have the habit of blaming others for every failure...' An intimate tour of life on the streets of Budapest, Tirana, Warsaw and Zagreb, as those cities continue to acclimatise to the post-Communist thaw, Café Europa does not provide easy solutions or furnish political pallatives. Rather as a Croatian with a viewpoint of ever-widening relevance, the value of Slavenka Drakulic's wry and humane observations lie in the emotional force of their honesty and the clarity of their insight.....
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Café Europa Revisited Slavenka Drakulic, 2021-01-05 Drakulić’s composite portrait provides a clear-eyed look at European values, and what they really amount to. —The New Yorker An evocative and timely collection of essays that paints a portrait of Eastern Europe thirty years after the end of communism. An immigrant with a parrot in Stockholm, a photo of a girl in Lviv, a sculpture of Alexander the Great in Skopje, a memorial ceremony for the 50th anniversary of the Soviet led army invasion of Prague: these are a few glimpses of life in Eastern Europe today. Three decades after the Velvet Revolution, Slavenka Drakulic, the author of Cafe Europa and A Guided Tour of the Museum Of Communism, takes a look at what has changed and what has remained the same in the region in her daring new essay collection. Totalitarianism did not die overnight and democracy did not completely transform Eastern European societies. Looking closely at artefacts and day to day life, from the health insurance cards to national monuments, and popular films to cultural habits, alongside pieces of growing nationalism and Brexit, these pieces of political reportage dive into the reality of a Europe still deeply divided.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Café Europa Slavenka Drakulić, 1996 Reflects on Eastern Europe in the post-Cold War era in a personal compilation of essays that examines everyday life in the once-communist nations, the struggle toward democracy, and the influence of Western culture
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Frida's Bed Slavenka Drakulić, 2008 This beautifully imagined story of the last days of Frida Kahlo's life explores the inner life of one of the world's most influential female artists.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: They Would Never Hurt A Fly Slavenka Drakulic, 2013-01-17 Slavenka Drakulic attended the Serbian war crimes trial in the Hague. This important book is about how ordinary people commit terrible crimes in wartime. With extraordinary story-telling skill Drakulic draws us in to this difficult subject. We cannot turn away from her subject matter because her writing is so engaging, lively and compelling. From the monstrous Slobodan Milosevich and his evil Lady Macbeth of a wife to humble Serb soldiers who claim they were 'just obeying orders', Drakulic brilliantly enters the minds of the killers. There are also great stories of bravery and survival, both from those who helped Bosnians escape from the Serbs and from those who risked their lives to help them.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: How We Survived Communism & Even Laughed Slavenka Drakulic, 1993-05-12 Hailed by feminists as one of the most important contributions to women's studies in the last decade, this gripping, beautifully written account describes the daily struggles of women under the Marxist regime in the former republic of Yugoslavia.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: The Balkan Express Slavenka Drakulic, 1993-05-17 In a series of beautiful, impassioned essays, Croatian journalist and feminist Drakulic provides a very real and human side to the Balkans war and shows how the conflict has affected her closest friends, colleagues, and fellow countrymen--both Serbian and Croatian. Includes five new essays not in the hardcover edition.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: A Guided Tour Through the Museum of Communism Slavenka Drakulic, 2011-02-22 A wry, cutting deconstruction of the Communist empire by one of Eastern Europe's exceptional authors. Called a perceptive and amusing social critic, with a wonderful eye for detail by The Washington Post, Slavenka Drakulic-a native of Croatia-has emerged as one of the most popular and respected critics of Communism to come out of the former Eastern Bloc. In A Guided Tour Through the Museum of Communism, she offers a eight-part exploration of Communism by way of an unusual cast of narrators, each from a different country, who reflect on the fall of Communism. Together they constitute an Orwellian send-up of absurdities during the final years of European Communism that showcase this author's tremendous talent.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Two Underdogs and a Cat Slavenka Drakulić, 2009 A dog named Charlie in Bucharest, a sixty-year-old cleaning woman in Prague, and a cat in Warsaw discuss the transition from Communism to capitalism in the former Soviet Union and contemplate questions about social justice, collective responsibility, and the value of remembering the past.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Europe's Troubled Peace Tom Buchanan, 2012-01-30 This revised second edition now extends to the end of the first decade of the twenty-first century, covering the financial crisis and the related crisis in European integration, the impact of the “War on Terror” on Europe, and the redefinition of Europe following EU enlargement. Thoroughly revised and expanded, this integrated history of Europe now covers the end of the Second World War up to the end of the first decade of the twenty-first century Includes new sections on immigration and ethnicity in Europe after the Cold War, and the role of historical memory in contemporary Europe A final new chapter assesses the role of Europe within the wider world of the twenty-first century, the financial crisis and the related crisis in European integration, the impact of the “War on Terror” on Europe, and the redefinition of Europe following EU enlargement Covers the history of central and eastern Europe in depth, as well as that of Western Europe Discusses in detail the impact of the Cold War across the continent
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Central Europe Lonnie Johnson, 1996 Throughout the ages, small nations struggled valiantly against a series of imperial powers - Ottoman Turkey, Habsburg Austria, imperial Germany, czarist Russia, Nazi Germany, and the Soviet Union - and they lost regularly. Johnson's account is present-minded in the best sense: in describing actual historical events, he illustrates the ways they have been remembered, and how they contribute to the national assumptions that still drive European politics today.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Café Europa Revisited Slavenka Drakulic, 2021-01-05 Drakulić’s composite portrait provides a clear-eyed look at European values, and what they really amount to. —The New Yorker An evocative and timely collection of essays that paints a portrait of Eastern Europe thirty years after the end of communism. An immigrant with a parrot in Stockholm, a photo of a girl in Lviv, a sculpture of Alexander the Great in Skopje, a memorial ceremony for the 50th anniversary of the Soviet led army invasion of Prague: these are a few glimpses of life in Eastern Europe today. Three decades after the Velvet Revolution, Slavenka Drakulic, the author of Cafe Europa and A Guided Tour of the Museum Of Communism, takes a look at what has changed and what has remained the same in the region in her daring new essay collection. Totalitarianism did not die overnight and democracy did not completely transform Eastern European societies. Looking closely at artefacts and day to day life, from the health insurance cards to national monuments, and popular films to cultural habits, alongside pieces of growing nationalism and Brexit, these pieces of political reportage dive into the reality of a Europe still deeply divided.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Another Day of Life Ryszard Kapuscinski, 2007-12-18 In 1975, Angola was tumbling into pandemonium; everyone who could was packing crates, desperate to abandon the beleaguered colony. With his trademark bravura, Ryszard Kapuscinski went the other way, begging his was from Lisbon and comfort to Luanda—once famed as Africa's Rio de Janeiro—and chaos.Angola, a slave colony later given over to mining and plantations, was a promised land for generations of poor Portuguese. It had belonged to Portugal since before there were English-speakers in North America. After the collapse of the fascist dictatorship in Portugal in 1974, Angola was brusquely cut loose, spurring the catastrophe of a still-ongoing civil war. Kapuscinski plunged right into the middle of the drama, driving past thousands of haphazardly placed check-points, where using the wrong shibboleth was a matter of life and death; recording his imporessions of the young soldiers—from Cuba, Angola, South Africa, Portugal—fighting a nebulous war with global repercussions; and examining the peculiar brutality of a country surprised and divided by its newfound freedom.Translated from the Polish by William R. Brand and Katarzyna Mroczkowska-Brand.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Divine Child Tatjana Gromaca, 2021-10-12 In the early 1990s, as Yugoslavia begins to crumble, so too does a woman, known only as Mother. Ostracized by her Croatian neighbors because of her Serbian background, the bright cheer Mother brought to her role as a wife and mother is darkened by the onset of mental illness that devours an entire family. Seen through the acerbic and wry perspective of Mother's eldest daughter, Divine Child paints a picture of the forces that batter an individual into shape in a time of economic crisis and rabid nationalism. This unforgettable survival narrative won the 2013 Jutarnji list Award for Novel of the Year in Croatia.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Holograms of Fear Slavenka Drakulić, 1992 As a woman lies in an American hospital room, she recalls her brutal childhood in Yugoslavia, retracing the psychological journey that brought her to her present condition and reflecting on the possibility of a new life.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: The Taste Of A Man Slavenka Drakulic, 2013-01-17 One autumn in New York, a young Polish poet, studying literature, and a Brazilian anthropologist researching a new book, meet, fall in love and move into a tiny apartment together. Tereza has a lover waiting for her in Poland, Jose a wife and child in Sao Paulo, and it would seem this could only be the most temporary of affairs. Yet there emerges the mesmerizingly explicit portrait of a relationship conducted at the extreme edge of sensuality, defying conventional definition. With no common language, exiled from their culture, for each of them the body of the other becomes everything: spirituality, sustenance, almost unbearable pleasure. Breathtakingly erotic, intensely physical, profoundly intelligent, THE TASTE OF A MAN pursues a path traced by a love based on pure appetite with shameless and unflinching candour, to its ecstatic and terrible conclusion.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: The Idea of Europe , 2021-03-22 Recent developments within and beyond Europe have variously challenged the very idea of Europe, calling it into question and demanding reconsideration of its underlying assumptions. The essays collected here reassess the contemporary position of a perceived “European” identity in the world, overshadowed as it is by the long antecedents and current crisis of triumphalist Eurocentrism. While Eurocentrism itself is still a potent mind-set, it is now increasingly challenged by intra-European crises and by the emergence of autonomously non-European perceptions of Europe. The perspectives assembled here come from the fields of political, cultural and literary history, contemporary history, social and political science and philosophy. Contributors are: Damir Arsenijević, Luiza Bialasiewicz, Vladimir Biti, Lucia Boldrini, Gerard Delanty, César Domínguez, Nikol Dziub, Rodolphe Gasché, Aage Hansen-Löve, Shigemi Inaga, Joep Leerssen, and Vivian Liska.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Chasing a Croatian Girl Cody McClain Brown, 2015 This is the lighthearted story of American Cody McClain Brown's adjustments to life in Croatia. After falling in love with an enigmatic, beautiful Croatian girl (whom he knows is from Croatia but assumes that means Russia), Cody eventually woos her and the two move to Split, Croatia. There, he encounters a world of deadly drafts, endless coffees, and the forceful will of his matriarchal mother-in-law. Chasing a Croatian Girl moves past the beautiful pictures of Croatia and humorously discovers the beauty of Croatia's people and culture.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: The Shortest History of Europe: How Conquest, Culture, and Religion Forged a Continent - A Retelling for Our Times (Shortest History) James Hirst, 2022-11-08 Uncover the decisive moments that shaped a world-changing continent. The Shortest History books deliver thousands of years of history in one riveting, fast-paced read. Celebrated historian John Hirst draws from his own lectures to deliver this ultra-accessible master class on the making of modern Europe, from Ancient Greece through World War II. With over 600,000 copies sold worldwide, this brief history is a global sensation propelled by a thesis of astonishing simplicity: Just three elements—German warfare, Greek and Roman culture, and Christianity—come together to explain everything else, from the Crusades to the Industrial Revolution. Hirst’s razor-sharp grasp of cause and effect helps us see with sparkling clarity how the history of Europe—the crucible of liberal democracy—shapes the way we live today.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: On the Edge of Reason Miroslav Krleza, 2023-06-06 From the great Croatian writer: a masterly work of literature—hilarious, unforgiving, and utterly reasonable Until the age of fifty-two, the protagonist of On the Edge of Reason suffered a monotonous existence as a highly respected lawyer. He owned a carriage and wore a top hat. He lived the life of “an orderly good-for-nothing among a whole crowd of neat, gray good-for-nothings.” But, one evening, surrounded by ladies and gentlemen at a party, he hears the Director-General tell a lively anecdote of how he shot four men like dogs for trespassing on his property. In response, our hero blurts out an honest thought. From this moment, all hell breaks loose. Written in 1938, On the Edge of Reason reveals the fundamental chasm between conformity and individuality. As folly piles upon folly, hypocrisy upon hypocrisy, reason itself begins to give way, and the edge between reality and unreality disappears.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Girl in the Picture Denise Chong, 2006-05-09 By the author of the award-winning memoir The Concubine’s Children. On June 8, 1972, a nine-year-old girl, severely burned by napalm, ran from a misplaced air strike over her village in South Vietnam and into the eye of history. Her photograph—one of the most unforgettable images of the war and of the twentieth century—was seen around the world. The Girl in the Picture is at once a riveting personal story about Kim Phuc, a victim of war and later, under the Communist regime, a tool of propaganda, and a groundbreaking social history that offers a rare view of everyday life in Vietnam both during and after the war.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: The Last Day Nicholas Shrady, 2009-03-31 The Lisbon Earthquake of 1755 was no run-of-the-mill misfortune-it was a watershed moment that shook the pillars of an inveterate social order and sent reverberations throughout the Western world. Earth, water, wind, and fire all conspired to produce a hellish catastrophe that lasted for a full five days and left Lisbon thoroughly annihilated. Nicholas Shrady's unique account of this first modern disaster and its aftereffects successfully articulates the outcome of the earthquake-the eighteenth-century equivalent of a mass media frenzy giving rise to a host of other fascinating developments, such as disaster preparedness, landmark social reform, urban planning, and the birth of seismology.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Anatomy of a Genocide Omer Bartov, 2018-01-23 Winner of the Yad Vashem International Book Book Prize for Holocaust Research “A substantive contribution to the history of ethnic strife and extreme violence” (The Wall Street Journal) and a cautionary examination of how genocide can take root at the local level—turning neighbors, friends, and family against one another—as seen through the eastern European border town of Buczacz during World War II. For more than four hundred years, the Eastern European border town of Buczacz—today part of Ukraine—was home to a highly diverse citizenry. It was here that Poles, Ukrainians, and Jews all lived side by side in relative harmony. Then came World War II, and three years later the entire Jewish population had been murdered by German and Ukrainian police, while Ukrainian nationalists eradicated Polish residents. In truth, though, this genocide didn’t happen so quickly. In Anatomy of a Genocide, Omer Bartov explains that ethnic cleansing doesn’t occur as is so often portrayed in popular history, with the quick ascent of a vitriolic political leader and the unleashing of military might. It begins in seeming peace, slowly and often unnoticed, the culmination of pent-up slights and grudges and indignities. The perpetrators aren’t just sociopathic soldiers. They are neighbors and friends and family. They are also middle-aged men who come from elsewhere, often with their wives and children and parents, and settle into a life of bourgeois comfort peppered with bouts of mass murder. For more than two decades Bartov, whose mother was raised in Buczacz, traveled extensively throughout the region, scouring archives and amassing thousands of documents rarely seen until now. He has also made use of hundreds of first-person testimonies by victims, perpetrators, collaborators, and rescuers. Anatomy of a Genocide profoundly changes our understanding of the social dynamics of mass killing and the nature of the Holocaust as a whole. Bartov’s book isn’t just an attempt to understand what happened in the past. It’s a warning of how it could happen again, in our own towns and cities—much more easily than we might think.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Central and East European Politics Zsuzsa Csergo, Daina Stukuls Eglitis, Paula M. Pickering, 2021 Now in a fully updated edition, this essential text explores the other half of Europe, the newer and future members of the EU along with the problems and potential they bring to the region and to the world stage--
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Europe in the Contemporary World: 1900 to the Present Bonnie G. Smith, 2020-12-24 Examining the history of 20th- and 21st-century Europe in a global context, this book cleverly integrates elements of intellectual, political, social cultural and economic history to provide an overall view of the period, with detailed coverage across the continent. Including a new chapter on 21st-century issues, more material on globalization and historiographic updates throughout, this new edition is the definitive guide to Europe and its place in the world since 1900 for students and scholars alike--
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Architecture and Control Annie Ring, Henriette Steiner, Kristin Veel, 2018 Surface phenomena of the broad present -- Contested sites -- Control and resistance.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Post-communist Nostalgia Maria Todorova, Zsuzsa Gille, 2012 Although the end of the Cold War was greeted with great enthusiasm by people in the East and the West, the ensuing social and especially economic changes did not always result in the hoped-for improvements in people's lives. This led to widespread disillusionment that can be observed today all across Eastern Europe. Not simply a longing for security, stability, and prosperity, this nostalgia is also a sense of loss regarding a specific form of sociability. Even some of those who opposed communism express a desire to invest their new lives with renewed meaning and dignity. Among the younger generation, it surfaces as a tentative yet growing curiosity about the recent past. In this volume scholars from multiple disciplines explore the various fascinating aspects of this nostalgic turn by analyzing the impact of generational clusters, the rural-urban divide, gender differences, and political orientation. They argue persuasively that this nostalgia should not be seen as a wish to restore the past, as it has otherwise been understood, but instead it should be recognized as part of a more complex healing process and an attempt to come to terms both with the communist era as well as the new inequalities of the post-communist era.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Mud Sweeter Than Honey Margo Rejmer, 2022-11-10
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Don't Sleep, There are Snakes Daniel Everett, 2010-07-09 Although Daniel Everett was a missionary, far from converting the Pirahãs, they converted him. He shows the slow, meticulous steps by which he gradually mastered their language and his gradual realisation that its unusual nature closely reflected its speakers' startlingly original perceptions of the world. Everett describes how he began to realise that his discoveries about the Pirahã language opened up a new way of understanding how language works in our minds and in our lives, and that this way was utterly at odds with Noam Chomsky's universally accepted linguistic theories. The perils of passionate academic opposition were then swiftly conjoined to those of the Amazon in a debate whose outcome has yet to be won. Everett's views are most recently discussed in Tom Wolfe's bestselling The Kingdom of Speech. Adventure, personal enlightenment and the makings of a scientific revolution proceed together in this vivid, funny and moving book.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Cafe Europa Slavenka DRAKULIC, 1996
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Many Waters Sally Bruce Kinsolving, 1942
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Irish Pages Chris Agee, 2007
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Impossible Country Brian Hall, 2011-04-30 'Here is art which conceals art, and intellect which conceals intellect, so that by the end of the book one feels that one understands something one had not understood before. Mr Hall is witty and amusing, but not snide; he has a lightness of touch which allows him to write of extremely serious matters without solemnity; he knows how to convey a great deal in a few words' Sunday Telegraph 'He is an observant and witty writer...you believe implicitly that he has met the people he writes about, and that they said what he quotes them as saying' Sunday Times
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: Central and East European Politics Sharon L. Wolchik, Jane Leftwich Curry, 2011 A useful text and reference book. These essays are at their best in serving both area study and political sociology.---Slavic Review --
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: The Reawakening (La Tregua) Primo Levi, 1965
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: The Inner Side of the Wind, Or The Novel of Hero and Leander Milorad Pavić, 1993 From the author of the international phenomenon Dictionary of the Khazars comes his most personal and intimate work to date. This novel parallels the myth of Hero and Leander, telling of two lovers in Belgrade, one from the turn of the 18th century, the other from early in the 20th, who reach out to each other across the gulf of time.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: The Economics of Feasible Socialism Revisited Alec Nove, 2017-06-30 Characteristically readable, controversial and full of insights, Alec Nove's new book is essential reading for anyone concerned with evaluating the relevance of Marxism to contemporary social and economic problems.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: The Culture of Lies Dubravka Ugrešić, 1998 A funny and cynical collection of essays, apercus and sketches denouncing the perversions of political and cultural life in Croatia. The Culture of Lies was written as a reaction to the collapse of Yugoslavia and the unholy war in Croatia and Bosnia. The collection attacks and attempts to understand events in the former Yugoslavia: aggression against people's own brothers, artificial amnesties; adoption of nationalist fascist ideologies; propaganda and censorship; folklore kitsch as a culture of a lie; writers and intellectuals caught up in the Maelstrom of Nationalism. Ugresic's ascerbic and pentrating essays cover everything from politics to daily routine, from public to private life. This is 1 of the most intelligent and lucid accounts of this episode in history by a writer herself exiled and struggling to find a new identity.
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: The Hired Man Aminatta Forna, 2013-10-01 An award-winning Scottish and Sierra Leonean novelist “brilliantly portrays the atmosphere” of Croatia in this haunting tale of war, history, and secrets (The Guardian). Visitors are not common in the small Croatian village of Gost, so Duro is surprised to see a strange car pull up to a well-known farmhouse just outside of town. Laura, a British woman, and her two children are refurbishing the home to be their summer cottage, and Duro agrees to lend a hand, becoming Laura’s confidant along the way. But the rest of the residents of Gost are not so pleased to have outsiders in their midst. As Duro works to shield Laura and her family from the town’s hostility, volatile secrets begin to bubble to the surface—secrets that could threaten everyone in the seemingly sleepy town, even the unwitting new residents. The Hired Man is a story of lost love, dangerous history, and quiet malice. “Not since Remains of the Day has an author so skillfully revealed the way history’s layers are invisible to all but it’s participants, who do what they must to survive” (The Boston Globe).
  cafe europa slavenka drakulić: (--shards--) Ismet Prcic, 2011 Ismet Prcic's brilliant, provocative, and propulsively energetic debut is about a young Bosnian, also named Ismet Prcic, who has fled his war-torn homeland and is now struggling to reconcile his past with his present life in California. He is advised that in order to make peace with the corrosive guilt he harbors over leaving behind his family behind, he must write everything. The result is a great rattlebag of memories, confessions, and fictions: sweetly humorous recollections of Ismet's childhood in Tuzla appear alongside anguished letters to his mother about the challenges of life in this new world. As Ismet's foothold in the present falls away, his writings are further complicated by stories from the point of view of another young man--real or imagined--named Mustafa, who joined a troop of elite soldiers and stayed in Bosnia to fight. When Mustafa's story begins to overshadow Ismet's new-world identity, the reader is charged with piecing together the fragments of a life that has become eerily unrecognizable, even to the one living it. Shards is a thrilling read--a harrowing war story, a stunningly inventive coming of age, and a heartbreaking saga of a splintered family.
coffee shop 与 café 有什么区别? - 知乎
85度C 可以算cafe,更像bakery, 85度C在美国叫 85 Bakery Cafe。 后来我在wikipedia也查了: Coffeehouse. Coffeehouse and coffee shop are related terms for an establishment which …

为什么在英语里,咖啡馆有时被写作「café」? - 知乎
Oct 3, 2020 · 虽然在一些权威词典中,不带撇的cafe被认为是规范写法,但在现实生活中,很多店铺更偏爱café这种形式。 有人说café是法语单词,可能不太准确。 café这个写法确实来自法 …

2025年运动相机推荐|Gopro 13、大疆ation 5 Pro、Insta360 运动 …
Jan 14, 2025 · DJI Osmo Action 5 pro. 外观方面:DJI Osmo Action 5 Pro 与其前代 Osmo Action 4 非常相似。前后两个触摸屏现在都采用OLED 格式且更大:前屏幕从 1.4 英寸增加到 1.46 英 …

意式咖啡和美式咖啡的区别是什么? - 知乎
摩卡(Mocha Cafe): 摩卡咖啡是由意大利浓缩咖啡、巧克力糖酱、鲜奶油和牛奶混合而成的一种古老的咖啡。由四分之一意式浓缩咖啡,四分之一巧克力糖酱,四分之一牛奶,四分之一鲜 …

c盘突然大了几十g,roaming这个文件夹怎么这么大? - 知乎
c盘突然大了几十g,快要爆满,今天才发现原来是c盘的用户文件夹里有个隐藏文件夹appdata,里面有个子文件…

香港旅行攻略:签证、景点、住宿、交通、美食、逛街购物等,看 …
May 9, 2023 · 又是一群人在排队。。。。 为什么去香港? 老公最爱周杰伦,周杰伦香港演唱会时间5月5日至5月14日,所以我们准备多呆些天,去凑个热闹,圆了老公的小愿望~为了少踩 …

学俄语怎么入门? - 知乎
知乎,中文互联网高质量的问答社区和创作者聚集的原创内容平台,于 2011 年 1 月正式上线,以「让人们更好的分享知识、经验和见解,找到自己的解答」为品牌使命。知乎凭借认真、专业 …

coffee shop 与 café 有什么区别? - 知乎
85度C 可以算cafe,更像bakery, 85度C在美国叫 85 Bakery Cafe。 后来我在wikipedia也查了: Coffeehouse. Coffeehouse and coffee …

为什么在英语里,咖啡馆有时被写作「café」? - 知乎
Oct 3, 2020 · 虽然在一些权威词典中,不带撇的cafe被认为是规范写法,但在现实生活中,很多店铺更偏爱café这种形式。 有人说café是法语单词, …

2025年运动相机推荐|Gopro 13、大疆ation 5 Pro、Insta360 运动相机性价 …
Jan 14, 2025 · DJI Osmo Action 5 pro. 外观方面:DJI Osmo Action 5 Pro 与其前代 Osmo Action 4 非常相似。前后两个触摸屏现在都采用OLED 格 …

意式咖啡和美式咖啡的区别是什么? - 知乎
摩卡(Mocha Cafe): 摩卡咖啡是由意大利浓缩咖啡、巧克力糖酱、鲜奶油和牛奶混合而成的一种古老的咖啡。由四分之一意式浓缩咖啡,四分之一巧 …

c盘突然大了几十g,roaming这个文件夹怎么这么大? - 知乎
c盘突然大了几十g,快要爆满,今天才发现原来是c盘的用户文件夹里有个隐藏文件夹appdata,里面有个子文件…