Americans React to British Highschoolers seeing British MEMES!

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  • Опубликовано: 19 май 2024
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Комментарии • 556

  • @Sii6X
    @Sii6X Год назад +770

    As a British guy the way that woman made the cup of tea actually triggered me, she should be jailed for that absolute monstrosity

    • @reallystraightguy2716
      @reallystraightguy2716 Год назад +40

      As an American, I've never seen or heard of anyone making tea like this. EVER!

    • @RD-eh3tz
      @RD-eh3tz Год назад +43

      Don't think you can even call it tea when half the glass was milk

    • @kimarnill7648
      @kimarnill7648 Год назад +4

      She lived in the U.K. for a number of years, she should know.😮

    • @alexbuckenham1663
      @alexbuckenham1663 Год назад +7

      She was definitely doing that for the video to go viral when it triggered us Brits...it worked

    • @stutallis5673
      @stutallis5673 Год назад

      In the olde days, she'd have been burned at the stake for that

  • @SteveSmallMusic
    @SteveSmallMusic Год назад +782

    It's maths because it's the shortened version of 'mathematics', not 'mathematic'.

    • @leweegiggles
      @leweegiggles Год назад +25

      Yeah but their stupid argument is based on the fact that it's shortened and therefore removed from the word by the shortening

    • @PuckDaily
      @PuckDaily Год назад

      That literally makes no sense. If it was shortened there is no need to ad an s.

    • @leweegiggles
      @leweegiggles Год назад +73

      @@PuckDaily what he meant was "abbreviated" not shortened. Americans have shortened it but we have abbreviated it.

    • @samhilton4173
      @samhilton4173 Год назад +66

      It has an S regardless, because it is not a singular area of learning. Since it encompasses multiple subjects it must be pluralised.

    • @PuckDaily
      @PuckDaily Год назад +2

      @@leweegiggles maths is not an abbreviation what are you talking about loooool you dont understand that word my guy. EU education going strong i see 😂 in that case, anyways, how can you screw up an abbreviation? There is not a set abbreviation for mathematics. This is just turning into a “im right cause im english” argument as if we don’t use the same language.

  • @aedards
    @aedards Год назад +194

    Fun fact, biscuit is an old French word for twice cooked, which are what biscuits are. We have cookies, they come under the overall heading of biscuit and are broadly like choc chip cookies. Biscuit is a general term.
    O and chips, chips are little shavings/cuts from potatoes, or chips if you will. We have fries as well, they are a specific type of chip. And crisps are crisps because they are, well, crispy 😊

    • @samhilton4173
      @samhilton4173 Год назад +9

      In British kitchens fries are called "frits" or "frittes".
      "Fries" is still considered an Americanism in the culinary world.

    • @aedards
      @aedards Год назад +12

      @@samhilton4173 fair enough, though you'd be hard pressed to find anyone call them anything else other than fries, or chips.

    • @bassax7045
      @bassax7045 Год назад +6

      cookies was inherited from Dutch koekjes

    • @Truthspeakers1589
      @Truthspeakers1589 Год назад +5

      ​@@samhilton4173 I'm British and never heard of frits. Its always chips.

    • @chrislyne377
      @chrislyne377 Год назад

      ​@@samhilton4173 lol no they're not. Where are you from??

  • @WEZ4136
    @WEZ4136 Год назад +455

    I always find it hilarious when Americans comment on English words and how they find the words wrong when we gave the Americans the English language in the first place 😂
    Keep up the good work guys, absolutely love your video reactions

    • @lydiamichaels1976
      @lydiamichaels1976 Год назад +59

      a lot of americans especially teens on tiktok act as if accents, dialects and slang are weird but they've always existed throughout history. Americans have accents but they act as if they have the default or smth and everyone else in the english spking world is weird. Also i think maybe growing up the american media showed only the posh english accent so now that they're older and discovered realistic british accents and slang they act as if it's strange or smth

    • @PuckDaily
      @PuckDaily Год назад +1

      Americans have contributed plenty to English. You also forget we were you at one point dumbasses (my grandpa moved here from london when he was 18). Lol and maths is just wrong and stupid theres no need to ad extra letter when your trying to get rid of syllables. Defeats the purpose or shortening. Everyone knows math is short for mathematics. Inb4 yall say you invented math.

    • @WEZ4136
      @WEZ4136 Год назад +12

      @@lydiamichaels1976 I’d agree with that, most likely hearing the English accent from actors in movies 😆

    • @lydiamichaels1976
      @lydiamichaels1976 Год назад +1

      @Jack Scandinavian is Germanic u melon

    • @ladysparrow8650
      @ladysparrow8650 Год назад +5

      🎤🎤🎤🎤we invented the language so were right lmao

  • @lyndseyj100
    @lyndseyj100 Год назад +113

    Cookies are cookies in England too, biscuits are something different, chocolate chip cookies we do call cookies.
    We also have fries too!! Chips are thick cut version of fries.
    We use same word just have other words to differentiate variations.

    • @gemlc2022
      @gemlc2022 Год назад +8

      The chips fries and biscuit cookie thing does wind me up a bit 🤣, as they are different things not just a different name dor them

    • @lyndseyj100
      @lyndseyj100 Год назад +1

      @@gemlc2022 I know it annoys me it isn't like we just use another word we use the words for correct items and have other words for the others.

    • @H5chi
      @H5chi Год назад +6

      Basically a cookie is a type of biscuit

  • @_Ogmios
    @_Ogmios Год назад +113

    Biscuit means twice-baked. Cookies are single bake, most modern biscuits are single bake.
    But it was much more common to cook sweet things more than once in the past when the term was first taken from the latin.
    Military hard-tack was baked 4 times for instance

    • @ianjardine7324
      @ianjardine7324 Год назад +28

      Which is why biscuits are crunchy and cookies are chewy. This is clearly understood by most of the world but Americans have to be different.

    • @MyBigMouth
      @MyBigMouth Год назад +1

      To add to this, if you bake biscuit twice now it's still the same texture, but bake an American biscuit twice it turns into a lump of rock.

    • @dylanmurphy9389
      @dylanmurphy9389 Год назад +8

      For me, a cookie is one specific type of biscuit

    • @WEZ4136
      @WEZ4136 Год назад +4

      To me as an Englishman a cookie is round with choc chips and hazelnut or whatever you prefer, but we probably have different types of biscuits than Americans have cookies.
      The reason most Americans don’t have electric kettles is down to the electricity supply as it’s only 110 watts, many use the stove top kettle instead but, WTF was that woman and her kid doing to that poor tea bag, my god she needs taking out into the streets and publicly shamed for that shit. She turned making a brew into a full on international insult to tea drinkers worldwide 😂

    • @abbiereynolds8016
      @abbiereynolds8016 Год назад +3

      For me, a cookie is the one with chocolate chips in it, everything else is a biscuit.

  • @gavinyoung4156
    @gavinyoung4156 Год назад +66

    We call fries chips because the potatoes go through a chipping machine to make them 😂

    • @kingspeechless1607
      @kingspeechless1607 5 месяцев назад

      They are cut into chips with a knife at home and in the past. It makes more sense to say it is called a "chipping machine" because it makes 'ready to cook' chips.

  • @pedroneves3153
    @pedroneves3153 Год назад +41

    With the whole French fries/chips debate we call the thick cut ones chips and the thin ones Fries, there’s a difference… we don’t go to McDonalds and ask for Large chips we ask for large fries for example, whereas at a fish and chip shop we’d ask for large chips as they’re the thick cut versions…

    • @ALittleKitten
      @ALittleKitten Год назад +2

      Thank you

    • @MikaIsDead
      @MikaIsDead Год назад +2

      I feel like most young British people (specifically londoners or people from bigger cities) switch between English English and American English for certain words because we grew up watching a lot of American TV

    • @pedroneves3153
      @pedroneves3153 Год назад

      @@MikaIsDead agreed

    • @kingspeechless1607
      @kingspeechless1607 5 месяцев назад

      "Large chips" in a chippie, usually refers to the quantity of chips a customer wants, not the individual size of the chip.

  • @wolf_of_fenric
    @wolf_of_fenric Год назад +33

    In the UK a biscuit tends to be hard while a cookie tends to be softer/doughy. Digestives are a brand of biscuits.

  • @user-up1us8ud1h
    @user-up1us8ud1h Год назад +30

    To me, (UK) a biscuit is crunchy and a cookie is soft and doughy. Great reaction guys 👍

  • @jimjimcherie
    @jimjimcherie Год назад +15

    Armand is genuinely so funny. It's maths because maths is plural, there's multiple branches of mathematics. My first language is spanish, we also say "matemáticas", it's plural.

  • @Shell2164
    @Shell2164 Год назад +21

    Teabag then pour on boiling water, then milk last once the teabag is removed. Any other way is criminal.

  • @lizmccarthy-edwards2115
    @lizmccarthy-edwards2115 Год назад +8

    I was surprised none of them knew "innit" was an abbreviation of "isn't it". I was waiting for one of them to pipe up and say it but uhhh - nope.

  • @tonywilkinson6895
    @tonywilkinson6895 Год назад +10

    The lady that made the tea,was just taking the piss and joking as she lived in the uk for years.

  • @ianmclean6399
    @ianmclean6399 Год назад +11

    Mathematics. Plural so its maths, math is singular makes no sense

  • @conallmclaughlin4545
    @conallmclaughlin4545 Год назад +6

    Chips are called chips because the potato's are chipped. They go through a Chipping machine.
    Crisps are called that because its a crispy slice of fried potato . Its cooked until its crisp.

  • @the98themperoroftheholybri33
    @the98themperoroftheholybri33 8 месяцев назад +2

    I spiritually died watching that lady make tea in a microwave

  • @happycatyoutube
    @happycatyoutube Год назад +8

    We have cookies AND biscuits.....and we have chips AND fries! 😂 it may sound confusing but there is difference between them all 🤣👍

  • @jacksmith4460
    @jacksmith4460 Год назад +8

    Biscuit comes from french it means twice baked, which is part of the definition of what a Cookie or Biscuit is

  • @RandomShart
    @RandomShart Год назад +9

    Hot tea in a cup is simple, pour boiling water over a tea bag in a cup, stir and leave to brew (personal preference but I'd give it 3 minutes tops). Then optional to add sugar and milk if you want it. Some people use lemon instead of milk but we don't talk to those people.

    • @betha8702
      @betha8702 Год назад +1

      I think it depends on the tea. Personally if I'm offered Earl Grey then I take it with Lemon and a bit of honey but if it's Yorkshire or PG Tips then milk and sugar all the way.

  • @educatednumpty71
    @educatednumpty71 Год назад +7

    Cookies are soft and bend whereas biscuits are hard and snap. It comes from the days of sail when the ship's biscuits were hard and had to be soaked in broth before eating.

  • @nicknoga564
    @nicknoga564 Год назад +7

    “Biscuit” is actually a word with ancient Roman origins. In Latin it would’ve been broken into two-words “bi” and “scuit” (which translates to ‘twice-baked’). For centuries it referred to a basic, hard cracker that people would eat on long sea voyages and such (that’s where ‘sea biscuit’ comes from). They were a low-moisture that wouldn’t go bad after months and months at sea. About 100years ago, the food industry saw huge innovations in biscuits and started flavoring them with sweeteners. In the UK they maintained the use of the word ‘biscuit,’ whereas in the US we used a Dutch word ‘koekje’ (which translates to ‘little cake’). It’s pronounced ‘cookie’ and had been in use in America due to Dutch colonization of NY, NJ, Delaware, etc. Other Dutch food names stuck in the US as well(coleslaw, pickle, etc.).

  • @pakistancricfan1773
    @pakistancricfan1773 Год назад +10

    As a Pakistani, I speak a mixture of British and American english so it's always hilarious seeing these kind of videos.

    • @kingspeechless1607
      @kingspeechless1607 5 месяцев назад +1

      That should be 'English' and "American English!"

  • @bookclub5021
    @bookclub5021 Год назад +4

    These guys, man. Love them. They were so close to getting it at the end with the math/maths thing lmao.

  • @whitedwarf4986
    @whitedwarf4986 Год назад +26

    I've often thought the closest place in the USA to us over here in terms of attitudes and sense of humour is New York so it's good to hear New Yorkers think the same.

  • @TheJammm79
    @TheJammm79 Год назад +2

    Lovin yr work fellas. I like how u are getting our culture and running with it! It’s really interesting to see u guys compare and it’s great u can do it with laughs instead of being too serious. Props 👍

  • @GamerBruh13
    @GamerBruh13 Год назад +12

    In the U.K. we have both cookies and biscuits. They are different.
    Also we have fries and chips. Fries when they are the thin shoestring type, and chips when they are thicker cut.

    • @bigbadburts
      @bigbadburts Год назад +3

      True. French Fries are a thin cut chip.

  • @liamwilko9285
    @liamwilko9285 Год назад +9

    New York is definitely the closest you'll get to having a similar culture to London

  • @callmespinach4524
    @callmespinach4524 Год назад +14

    You guys have a MASSIVE breakfast culture lol. Cereal? American. Pancakes, bacon, waffles , eggs benedict, hash browns? American. Even the idea that breakfast is the most important meal of the day is American.

    • @Lily-Bravo
      @Lily-Bravo 6 месяцев назад +1

      70yr old Brit here. in my childhood breakfast was half a grapefruit or orange followed by eggs of some sort or kippers or smoked haddock, or porridge. It was substantial anyway. Then I came home from school for a cooked lunch with pudding and after school would be a "high" tea of baked beans on toast, or tinned spaghetti or cheese or sardines on toast, with bread and butter and cakes with hot milky drink and biscuits before bed. No snacks, no fizzy drinks. I was skinny as a rake. I had autonomy over my pocket money and bought sweets though.

    • @puneetantaal9272
      @puneetantaal9272 5 месяцев назад

      i think they maybe mean on a daily bases, cuz people dont cook waffles on a tuesday. some people do just black coffee, or theres oatmeal, but mostly there isnt a huge national breakfast thats a go-to idk

  • @Yehnah677
    @Yehnah677 Год назад +1

    We have chips which are the normal ones, fries which are the thinner ones but we also call them chips sometimes and then crisps which are crisps. Cookies are cookies but you have a wide range of biscuits.

  • @zacchcanavan5390
    @zacchcanavan5390 Год назад +3

    I dont understand why americans say Graham like "Gram"
    And Craig like "Creg"

  • @doger6425
    @doger6425 Год назад +5

    A cookie is a cookie over here but it's just a type of biscuit, there's loads of different types of biscuits. We have fish and chip shops all over the UK where they put potatoes into a machine called a chipper. In France they cut their potatoes much thinner and call them fries, we have fries aswell but we just call them chips 😂😂😂

  • @ChrisDornDorny
    @ChrisDornDorny Год назад +13

    To us Brits a cookie is a type of biscuit
    Cookies are generally softer and have other things added to it like chocolate chip cookies 🍪

  • @beastiebear7231
    @beastiebear7231 Год назад +6

    'Innit' is the lazy form of 'isn't it'

    • @Nekotaku_TV
      @Nekotaku_TV Год назад

      There are people that don't know that?

  • @dannysmith8035
    @dannysmith8035 Год назад +2

    the reason why brittish says maths is there is 6 main displines of mathematics

  • @chrisBrown58
    @chrisBrown58 Год назад +1

    Time to check out a couple of classic sketches. The Two Ronnies "Four Candles" sketch, and Only Fools and Horses "Chandelier" sketch...both are comedy gold.

  • @richardcarter5082
    @richardcarter5082 Год назад +3

    We definitely speak quicker than most Americans. New York is faster speaking than the rest of USA I find. With a lot of US youtubers I have to watch at 1.5x speed, but you guys I watch at normal speed.

  • @cazzyuk8939
    @cazzyuk8939 Год назад +4

    MathS is short for MathematicS. I've been to NY & it's closer to us Londoners, there isn't much difference to be honest - I liked the NYorkers - some were brash but so are some Londoners so am used to that & didn't take it the wrong way.

  • @ThatEssentialAttire
    @ThatEssentialAttire Год назад +2

    The majority of people with any brain cells in the UK don't use the word "innit". We do have cookies but they're a type of biscuit, Lets be serious Biscuit is the correct word and to state the obvious the language is ENGLISH.

  • @candiicane3666
    @candiicane3666 Год назад

    More of these!! They’re so funny 😂😂 great kids!

  • @BSMAG87
    @BSMAG87 Год назад +4

    We don't have what you consider biscuits in the UK (i.e. the bread roll-esque things you get in restaurants, which are closer to a British scone than anything else), but we also use the work cookie (I'd use that for something round and chocolate chip, maybe soft and chewy etc - i.e. the quintessential cookie). In the UK, biscuit is a more general term for what you'd consider cookies at large but I typically associate it with custard creams, ginger nuts, digestives, bourbons etc. (call those cookies and I'd raise an eyebrow)

  • @k2411871
    @k2411871 Год назад +4

    Most of the world calls them "biscuits" as oppose to cookies, which is a type of biscuits

  • @elena-zg4ry
    @elena-zg4ry Год назад +3

    beans are often on a full english breakfast so u need to try one and it might change ur mind!

  • @Sara_Louise
    @Sara_Louise Год назад +1

    We have many variations of 'fries' - Thick cut, crinkle, jackets on, french fries that could all be fried but look different

  • @ElandBee
    @ElandBee Год назад +3

    The footballer who was sunburnt is actually Belgian not British.

  • @Kxlsie
    @Kxlsie Год назад

    Yessss we need more time guys

  • @SithVicious
    @SithVicious Год назад

    We do call the thin ones fries or French fries in Britain. Chips are usually much thicker.
    But in general we say chips to mean everything

  • @icba9292
    @icba9292 Год назад +1

    an electric kettle is such a basic necessity over here, like when someone moves house, the first thing they will buy is a kettle, cutlery, plates and dishes, mugs and glasses. Its that much of a necessity lol

  • @melovesawyer
    @melovesawyer Год назад +1

    The tea thing, I’ve also seen people actually obtain electric kettles and literally make the tea inside the actual kettle, milk and all!

  • @BritishReaction
    @BritishReaction Год назад

    We use cookies in england too... Cookies are a category is biscuits...
    Like crisps... crinkle cut are a type of crisps... It would be like in the US, you call all crisps, "crinkle cuts" even if they are another type of crisp

  • @vickyrandall4334
    @vickyrandall4334 5 месяцев назад +1

    In UK chips are called chips because thay are potatoes that have had bits chipped off them, aka cut into chips.
    French fries are a skinny version of a chip that is fried (think McDonalds fries).
    Crisps are crispy super thin potatoes. It makes much more sense than the American words for these... they did get fries right though so credit where it's due.

  • @xtdr-nutx3252
    @xtdr-nutx3252 Год назад +1

    4:55 yeah but you can fry other stuff too but you dont call them fries so no it doesnt make sense. Plus, we do call a certain type of chips "fries" depending on what chip it is.

  • @EwanBrooks
    @EwanBrooks Год назад +1

    Not all fries are fried though, they're oven baked too, so potatoes go through a chipping machine that turns them into the size and shape of a fry hence chips, crispy thinly sliced potatoes hence crisp..

  • @whitewolf8644
    @whitewolf8644 9 месяцев назад

    Biscuits are what we call a large variety of “cookies”. Cookies are cookies then we have, custard creams, bourbons, shortcake, rich tea and on it goes..all considered biscuits 👌

  • @welshknight1456
    @welshknight1456 5 месяцев назад

    Try a full english breakfast, bacon, eggs,sausages,toast with salted butter, bread and butter, black pudding, fried tomatoes, mushrooms,beans,hash brown, Hp sauce or heinz tomato sauce, salt and pepper, mug of hot tea. Cant beat it .

  • @KingBuster90
    @KingBuster90 Год назад +1

    Crisps) crispy potato peels
    Chips) chipped up potato
    Cookie) is a type of Biscuit like Sandwich Biscuits (Example Oreos), Digestive Biscuits, Ginger Biscuits, Shortbread Biscuits, Cookies, Chocolate-Coated Marshmallow Treats (Example Tea Cakes), and Speculaas.
    PS in Scotland potatoes are called Tatties pronounces like a mix of tattoo & titties ta-teez
    & Tomatoes are tim-ma-tays sometimes pronounces without the second t

  • @UNLTDvision
    @UNLTDvision 7 месяцев назад

    In Charleston SC we say innit exactly how they do

  • @aledjango
    @aledjango Год назад

    We say cookie too, but only for certain types of *biscuits*
    We also call thin cut *chips* fries

  • @amazingdragongirl747
    @amazingdragongirl747 9 месяцев назад

    as an english person on a biscuits front , I say cookie for anything cocolate chip , its a chocolate chip cookie and biscuits for everything or say what on the laybel like hobnobs or digestives

  • @ryandarkes3280
    @ryandarkes3280 Год назад

    To make tea
    1 put tea bag in cup
    2 add boiled water (preferably from a kettle)
    3 let tea steep to make it stronger
    4 remove tea bag
    5 add a drop of milk
    6 drink it

  • @melovesawyer
    @melovesawyer Год назад +2

    I was told before that linguistically the letter H is actually pronounced ‘aitch’. I remember that because I refuse to change how I say it lol.

  • @lindadoran9700
    @lindadoran9700 Год назад

    And also the best you will never walk alone by the Liverpool fan

  • @informedchoice2249
    @informedchoice2249 Год назад

    The term biscuit comes to English from the French biscuit (bis-qui), which itself has a Latin root: panis biscotus refers to bread twice-cooked. The Romans certainly had a form of biscuit, what we'd now call a rusk and, as the name suggests, it was essentially bread which was re-baked to make it crisp.

  • @ellehan3003
    @ellehan3003 Год назад

    Biscuit means twice baked. So the end product is hard. British biscuits tends to snap when you break them, so theyre hard. Cookies are softer.
    Digestive biscuits used to be a health product years ago. For the digestive system. But people liked the taste so we eat them for fun.

  • @janelc1843
    @janelc1843 Год назад +2

    I'm not even British, I'm French and I was triggered by the way that woman made tea... I feel really sorry for my British fellows, that was really really really painful to watch

  • @EmWahOwl
    @EmWahOwl Год назад +2

    Maths is just Mathematics ---just take out the ematic from it and keep the s at the end :D oh and the beans in the morning thing..i was always raised that it's only a breakfast food when served as part of a Full-English breakfast ( sausages, bacon, beans, eggs, chopped tomatoes and mushrooms)

  • @parzival3582
    @parzival3582 Год назад +1

    We do say fries for skinny chips occasionally. It's not because they're fried, it's because they're named after 'French Fries' which are very skinny.

  • @yeahmyrealnameright5967
    @yeahmyrealnameright5967 Год назад +1

    Crisps are a British invention(1800’s British recipe as opposed to American 1920’s).
    So its not chips.

  • @SteveSmallMusic
    @SteveSmallMusic Год назад +3

    They are called chips because it is the shortened version of 'chipped potatoes'.
    I don't understand why on earth you would call sliced potatoes (crisps) chips.

  • @sue4260
    @sue4260 Год назад +1

    Theres nuffin up wiv our biscuits or chips mate! U na wot I mean mate...init!! Lol💖🇬🇧💖🇬🇧

  • @shaynasheikh4832
    @shaynasheikh4832 Год назад

    Biscuit - Middle English: from Old French bescuit, based on Latin bis ‘twice’ + coctus, past participle of coquere ‘to cook’ (so named because originally biscuits were cooked in a twofold process: first baked and then dried out in a slow oven so that they would keep).

  • @connor5522
    @connor5522 Год назад +1

    In England we call chips crisps, fries are still called fries but only the actual skinny fries, when we say chips we mean the thick fluffy type of fries

  • @cormacmurray9275
    @cormacmurray9275 Год назад

    You need to watch Michael McIntyre, ‘send to all’ it’s brilliant. I’m surprised someone in America hasn’t started doing it with guests.

  • @ellacartwright6133
    @ellacartwright6133 6 месяцев назад

    How to make tea for Americans:
    Boil kettle or get boiling water
    Get a mug out
    Put tea bag in the mug
    Pour boiling water into mug
    Get a teaspoon
    Squeeze tea bag on size of mug
    Usually 2/3 times depending on how strong you like it
    Dispose of tea bag
    Get milk and pour into the mug
    Add more milk if it’s too dark
    Once finished with adding milk
    You have a choice
    This choice will depend upon where you stand in Britain
    You can add sugar or sweetner
    However I strongly advise it’s better without
    So I hope you enjoy your tea

  • @Mathewmartialart
    @Mathewmartialart Год назад

    student with the beard has already had 3 mortgages

  • @bjb123ch
    @bjb123ch Год назад

    We do have french fries...its a style of chips, very thin ones.

  • @DavidStruveDesigns
    @DavidStruveDesigns Год назад

    A good way to tell if it's a cookie or a biscuit - cookies turn hard when they go bad, biscuits turn soft.

  • @lillired857
    @lillired857 Год назад

    biscuit is by definition a snapping thin thing like the pottery. Aitch is also correct

  • @adamwallis3235
    @adamwallis3235 Год назад +2

    You guys should do a reaction to Sherlock with Benedict cumberbatch

  • @adriandickson5208
    @adriandickson5208 10 месяцев назад

    Here in UK, a cookie is a specific type of biscuit, normally with chocolate chips. And, fries are the skinny french fries like in McDs, whereas Chips are much thicker.

  • @ibanezman04
    @ibanezman04 Год назад +2

    3:56. Cookies are a type of biscuit. But not all biscuits are cookies. (In the same way that all jaccuzis are hot-tubs but not all hot-tubs are jacuzzis). In America a biscuit is like a British scone, only not as as nice and only ever savoury, never sweet. In Britain scones are most commonly eaten with Clotted cream and Jam.
    4:50 Because there's nothing French about them that's what we say fries. Fries are thin, chips are fat, that's how we differentiate the two.
    7:05 Beans on toast is a cornerstone of British culture. Especially breakfast. (Don't knock it till you've tried it). However the 'Brit's don't use spices or season their food' stereotype is only accurate for those who don't know how to cook. Having lived in America I'd say it's ironically more appropriate to US culture.
    9:34 NO that is definitely not how you do it. That video is sacrilegious. I could point out 100 things wrong with how she made that tea, but to your point about milk...It's literally supposed a splash of milk. Thats it.
    13:34. Spot on lad.
    In conclusion. If there's any further confusion over the English language or the alphabet, spellings, pronunciations etc. Just remember we invented it, and you guys fucked it all up. :)
    Keep up the great videos guys!

  • @justme1111
    @justme1111 Год назад

    To us in the UK a cookie is a specific type of biscuit and fries are a thin cut chip

  • @stothemuthafuckinv
    @stothemuthafuckinv Год назад +1

    Because if you said pass me a cookie and there was cookies and “cookies” which one do you pick up😂

  • @ozzybloke-craig3690
    @ozzybloke-craig3690 Год назад +7

    Nice. I been watching Jolly for years. Learned some Korean because of these guys. Josh and Olly ❤️

    • @RaySw89
      @RaySw89 Год назад

      But we tell you guys what to do, and you guys Politely Obey

  • @marcusdalling2018
    @marcusdalling2018 Год назад +1

    What do you call fries that you cook in the oven ? Ovens 🤣

  • @deb1544
    @deb1544 Год назад

    Biscuits is harder than cookies over here. Cookies tend to be a bit softer with choc chip etc.

  • @staticbuilds7613
    @staticbuilds7613 6 месяцев назад

    We also conquered the land for tea which we still use

  • @kieronimo1
    @kieronimo1 Год назад +2

    A cookie is a type of biscuit in the UK. Like chocolate chip Maryland cookies. Fries are a kind of chips in the UK, the skinny crunchy ones like you get in McDonalds. Chips are fatter and soggier. Don't forget, It's kind of our language so we're more right than you are. In the UK, what you call fries are called crisps (because they are thin, crispy and sliced fried potato).

  • @tethys17
    @tethys17 10 месяцев назад

    Biscuits and cookies are seperate things.
    A biacuit goes soft over time and cookies go hard.

  • @kimarnill7648
    @kimarnill7648 Год назад

    Those two guys presenting are hilarious, one of them I think grew up in Korea.

  • @fjnemo
    @fjnemo Год назад +1

    Baked beans for breakfast is the only way to go

  • @Jzaday
    @Jzaday Год назад

    no no no cookies are a type of biscuit hahaha.

  • @Saacary
    @Saacary Год назад

    Cookies are a type of biscuit, we still call them cookies regardless 😂

  • @willmartin2078
    @willmartin2078 Год назад

    Unreal I was watching this earlier today

  • @animeOfDarkness405
    @animeOfDarkness405 11 месяцев назад

    In uk when i make cupof tea i boil the water from kettle then add milk then sugar and then teabag then pour boil water

  • @christulip1012
    @christulip1012 Год назад

    Coming from England I look forward to having waffles or pancakes with syrup it’s so nice but we see that as an American breakfast

  • @EclecticInstinct
    @EclecticInstinct Год назад

    Fun reaction guys.

  • @davidhoward5392
    @davidhoward5392 Год назад +1

    Southern accents, try this Mancs, Scouse, Geordie or Jocks

  • @sputnik1941
    @sputnik1941 Год назад

    The tea was pretty special .

  • @SteveSmallMusic
    @SteveSmallMusic Год назад +2

    We do call cookies, cookies. But they have to actually be cookies 🍪
    All the rest are biscuits.
    What you call a biscuit is a type of scone. It is illegal to put gravy on scones in the UK. Gravy on scones - you monsters.