Singapore is a great place to work in. No doubt about that. But, it's only a great place to live in if you have the money. In Singapore, the only thing free is the air you breathe. That's how the all time joke about what the ruling party's abbreviated name stands for came about.
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Should I move to Singapore?
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Question........isnt the price of a luxury car more expensive in SQ than say another country. EX, A BMW M3 that costs around 60k in the U.S costs 120,000?
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Originally posted by Kyo View PostEven the Norwegians agree they come second to Singapore...God must have been a ship owner, he placed the raw materials far from where they are needed and covered two-thirds of the earth with water...
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If you do come over just be mindful of flying near Christmas as flights are always fully booked as people go via Singapore to OZ etc If it will be right at the end of the year then arrange to come out during Christmas and Ney year then go spend NYE in Bali or OZ!
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Originally posted by SQtraveller View PostI've had a meeting recently with the boss who says that if I agree, the move will take place at the end of this year.God must have been a ship owner, he placed the raw materials far from where they are needed and covered two-thirds of the earth with water...
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Originally posted by Pinkfloyd View PostLike Nike says "Just Do It!"... Give it a year and if you are fed up with SIN by then, you can always move on... No harm done...
Unlikely to be technically fully correct......
A company shipping over personnel, and in this case so far, will likely state in their contract a minimum "pay-back" time of anywhere between 2-5yrs. Though difficult to fully enforce be mindful that there could be a penalty for going home "early" into a contract that could include repayment of moving fees and visa fees etc.
Just something to look out for SQTr.
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Originally posted by Kyo View PostNo, English is probably the main language spoken, although Mandarin comes in a close second, I'd say (certainly street signs and the like are all in English).
Singlish is the main language, and as a newcomer it can take a bit of getting used to though as an English native speaker is certainly far easier. My wife, whose second language is English, does tend to find the language and accent a little tricky.
How close is it though between Mandarin and Cantonese for 2nd spot? I hear as much Cantonese as just about anything else.
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Canto only in Chinatown, mostly
Other than that I rarely hear it used. Singaporean Hokkien is far more common in my opinion. But you're right - it's not English exactly, it's Singlish! (a smattering of Hokkien/Mandarin/English sometimes)
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