Known Definition Of A Tourist example essay topic
To back up the definition of the word that I agree with, I have provided some other examples based on occurrences I have been involved with or seen. A tourist, in my opinion, is a person who is very rude, hostile, pushy, urgent, always rushing, and ignorant when it comes to directions and locations. Since tourists aren't born and live in the place they are visiting, they can't see all the landmarks and interesting sites there is to see. They are always rushing to fit as much as they can into one day's events before they go back to where they live. They stop you every few minutes while standing in front of The Hub to ask where Main Street is. This also ties into "being rude" because they don't ask in a polite way usually, and they rarely say "Thank You".
They can't be bothered with slow people. I worked at D&B Car Wash last summer and I got a lot of rude customers everyday. I would ask them what wash they would like, since we have three kinds, and they would throw the money at me telling me to just give them a wash. They were obviously in a hurry to do something. Most of the time they didn't even know how to drive their car in properly, and they would get it stuck, then get upset and start screaming and saying they were going to sue the Car Wash if any damage happened to their car. Then the manager would come out and a whole fiasco would begin.
There are many distinctive features a tourist has or uses that allows others to be able to identify them. Tourists usually carry a camera (disposable or not), binoculars, sunglasses, backpacks, ugly Bermuda shorts, white sunblock on their noses, and funny looking fanny packs that strap around their waist. Tourists always have to be well prepared because they never know what there is to encounter or what they will encounter. Tourists love to be the center of attention, trying to pretend that they are better than everyone else. They like to make big purchases to show off their wealth. An example of this was when I was downtown.
I went into an antique shop. It was very interesting, and it had a lot of cool items. I saw this woman in front of me, she was buying almost everything she saw, or so it seemed. She browsed the shop for a little while, trying to figure out what antiques she really wanted to buy. Then, she listed the items she absolutely wanted to the cashier, for her to retrieve them.
I was in a line for literally an hour. Another common issue among tourists and natives is driving skills. When I would drive with my mother (since I don't have a license), there would be many tourists on the road. We never encountered so many problems. There would be people honking their horn at careless driving mistakes, tourists not using their turn signals causing accidents, and tourists going the wrong way down a one way street. This was a problem, for there are many people on Nantucket Island, or anyplace for that matter.
Respect comes into this as well. Tourists have no respect for natives, or other tourists either. They are constantly taking up the whole sidewalk and people have to fudge their way through the crowds just to travel from one place to another. They have a habit of walking across the street without looking for cars, so all the cars have to stop suddenly for them since they have the right of way. They are in a dream world and don't notice things the way they should. And of course who can forget about the mopeds that tourists love to rent and drive all around the island?
Don't get me started! Basically, tourists are inconsiderate and not very aware of their surroundings so they do things that irritate the local people here. This would be true most anywhere. I guess you notice it more on Nantucket because it's such a small place, and there are so many less people here in the winter. Once the weather starts to get warm, the tourists come out. It's tourist season again - do I need a special hunting license?