Here is the unglamorous side of car life in Hong Kong: you need a plan for where the car sleeps and how it moves. Parking is the linchpin. If your building has resident spaces, great; if not, scout nearby car parks, office towers, and estate lots for monthly options. Factor commute patterns too: a space near home and a daily rush-hour hunt near the office is a recipe for stress.
EVs are everywhere lately, and Hong Kong’s dense layout can actually suit them well. Short urban trips make efficient use of batteries, and regenerative braking thrives on stop-and-go traffic. But the real question is charging. If you have a reserved space with reliable power, an EV can be a dream. For apartment living without guaranteed charging, look at your neighborhood’s public options and how often you really drive. The convenience gap between home charging and public queues is what decides satisfaction, not the brochure range number.
When English speakers ask for “car in French,” the word you want most of the time is “voiture.” It is feminine: une voiture, la voiture, ma voiture. Plural is des voitures. You will hear it everywhere, from car ads to casual chats: “On prend la voiture ou le train ?” (Are we taking the car or the train?) It also plugs nicely into a bunch of everyday phrases: conduire une voiture (to drive a car), acheter une voiture neuve (to buy a new car), voiture electrique (electric car), assurance voiture (car insurance), and location de voiture (car rental).
Oil change intervals used to be a simple 3,000 miles, but that is outdated for many cars. Today, 5,000 to 10,000 miles is common, and some engines and oils can safely go longer. Time matters, too. If you drive very little, consider a change every 6 to 12 months because additives deplete and moisture accumulates. Your driving habits make a big difference. Short trips where the engine never gets fully warm, lots of idling, towing, dusty roads, or extreme heat are considered severe service, which can cut intervals in half. Many modern cars have an oil life monitor that uses algorithms and sensors to estimate remaining life; treat that as your baseline unless you know your use is more severe. The color of oil is not a reliable indicator, since detergents turn it dark even when it is still protecting well. If a track day or mountain towing adventure is on the schedule, an early change before or after is cheap peace of mind. Clean oil is cheap insurance.
Let’s pressure-test the fee structures with three common cases. For a low-priced item (say, a $30 top), Mercari’s fees scale with price: 10% selling fee plus payment processing, so you are down a few dollars before shipping. If you offer free shipping, that cost further eats into a small margin. On Carousell, a meetup sale may net the full $30 (no platform fee), but if you use Carousell Protection and ship, you will lose a small percentage (and any fixed component) plus shipping. On a midrange gadget around $120, Mercari remains predictable—your fees are proportional to price. On Carousell, the percent fee still applies if you use Protection, but a face-to-face deal could still be fee-free. For a $600 premium item, the difference can widen. Mercari’s percentage fees grow with the ticket size, while Carousell Protection still charges a percent (and possibly a cap in some markets), but local, in-person deals could again be fee-free. The practical takeaway: Carousell rewards local meetups; Mercari rewards shipping reach with predictable costs.