Polish searchers are apparently confounded by our baking ingredients, demanding to know "why is British flour so strange?" and Austria should probably hang its head in shame for the question "is England a country or a city?"
Other searches were somewhat more reasonable.
The Danish have been asking why English judges wear wigs, the Finnish want to know why the Olympics refer to the UK as "Britain", while Lithuanians ponder as to why British people drive on the left side of the road.
Last week, separate data was released about the most common searches made about all the countries around Europe.
According to Google's autocomplete function, which uses algorithms to suggest search terms based on what you've already started typing, plenty of people write "Wales is better than England" in the search box.
Tellingingly, the most popular statement about England was found to be, "England is confusing".
It's tricky to test this for yourself, since the search engine will already be deeply personalised to you based on your browsing history.
But it's amusing, if true, that so many people have typed "Scotland is not a real country" and "Ukraine is not a brothel" into Google.