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 Do u actually read long questions..tell the truth?
or u just read half of it just to know what the asker is talking about??

4 me i dont read all of it ..it's just boring
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3ashan keda el mafrood el wahed ...


 Please describe yourself in no more than ten words?
...


 What do you fear the most?

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no hallambra, im not the one giving everyone thumbs down. im not that kind of a ...


 Are you fortunate enough to still have both your parents?
...


 How should Israel respond to this latest tragedy?
http://www.ynetnews.com/...


 What would you do if ...?
your mind (and everybody else as well) was telling you one thing, while your heart and desires told you another? If you chose to follow your heart, you would not be hurting others, just disappointing ...


 If you received 5 million dollars, what will be the first thing you buy?
...


 Since the jews have 2 states, and palestinians have non, should israel be moved to new york?
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 Which singer you can't stand listening to?
...


 Are you shy infront of the opposite gender?
rate 1 to 10...


 What could be more embarrassing than just smiling*?
Is there a time when your working or doing anything and all of a sudden ur head starts working and thinking about something and than u smile without noticing urself when theres someone watching u ...


 Ur opinion plzzz?
tomorrow is the first day in school my friends arent with me in the same classe ...so i am confused tommorow sit in back or in the front in the classe

i really want to be isloated from ...


 What are your favorite dessert choices ?
I want to try something new
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desserts ...


 What do you think you are too old for?
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 What Egyptian natural juice you advise others to drink and why?
If names are not easy in English write it in Arabic or try to explain how it's made.

About myself I love sugar cane juice (3asier Asab)if this is the write name. It's typical E...


 Who is your favourite arab singer?
e.g. nancy agram, amr diab..etc.....


 What would you take with you if you only had 5 minutes to evacuate your home during a fire?
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 Suppose Israel withdrew all occupation and removed all checkpoints now, how would Palestinians react?
Would there be peace for all?
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Aldonbonn, I am just asking for an opinion.

Bosco, which political party would make a good democratic government?...


 I have found Jewish ancestry I was unaware of, am I Jewish?
...


 What is the worst thing to say on a first date ?
I know it's an old one but I am looking for some new answers !
How about a truly African one ?
''My sangoma said I''l meet you here !''...



Butterflies in my stomach

Egypt or Greece?

Which is better?.. and plz dont choose a country just because you are from there.. i need REAL answers. thank you =)

    



Show all answers


hasafer
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Egypt for sure


JASMINE 2
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Egypt!! The country of the Pyramids the Nile ! The country of everything beautiful!!


Karina*
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I don't know which one I would choose, because both countries has a lot to offer.. Both very beautiful countries with a lot of history...


bloodburner
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Greece


Anastasia@HELLENIC!
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Both are very different countries.

Both share very ancient but DIFFERENT histories.

Greek culture is Meditterenean/European
Egyptian culture is Arab/Middle Eastern

Greece is Eastern Orthodox and Egypt is mostly Muslim

Greece depends on its seas, Egypt depends on Its Nile River.

Greece is full of mountains. Egypt is full of deserts.

Greece is more liberal and Western. Egypt is more strained and conservative.

Greece has the lowest crime rate in Europe. Egypt is the least terrorist country in the Middle East.

Greece has many more islands, and touristic spots. Also Greece is more developed, safe, and a much cleaner country. So i would choose Greece because of that. No hard feelings for the Egyptians though =) i love them all =)


Yasmine
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Greece - Because it's a country full of History (Ex: "Cradle of Western Civilization, and home to the Olympic Games..etc.)

Also Greece has many many islands that are Cosmopolitan and beach resorts. Greece is more developed and I wouldn't feel comfortable going into a Middle Eastern country. That's my opinion.


taryamma
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Come to Egypt and look for some Greek enviroment :)

Greek restaurants and Greek tourist places


pepe
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I really think greece because I have gotten the chance to visit that beautiful city. It is jut so amazingly beautiful.


Kasie
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Greece. definintely not Egypt ugh.


Cutie
greece


Karl B
You've got to be a real cut and dry person. I'll tell you how to tell what a cool country is. Walk accross the border and smell what it must of felt like when people really roamed the earth and didn't know what the next valley would reveal. Myself, it's hard to beat retsina.


kitz
Greece.


WHY ME???
greece


GREEK BARBiE
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Greece because Greek boys are HOT!


samy n
every country of both has its taste and good blaces but egypt is more than greec with its so anchient civilization and its nile river also its beachs like alex looklike greec so in egypt yoy enjoy by both


sistablu...Maat
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They two very different countries and so it is very difficult to attempt to compare them. They speak different languages,have very different belief systems,(in general) and have very different topography and climate.
But each has inherited an amazing amount of culture from their past ancient civilizations.
Greece is much more Cosmopolitan and European while Egypt is Middle Eastern even though it is in Africa.
If you are chosing for a holiday then it really comes down to which ancient civilization holds the most fascination for you.
for both countries have beach or seaside resorts where you can lazr on the beach or crise on the water.
There is also a great night life in both Cairo and Athens.
Your money will go a lot further in Egypt if you are from a western country, so I guess you haver to weigh all those aspects up.
Personally I would have to choose Egypt.
As having spent time in Greece and the Greek Islands I can honestly say that there is nothing,no country on this earth that holds the magic,the splendor and majesty of ancient times and blends it with the frenetic madness of the modern age than Egypt.
So much so that I left Australia, which is a very different country and culture to both, to come and live here in Egypt.


JP
Greece


Sultan Shalfat the Adventurer
Helen, I give you the advice of your life. Egypt it is.


.


cuterthanu
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Each is better in different ways. Egypt has amazing ancient legacy and many diverse interesting cultures. It's so much fun to explore Ancient Egypt, the dessert and the songs and dance. Greece is less interesting this way but it is a very very beautiful country. The people are also beautiful. Everything's clean.


Moonrise
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Egypt and Greece share so many similarities.
both have ancient monuments.
both have a capitals and comfortable summer resorts .
both have similar climates .
in both you will find sellers in the street corners , roast potatoes in egypt,and roast chestnuts in greece.
both had ancient gods and myths about those gods.
both have turkish coffe, but in greece they call it greek coffee bec they have a long fight with turkey.
when im in greece, i feel at home , but i dont speak their language, i speak english instead.
so many greeks were in egypt , but left in the fifties . they still love us and invite us to a drink when they hear a word of arabic we say. they are generous and hospitable.
finally, i feel at home in greece, but i am at home in egypt. so, i would say that egypt is better . this is my real answer.


Beautiful Skopje
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Greece is a modern European country. Egypt is subdeveloped where people wear sandals and ride camels to work.


Isabella my precious
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GREECE- "cradle of Western civilization" and birthplace of Democracy. Land of Homer, Plato, Aristotle and Alexander the Great. Land of the Greek Gods & Aegean Sea.

Historic Athens and 2,500 islands to choose from.

up to you =)


Kalooka
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Egypt for just one reason..the warm weather at this time of year, Greece now is cold.


HAPA CHIC
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EGYPT
______________________________________...

Part of Alexandria's power and majesty came from its status as the new capital of Egypt. In 320 BC it replaced Memphis as the seat of rulership for the Ptolemaic dynasty and it remained so throughout the Byzantine period. The rest was largely due to its monopoly on the papyrus industry for the entire Mediterranean world, as well as its hold on the manufacture and export of medicines, perfumes, jewelry, and art. Additionally, many materials and goods prized by the ancient world from the east came into Alexandria and were exported from there.

The arrival of the Greeks brought an unprecedented amount of change in Egypt as they overlaid the existing society with that of their own. At first glance, the Græco-Macedonian period seems to lack the romance and awe of the Pharaohs who came before, but it was during this time, between Alexander's conquest and the Arab takeover of Alexandria in AD 642 that Egypt made some of its most significant contributions to the classical world, as well as absorbing its influences. Change came in many sectors of Egypt and Egyptian life. A new system of roads and canals was created which, coupled with the Nile travel already mastered by the Egyptians, resulted in the ability to move goods and people all over the Nile Valley and the Delta like never before. Better travel resulted in better communications across Egypt, which in turn resulted in greater military security as well as the faster spread of new cultural and social patterns.

Alexander the Great took Egypt from the Persians in 332 BC and made it a part of the the Greek Empire. In the first part of 331 BC, shortly after being crowned Pharaoh in Memphis, he sailed northwards down the Nile and there, prompted by a dream, he began his most lasting contribution to civilization. On the natural harbor near Rhacotis he built a fortified port and named it, in a moment of egotism, Alexandria. Alexander then connected the island of Pharos, located in the center of the bay, to the mainland with a 1,300-meter causeway, the Heptastadion. Thus two great harbors were created for his city and towering over it all, the Pharos Lighthouse, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. Yet Alexander, true to his nature, did not say long enough to see a single building built of his new city. Instead, he traveled to Siwa and then back to Memphis before setting out on his conquest of Asia. He never returned, dying in Babylon at the age of 38.

Following Alexander's death, his generals divided the Empire, each setting up their own kingdoms. One of them, Ptolemy, took Egypt as his share and made Alexandria his capital, ruling as Ptolemy I Soter and thus established the last dynasty that would rule Egypt with the title of Pharaoh. He brought Alexander's body with him to be buried in the city, reuniting the famed conqueror with the city that bore his name. For the next two-and-a-half centuries, the Ptolemaic dynasty of the Greeks would successfully rule Egypt, mingling Hellenic traditions with the mighty legacy of the Pharaohs.

It was under the Ptolemaic Dynasty that Alexandria truly became the cultural and economic center of the ancient world. Egypt was ruled from Alexandria by Ptolemy's descendants until the death of Cleopatra VII in 30 BC. The early Ptolemies raised the quality of Egyptian agriculture by reclaiming cultivatable land through irrigation and introduced crops such as cotton and better wine-producing grapes. In addition, they increased the wealth of their population by increasing foreign trade, making more luxury goods available to more people. In return, Egypt enriched their lives as the new rulers absorbed their adopted culture. Egypt had enchanted the Ptolemies, as it had all its foreign rulers before them. Ptolemy and his descendants adopted Egyptian royal trappings and added Egypt's religion to their own, worshipping the gods of Eternity and building temples to them, and even being mummified and buried in sarcophagi covered with hieroglyphs.

This adoption of Egyptian culture was really the secret to Ptolemy's rule (and that of his descendants). Alexander came and left, burning with the desire to bring the rest of the world under his influence, but Ptolemy saw a need to become one of the people he intended to rule. Indeed, the famed Satrap Stele, on which is carved a decree from Ptolemy from the same period as his installation as ruler reads, "I Ptolemy, the satrap, restore to Horus, the avenger of his father, the territory of Patanut [Egypt], from this day forth for ever..." In addition to showing respect for the Egyptian religion and beliefs (something previous conquerors had failed to do), this inscription reminded the people exactly who it was who had liberated Egypt from the Persian Empire, thus ensuring much support for the new ruler and the dynasty that would follow him.

This was quite literally a golden age for the citizens of Alexandria, and for Egypt as a whole. Although Alexander never lived to see its glory, it nevertheless became the racial melting pot he is said to have wanted for his capital city. Ptolemy decided early on that Alexandria would be not just another port capital, but the home of a new age in Greek science and art. It may seem surprising to find such an impulse in a military man, but Ptolemy was more than just another general. He was a great writer of histories, including detailed accounts of Alexander's campaigns, and this love for learning did not die with him. Ptolemy's son and heir, Ptolemy II Philadelphus, for instance, had a passion for science, and Ptolemy III as we shall see, was a manic collector of books. The Greeks had long had a tradition of enlightened rulers, and despite being on foreign soil, the Ptolemies would be no exception. Ptolemy invited scholars and artists from all over the known world to come to Alexandria, not to be mere court window dressing, but to foster the learning culture of Alexandria. The arrival of many of these learned people, and later the successors they found amongst the citizens of their new home, resulted in one of the most famous images of historic Alexandria: the Library.

The Library at Alexandria was conceived largely as an attempt to bring together in Alexandria the whole of the earlier Greek science, art, and literature. Ptolemy I, though respectful as he was of the Egyptian culture, nevertheless believed the Greek culture to be superior in many respects, and thus the preservation of it in Alexandria was of utmost importance. The models for this project may very well have been the research center created by Aristotle at the Lyceum, as well as Plato's Academy. Between these two centers of learning, later joined by the Library, something very close to the modern university was being created, for these centers did not just archive information, they made it accessible to those who sought it, and in return, added to it. And add to it they did. At one point the Library held close to fifty thousand books, not much when compared to the university libraries of today, but for the ancient world it is an astonishing number.

It was the mission of the librarians, as well as of those rulers who supported it, to rescue and archive all Greek knowledge and to obtain copies of every known work. Stories abound about Ptolemy III Euergetes I, grandson of Ptolemy I, who seized cargoes of books from ships docked at Alexandria, had copies made of each volume, returned the copies to the shipmasters and kept the originals for the library. He also borrowed the complete works of Aeschylus, Euripides, and Sophocles from the Athenian collections and never returned them. Yet this is not to say that the Ptolemies hoarded knowledge. The libraries were open to all those who could read and who wished to learn. And learning was easy indeed thanks to the widespread teaching of the Greek alphabet. With only thirty symbols, as compared with the multitudes of hieroglyphs, virtually anyone could learn it, and almost everyone did. A new age of learning had dawned, and Alexandria stood at the bulwark of it.

The eventual fate of the Library is unknown. A significant portion of it is said to have been destroyed during Julius Caesar's war against Pompey, though how significant this portion was, or even the size of it, is not certain. The Library may have perished during the 270s, along with the palace quarter. At the very least, it does not appear to have existed at the time of the Arab conquest in the seventh century AD. Stories do abound, as they always will, that part of the library was rescued and remains hidden, waiting to be discovered.

For the next three centuries the Ptolemaic Dynasty would hold sway over Egypt, surviving both family feuds and external conflicts while living an unusual combination of Hellenic and Egyptian life. And under them Alexandria grew mighty and prosperous, the center of an empire that extended around the coast of Syria to the Aegean Sea. In fact, if Alexandria had been any more prosperous, it might have replaced Rome as the center of the world, as Rome was neither as strategically located nor as culturally diverse. But all this is not to say that Alexandria was a city completely at peace with itself. With the large numbers of people and cultures coming through the city, it was inevitable that conflict would arise. Certainly racial tensions, by no means an invention of the twentieth century, played a strong part. Additionally, a number of more tradition-minded Egyptians resented the presence of the Greeks, nations brought their feuds with them to the streets and businesses of Alexandria, and there was always the wildly unpredictable Alexandrian Mob to lend spice to things.

Little by little however, the glory days of the early Ptolemies came to an end. The later successors to the throne did not live up to the standards set by their forebears and moreover, internal strife took its toll. The Egyptians grew more restless year by year and finally, beginning in 206 BC, Upper Egypt openly rebelled. Suppressing these revolts took more out of the treasury than the Ptolemies could afford and this, combined with the less-than-sound foreign policy of the later Ptolemies, brought Egypt increasingly under the influence of rome


♥$]-[!nzenbi♥
Egypt!i'm not from egypt and i would really love to go there.its a fascinating place.it really is.


poem flower((mabrooook le Masr))
the natural answer is Egypt



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