Shudder Bug type... What is that? Don't laugh! My english is better than your portuguese...That would require me to be one of those "shudder bug" types, and I clearly am not!
Main Entry: shud·der
Pronunciation: 'sh&-d&r
Function: intransitive verb
Inflected Form(s): shud·dered; shud·der·ing /-d(&-)ri[ng]/
Etymology: Middle English shoddren; akin to Old High German skutten to shake and perhaps to Lithuanian kuteti to shake up
Date: 13th century
1 : to tremble convulsively : SHIVER
2 : QUIVER
Main Entry: shudder
Function: noun
Date: 1607
: an act of shuddering
- shud·dery /-d(&-)rE/ adjective
Shudder Bug
Bro, It's a slang term for someone who is into photography. You know the folks that strap camers down in their Busa's trunk so you can take pictures of strange Bugs...
And BTW, Your English is better than a lot of American's English...And one Canadian that stands out in my mind...
Now the European cars being better than American Cars? True...WAIT!!!!! Hold on now, If you take the respective cars in their native environments. Euro cars are better in Europe, American cars are better in North America. IMO
Most of North America is covered by big wide relatively straight roads, if fairly rough. We have four to sixteen lanes and cities that are built on a grid laid out by roads first. So when you have a 1200 mile road trip in America, you want something big, comfortable, powerful, and smooth.
However the Formula that works in North America fails miserably in the European Environment.
On the same token with a few exceptions the average European car just doesn't work over here. Too small, Diesel? What the hell is that doing in a car? But, in Europe these smaller, more fuel efficient, more nimble cars make a lot of sense. You figure a lot of European Cities, Roads, and layout pre date automobiles by a few hundred years. Big old American Family trucksters just do not fit in.
Just a thought...