Cities and places fill us with certain feelings. There’s a flair in the flavors and sounds of Miami fill us with the insatiable urge to dance, while a stroll through a leafy Chicago neighborhood makes us want to greet every passerby with kindness. We may not notice, but we can feel the spirit of a city, apparent in the way the locals greet each other, a certain resilience after defeat, or swelling pride after a hard-won independence. But how do we put that into words? One language may be (and often is) insufficient for all the cultures of the world. Words like the Serbian “inat” and the Danish “hygge” can express the heart of the cultures and their cities. Check out these beautifully hard-to-translate words here.
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Representative Image: He'd rather be home, but he has to provide. 
Hand signs an invoiceCanva
Gif of Colin Ferrel via
A woman hands her neighbors a giftCanva
A woman in a convenience store purchases a lottery ticket.Canva
A couple celebrates the purchase of ftheir new homeCanva

House on fireCanva
An elderly woman wipes away tearsCanva
Gif of Dave Grohl singing via 


Man standing on concrete wall.Photo credit
The Pantheon in Rome and Hong Kong at sunrise.Photo credit
Windmills and green grass.
Time lapse of blue skies over a solar field.