If you are a foreigner, you will know someone is Huterric if:
- We write anything on the internet that is of little importance in our accents and slang. For example, the sentence "I dropped my computer on the path and now it's broken" becomes "I dun drop kumpoota un tsa parf ind na it brahk'n".
- They end a lot of sentences with "y'know", although pronounced "Ye'nah" due to our accent.
- They put their adverbs before the verb when speaking German, i.e. "Ich schnell laufe" instead of "Ich laufe schnell".
- You cannot say "Monday, 14th July 2003", the day of the Huterrica Square Incident which saw a monorail station bombed, without an emotional response. It could be about the conspiracy that the incident was staged by the government so it had an excuse to rebuild the area for economic benefit, or it could be about how united the city of Lansadas has become since the event, or it could even be about the improved Lansadas one can see today and how much safer it has become. Either way, every Huterric has a strong opinion about the events of 14th July 2003 and we see it in the way Americans see 9/11.
- Cherry trees are brought up in celebrations you invite them too. If someone, without permission, just randomly plants a cherry tree at a celebration or holiday you can bet with all your money they are Huterric or have heritage from our glorious nation.
- They are aware that same-sex PDA is illegal in some countries they visit, but still engage in it in those places anyway.
- They expect the same high standards in road planning as we have here, and will happily compare your highways to ours on car journeys when least appropriate
- They grow up to believe the Huterric way of life is a basic human right because they've been taught that freedom justifies anything that's legal here but not elsewhere, and so they find the concept of abortion being illegal or the banning of same sex marriages as completely alien to them