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In Pakistan, going Dutch is sometimes referred to as the "American system". This practice is more prevalent among the younger age group, friends, colleagues and some family members to request separate bills. In Urdu, the practice is called apna apna, which means 'each his own'. In a group, going Dutch generally means splitting the bill equally.
There is no Dutch involvement in the series and serious flaws make it hard to believe. The name of the army base is a fictitious mixture of Dutch and German words in a wrong spelling. While in Dutch Syrup Village would have been Stroopdorp strangely enough the German word Dorf was chosen and Stroops does not mean anything.
Going Dutch Premiere Denis Leary Fox At the tulip festival, Maggie tries to prep Quinn with index cards, but Quinn insists he’s better when speaking off the cuff.
"Going Dutch" is a contemporary military workplace family comedy, not necessarily in that adjectival order. Denis Leary, with a distracting dye job, plays self-important Army Col. Patrick Quinn ...
"Going Dutch" does not have an equal translation in Dutch. Most commonly used is the expression that the group pays the bill "every man for himself" ("ieder voor zich"). In practice though this way of paying is not very common in The Netherlands.
Denis Leary’s big mouth is about to land him in a Fox-ton of trouble. The network’s upcoming comedy series Going Dutch stars Leary as U.S. Army Colonel Patrick Quinn, an “arrogant loudmouth ...
Going Dutch; Dutch courage; Dutch Sandwich; Dutch roll; Dutch Reach [1] Further reading "Dutch courage, going Dutch, double Dutch: waar komen deze uitdrukkingen ...
There was a ceremony that presented Miller posthumously with the Dutch Orange Lanyard, an esteemed military award, the application for which van Hees and another Dutch war expert, Tim Hendriks ...