BYO
I don't believe we have anything similar in the Lowlands and I must admit I have mixed feelings about this. I believe if a restaurant is not allowed to serve alcohol it can't be a good restaurant, to me the whole idea of having to bring your own bottle of whatever-that-is, seems weird and unreal. I've never even been in a restaurant with a BYO policy and each restaurant I went to here in London I did have a glass of wine [or two, or three, or...] so I reckon I must have been to licensed restaurants only *lucky gal*. To me it just doesn't add up, it sounds 'cheap' somehow. I thought the Dutch had a reputation of being 'cheap' over here, perhaps the English copied it?...
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e.g. "I'm a Dutchman"; "Dutch courage", "Dutch treat" . All these come from the time of the 17th century when the Dutch were hated military and commercial rivals of the English. Examples include Dutch reckoning, a bill that is presented without any details, and which only gets bigger if you question it, and a Dutch widow, a prostitute. In the same spirit are Dutch auction, one in which the prices go down instead of up; Dutch courage, temporary bravery induced by alcohol; Dutch metal, an alloy of copper and zinc used as a substitute for gold foil; Dutch comfort or Dutch consolation, in which somebody might say "thank God it is no worse!"; Dutch concert, in which each musician plays a different tune; Dutch uncle, someone who criticises or rebukes you with the frankness of a relative; and Dutch treat, one in which those invited pay for themselves.
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That's surprising. I've heard of BYO parties but not restaurants before.