Top 10 Culture Shocks moving from the USA to England

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 3,3 тыс.

  • @AmericanViscountess
    @AmericanViscountess  2 года назад +24

    Enjoying these videos on my channel? You can help support the production of future vlogs and episodes by becoming a Patron at www.patreon.com/americanviscountess

    • @kevinjewell233
      @kevinjewell233 2 года назад +1

      American with 34 years in France and the only thing that bothered me in the UK light switch height....

    • @thetruthhurts7675
      @thetruthhurts7675 2 года назад +2

      Minced beef, or Lamb isn't American ground beef or lamb. Minced meat here in the Uk is real meat from basically the nearest part to the bones (aka skeletal muscle), while Ground meat is emulsified meat and fat. They are not the same thing. Minced meat is 100% meat while ground meat might be something in say a sausage, which is bulked out by other things including cerals, Ground meat texture is creamy.

    • @stevenhoskins7850
      @stevenhoskins7850 2 года назад

      @@thetruthhurts7675 We have different grades of ground beef. Some is sort of fatty, some is very lean. It depends on what you are cooking on what type you buy.

    • @stevenhoskins7850
      @stevenhoskins7850 2 года назад +1

      Texan here. My very best friend is from England. She and I looked up the yearly rainfall rainfall for "rainy old England" and Texas. Texas is supposed to be all desert, because of Hollywood, and there is desert in Texas, but it's not all desert...just like California. We compared Dallas, Texas to London, England. In Dallas we get 3 times more rain than London does, because we are in the "sub tropical" side of the state. So much for "rainy old England". You are right about queues. We don't have them. Instead, we have lines, which are exactly the same thing. We bag our own groceries, even check them sometimes, or some places check and bag them for you. It depends on the store. So, you thinks we don't have roast dinners? SERIOUSLY??? I do roast beef and roast chicken dinners all the time. We also have fish n chips too. We just call the batter "beer batter" instead of "crunchy batter". Well...my friend and I couldn't stand to watch anymore of the video because of your lack of knowledge of the US. OTHERWISE, I'd have more to say on the subject.

    • @thetruthhurts7675
      @thetruthhurts7675 2 года назад

      @@stevenhoskins7850 Ground beef is emulsified fat and meat, it is not minced beef full stop, for example there is no heart or tongue in minced beef, but in ground beef it is a constituent part, plus you can buy ground beef with that is labelled with lung, or other organs, which you cannot in the UK. You are correct about what you can buy, and the grades, but emulsified fat is NOT good for anyone at all.

  • @wendyneill4570
    @wendyneill4570 2 года назад +69

    In the 70's when I visited California, I asked the receptionist at the hotel for a rubber for a mistake I had made. She almost fainted. I then asked my male colleague to knock me up at 7a.m.

  • @skiddledede8885
    @skiddledede8885 3 года назад +405

    To the “so what” people...The English are what they are, and every country has it’s lingo, habits, food, and drinks. I find it charming, fascinating, curious, and, frankly, WONDERFUL. Travel really does widen your “scope of imagination “.

    • @JYYB
      @JYYB 3 года назад +22

      They haven’t traveled to appreciate for sure. I used to travel so much and I’ve seen good and bad all over and it makes me appreciate culture and peoples habits.

    • @cremebrulee4759
      @cremebrulee4759 3 года назад +39

      Too many Americans think that everybody should do things the way that we do them. The English have been around a lot longer than the United States. That's one thing, when you go to Europe you see things that are very different there, and you learn to appreciate the United States but at the same time respect foreign countries and how they do things. No one who travels to a foreign country should expect everyone that they meet to speak English, either.

    • @betht60
      @betht60 3 года назад +32

      @@cremebrulee4759 We learned this thirty years ago, while my US Navy husband was stationed in Japan. Fortunately, most of the squadron spouses were extremely gracious and embraced the culture. There were one or two (very young) spouses who didn't get it, and would complain about some things that were purely cultural. My 12 year old daughter fell so much in love with Japanese culture that she began studying the Japanese language on her own. She became fluent by adulthood.

    • @reem_aw
      @reem_aw 3 года назад +2

      Totally! It really does.

    • @rawleymyers5647
      @rawleymyers5647 3 года назад +9

      @@cremebrulee4759 Especially Americans! As George Bernard Shaw said:" Americans haven't used it for years!" - Professor Higgins in My Fair Lady.

  • @LaundryFaerie
    @LaundryFaerie 2 года назад +94

    Perhaps you'll like this English culture shock story, told by my dear father-in-law.
    Dad was raised in rural Oklahoma and southern Utah, and is a folksy farm boy at heart, but his choice to join the US Air Force sent him and his family all over the world. He spent some time in England on joint maneuvers with the RAF. American air bases usually featured a mess hall, with the food served buffet or cafeteria style, but things were... well, different in England. Dad headed to the officers' mess and was surprised to be met by a waiter, seated, and offered a menu. Well, how posh! Then he realized to his dismay that the entire menu was in French. The only thing he could read was at the bottom: "Roast Beef and Yorkshire Pudding." He promptly ordered that.
    After a bit, the waiter bore out a lovely plate of roast beef with this odd little puffy breadlike object next to it. Dad looked at his plate in some consternation... where was the pudding he'd ordered? He called over the waiter and asked where the Yorkshire pudding was, and the waiter politely indicated the odd little puffy bread. "Ah, clever Brits," thought Dad. "They put the pudding IN the bread." So he cut into the bread... and it was hollow and empty! He'd been robbed! Called the waiter over again, and the long-suffering waiter then explained what a Yorkshire pudding was.
    A few years later, when he was serving in Scotland, Dad heard a fellow officer at a party tell a story about "the stupid Yank who didn't know what a Yorkshire pud was." Dad waited until the laughter had subsided, then stood up and said, "I'll have you know I AM that stupid Yank!" Roars of laughter. They wouldn't let him buy his own beverages after that.

    • @Stefaniaddison
      @Stefaniaddison 2 года назад +5

      This is absolutely amazing, because I actually was baffled the first time I ordered Yorkshire pudding

    • @michelewilliams3761
      @michelewilliams3761 Год назад +2

      @@Stefaniaddison so im confused is it a dinner roll?

    • @Stefaniaddison
      @Stefaniaddison Год назад +3

      @@michelewilliams3761 no, it's like this interesting puff pastry

    • @joemorris5288
      @joemorris5288 Год назад +1

      @@Stefaniaddison No, it is not a dinner roll, it is a batter mix

    • @Stefaniaddison
      @Stefaniaddison Год назад +2

      @@joemorris5288 they're similar to dutch babies

  • @jameshaddan8538
    @jameshaddan8538 3 года назад +236

    One of my favourite American/British moments - I was on one of my visits with my best friend (an American who has been living in London for 20+ years) and he was introducing me to an English friend, who after a brief chat said to me, “you don’t talk loud enough to be an American.” In his dry British way he was paying me a great compliment.

    • @skiddledede8885
      @skiddledede8885 3 года назад +18

      I was traveling in Britain with a college group and was very embarrassed by how loud the younger people were in the group. They never seemed to pick up on the offended looks of the British around us.
      Brown tea??

    • @henrimatisse7481
      @henrimatisse7481 3 года назад +2

      wow!

    • @betht60
      @betht60 3 года назад +10

      Guilty!! Although I have to say, the times I've traveled in Britain, I tended to moderate my voice to whatever company I was in; very useful when visiting other cultures!

    • @KR-ki9hw
      @KR-ki9hw 3 года назад +5

      I'm trying to learn from that, and you are right, we Americans can be too loud.

    • @josepheller8395
      @josepheller8395 3 года назад +4

      I thoroughly enjoyed your video. I have been watching many British shows on the TV or tele. I can understand how these differences in our common items can be confusing. I really would like to visit the UK someday.

  • @amirasmith5133
    @amirasmith5133 3 года назад +122

    Countries where they don't queue, old people and children get pushed aside or trampled. In the UAE a Philipino person can wait an hour for an info desk to open and then just before it does an Emirati can just walk on up before the people who've been waiting - queuing is more fair. In England, the person who has waited the longest, gets served first.

    • @PropheticCoachTheresa
      @PropheticCoachTheresa 3 года назад +34

      American's and Canadians always que also. Its considered very rude to "cut in line" in front of others who have been waiting longer.

    • @betht60
      @betht60 3 года назад +28

      Yes, in my experience as an American, 'cutting in line' is considered very rude! Also, often people will offer for someone elderly or with a physical disability to go ahead of them, or will allow someone at the supermarket with only a few items go first.

    • @CathyS_Bx
      @CathyS_Bx 3 года назад +12

      We may line up in America but in my experience the lines are uneven. The Brits queue up in tidy lines, ramrod straight. Marvelous!

    • @learnwithlisa24
      @learnwithlisa24 3 года назад +9

      Not necessarily, I live in the south of Spain and queues are virtually non-existent here but when it comes to getting on the bus or whatever everyone knows who was there longest and waits their turn. They actually ask "are you the last one?" So even though there isnt a physical queue there is a pecking order. And no matter what the physical queue would have been, old people generally always get preferential treatment and younger people let them jump the queue just out of respect for elders. Not like in my UK home city where old people who have been waiting longer get barged out of the way by groups of teens who have zero respect for their elders.

    • @trillion42
      @trillion42 3 года назад +4

      Well, it is supposed to be that way in the US, but, kids nowadays are not taught manners anymore! People are selfish and rude a lot.

  • @kittybitts567
    @kittybitts567 2 года назад +22

    How well she's acclimated herself to living in England! I would miss the big hugs we give in the U.S. The U.S. has so many different cultures combined, but all of the ones I've ever come in contact with big hugs are acceptable and encouraged. Hugs to you and your family from west of Boston, Massachusetts!

    • @lukewalker3
      @lukewalker3 2 года назад

      Not all but are like this in the uk me I hug people I know

    • @cassieoz1702
      @cassieoz1702 2 года назад

      We'd say 'acclimatised'

  • @charlieboy6315
    @charlieboy6315 3 года назад +195

    "What's the difference between a cake and a biscuit?"
    There was actually a lawsuit which defined this, because cakes and biscuits are in a different tax bracket - weirdly enough, biscuits are classed as a luxury food and cake isn't. When Jaffa Cakes first went on sale, HMRC (the taxman) sued McVities (the manufacturers) claiming they should be taxed as biscuits at the higher rate. In court, McVities' lawyer demonstrated that when biscuits go stale they go soft but when cake goes stale it goes hard, which the court accepted. Jaffa Cakes go hard when stale so they are *officially* cake!

    • @kamilahynas2327
      @kamilahynas2327 3 года назад +8

      I love Jaffa Cakes. But I did wonder why they're called cakes. Well, they ARE cakes ;)

    • @sarahallegra6239
      @sarahallegra6239 3 года назад +6

      That’s absolutely fascinating!! Thank you for the information!

    • @jimj4583
      @jimj4583 3 года назад +5

      George Harrison would definitely have had something to say/sing about this (“Taxman”)

    • @daz181072
      @daz181072 3 года назад +9

      a fun fact is that after this case The HMRC had the last laugh as the loop hole that allowed cake to be exempt was closed so mcvities spent a fortune fighting and winning the case only to have to pay the tax anyway………..it’s true when they say there’s no avoiding death and taxes

    • @charlieboy6315
      @charlieboy6315 3 года назад +6

      Lol true indeed - the official cake/biscuit distinction (hard/soft when stale) still stands though!

  • @wendy-moore
    @wendy-moore 3 года назад +633

    Lucy Worsley has a documentary on the history of tea etiquette where the milk went in first if you had inexpensive china so the hot water wouldn't crack the cup. Those from more affluent families put the milk in last as they had the better china.

    • @biloz2988
      @biloz2988 3 года назад +18

      To be honest with you, once you ruin your average China, you never use them again for hot beverages

    • @maggiegray1698
      @maggiegray1698 3 года назад +10

      Who cares??????

    • @kathyschmidt7312
      @kathyschmidt7312 3 года назад +20

      On on of the addendums to Downton Abbey, they stated the same. Basically boils down to class division.

    • @wendy-moore
      @wendy-moore 3 года назад +25

      @@kathyschmidt7312 Exactly. Every lady of the day wanted to show off by putting in the hot water first. Thank goodness we all get good china these days. I can't imagine having a cup fly apart on the table. History is so funny at times.

    • @wendy-moore
      @wendy-moore 3 года назад +59

      @@maggiegray1698 It's history trivia, Maggie. These days no one cares, but I guarantee you, 150 ago it was indeed a big deal in fine homes. Silly, but that's how it was.

  • @2ndflash
    @2ndflash 3 года назад +66

    In 1965, when I was 13 years old, my family moved to England from the corn country of middle Illinois. I had never been anywhere really, except grandma's house on vacation. Months later, I found myself a new boy sprog at a British Public School. A strict traditional British boarding school. I was the only American there. Culture shock on steroids! French. Latin. Chemistry. Physics. Geometry. Rules. Uniforms. Schedules. Bloody 'ell! Ah, but there was rugby! The Tuck shop. And hot custard poured liberally over cake. Now that was culture shock!

    • @MBarnett
      @MBarnett 2 года назад +3

      Jesus ur like 60 lad

    • @azurephoenix9546
      @azurephoenix9546 2 года назад +4

      Delicious culture shock, sounds like.

    • @fifthof1795
      @fifthof1795 2 года назад +3

      Ahh...tuck shops and custard on cake type stuff...mmm...yum.

    • @cuckootown9478
      @cuckootown9478 2 года назад +5

      @@MBarnett make that 70, get some extra maths coaching, it may come in handy when you're a grown up

    • @MBarnett
      @MBarnett 2 года назад +3

      @@cuckootown9478 thanks for that maximas, I can tell you’ll make it far in life, correcting 2 month old comments, sounding like a teacher.

  • @grannydeda62
    @grannydeda62 3 года назад +78

    As an American from Kentucky living in Scotland, I can appreciate this video in a fun way as I have experienced the same cultural and language shocks as yourself Julie.

    • @daviddilley8310
      @daviddilley8310 3 года назад +2

      An Australian family in Louisville Ky for 18 months (Luisville, LUHvul Looey ville) was a fun time and fondly remembered.

    • @trinidad2450
      @trinidad2450 3 года назад +4

      I'd so love to hear your delicious accent--just imagine, Southern mixed in with a bit of Scottish brogue, how yummy!

    • @booperpotpie9634
      @booperpotpie9634 3 года назад +2

      There are quite a few Americans in Scotland. I've been here 20 years.

    • @marypasco2213
      @marypasco2213 8 месяцев назад

      @@booperpotpie9634 My deal is, if I spend any time anywhere, I pick up the accent and way of speaking, to where locals think I'm a local as well.

  • @breathe4430
    @breathe4430 3 года назад +70

    I am an American and lived in a little village called Emberton. I confess that I absolutely adored that village and the people but totally hard culture shock. You’re so right about the weather. I went out to plant in my garden one day in May when it was sunny and cool. I had to go in because it started to rain, then it hailed and then the sun shone again. All in the space of about an hour. Best piece of advice I got from another American was regardless of the weather to go out and take a walk every day. Summers for more difficult for me because of the very long days and the lack of screens on windows. I had my garden door open and a magpie came in and stole my remote. The next time I went to America I bought some screening and made my own window screens. My husband used to say that the spiders were lovely but I didn’t quite see it that way and I really did value my remote. I would go to the market town of all me on market day and everyone knew I was American so everyone had to tell me their story of their vacation in Disney World. I was shocked at how many smokers there were. Out of the country you could still smoke inside of the pubs at that time and I was appalled at the number of smokers. I think the joke is that if Brit sees a crowd queuing they will just join the queue not even knowing why they are in line. And supermarkets….I remember the first time I went to Tesco and stood there waiting for them to put my groceries in a bag and they stood there looking at me waiting for me to put them in the bag. I didn’t know I had to be my own bag girl. I also didn’t know I had to put a pound coin in to get a cart. And of course when I wondered why the “Hoover” wouldn’t work and I realized I needed to turn on the plug at the wall. But the thing that Americans need to remember is to simply embrace and enjoy a different way of life. We don’t always get the chance and if I could I would go back to England in a heartbeat.

    • @AmericanViscountess
      @AmericanViscountess  3 года назад +11

      Thank you for sharing your wonderful stories!

    • @emobx02
      @emobx02 2 года назад +6

      @Jellyfish "shooting" jokes are so strange to me because, while even one shooting is tragic, it's really not that big a part of a typical person's day. The likelihood of being in a mass shooting is not likely (and I mean true mass shooting, not a gang shooting or death by suicide, which is often included in those numbers), but the way people inflate the occurrences really seems to diminish the actual problem. I met someone from the UK who asked me about gun violence, and when I replied, "It's not a good thing, but what about it?" they said something about how I must be so scared to go about my life and send my children to school. Imagine their shock when I told them that my only familiarity with shootings was the same as theirs- on the news. People forget how big the US is, and how something that happens in one place can be just as far removed as something happening in a different country.
      I guess I'd think the jokes are clever if they were at least reflective of reality, but the fact is that they actually just desensitize the issue. I guess there has to be a low-hanging fruit of humor in all facets of life, though.

    • @lissylissylissy
      @lissylissylissy 2 года назад +3

      I’m British and I absolutely HATE how true that queuing comment is! I’ve never really thought of it like this before, but you’re right. At least once a week I’ll join a queue, in the supermarket, train station, airport, wherever, and just wait to find out what I’m queuing for. I once nearly missed a flight because I just blindly joined a queue, but it was for the wrong airline’s check in desk. Now I’ll awkwardly ask the person in front of me what we’re waiting for if im in a rush! Learnt that one the hard way!

    • @currybase
      @currybase 2 года назад +2

      As they say- if you don't like the weather, wait 5 minutes.

  • @aprilgrant1957
    @aprilgrant1957 3 года назад +22

    So pleased that I found your channel. I remember watching "Ladies of London," and I always thought you were so kind, open and warm. I am pleased that your family's estate is being sustained with you at the helm. Looking forward to more videos.

    • @1234-m7w
      @1234-m7w 2 года назад

      At the helm ?? Go on with yas talking all posh lmao

  • @snaomi67
    @snaomi67 3 года назад +94

    Julie Is a gem and so down to earth🤗I love her sense of humor

    • @maggiegray1698
      @maggiegray1698 3 года назад +4

      Yes,I laughed like a drain. I hate the climate also so I complain about that. And the cold,say no more. But even worse the cold deniers while my feet are freezing. Living in Wales,loving the Welsh and the landscape!

    • @arribaficationwineho32
      @arribaficationwineho32 3 года назад +1

      I enjoyed seeing her in the reality show. It was interesting

  • @aglaurendance
    @aglaurendance 3 года назад +82

    My US Navy family was stationed in England when I was a young teenager. We lived on the economy in a tiny, rural farming village that wasn’t well-off at all. I loved getting to experience living on a real working farm (that was older than the US colonies!), as we lived in the retrofitted dairy building. I went to secondary school in the nearest city- it was only 10 miles away, but the school coach took over 30 minutes to get there. A big memory standing out is how I nearly failed a maths unit early on in my first year in my English school because I could not understand the vocabulary or the heavy Somerset accents of my teachers and classmates (I did quickly catch on, but this particular maths unit was still early in the school year). My Mom (I quickly and easily switched to calling her Mum while we were stationed over there) had to go to the school to get my teachers to show more sympathy towards their young American student- this seemed to work! (I think of this situation a lot actually in my current job as a public elementary school teacher in the States, makes me quite sympathetic to kids in new and scary situations.)

    • @janejohnstone5795
      @janejohnstone5795 3 года назад +3

      Very interesting..

    • @markrossow6303
      @markrossow6303 3 года назад +1

      "maths" being very non-U.S.
      Math or Mathematics
      (Had to quit math at Diffy-Q)

    • @Jenny-tm3cm
      @Jenny-tm3cm 3 года назад +5

      I love this. I wish so badly I would’ve been treated difference as a kid with autism but was undiagnosed until after high school. (In the US)

    • @catherinebailey2131
      @catherinebailey2131 Месяц назад

      Regional differences can sometimes be pretty glaring too. I had the same vocabulary problem, but right here in the US! My father was in the US Air Force. When we were stationed in Louisiana, I couldn't figure out why I had suddenly become so stupid at spelling. It was because I couldn't understand the deep southern accent of my English teacher during dictation tests. Locals even had a different word for the name of their state. They called it "loo-zee-an-uh." Everywhere else calls that state "loo-ee-zee-an-uh."

  • @DorisTheChicken3013
    @DorisTheChicken3013 2 года назад +1

    I just love you! From a SOUTHERN American, I have a hug waiting just for you!

  • @alexandral.5276
    @alexandral.5276 3 года назад +24

    Hi Julie! I'm a fellow Chicagoan who loves your videos! :) I lived in London from 2013-2014 while studying for my MA at UCL. One of the biggest reverse culture shocks that I experienced upon my return to America was how much water is in the our toilet bowls! I remember getting off the plane at O'Hare and going to the ladies room. At first, I thought the toilet was overflowing. It took me a second to remember that we just have more water in American toilets. 😂

    • @eattherich9215
      @eattherich9215 3 года назад +2

      The high water level in American and Canadian lavatory bowls was a surprise to me. I kept expecting the bowl to overflow on refilling.

  • @DeeLTFL
    @DeeLTFL 3 года назад +154

    Definitely do the dinner etiquette, please. Also, can we get your husband's top ten about his visits to USA and meeting your family and home culture?

    • @pennywilliams2429
      @pennywilliams2429 3 года назад +9

      Love this idea!

    • @Pheenix9900
      @Pheenix9900 3 года назад +12

      Oh yes, turn the tables and get a Brit's take on American culture.

    • @reem_aw
      @reem_aw 3 года назад +7

      Great idea 👍🏼

    • @lymangreen5020
      @lymangreen5020 3 года назад +9

      That does sound fun!! How does the Viscount deal with his American in-laws??

    • @jamesoconnor7143
      @jamesoconnor7143 3 года назад +4

      Comment by Carmencita: He probably really appreciated his upbringing in the UK....

  • @user-lw6nz9rv7t
    @user-lw6nz9rv7t 3 года назад +33

    Julie, another difference that shocked me was in America so many stores and fast food restaurants are open 24/7 and English stores and restaurants tend to have more traditional business hours.

    • @gavinreid2741
      @gavinreid2741 3 года назад +7

      Back in the 1970s shops closed on Sundays and were closed in the evenings.

    • @roselee4445
      @roselee4445 2 года назад +3

      And some counties still no booze sold on Sunday, Blue Law

    • @ladyjustice1474
      @ladyjustice1474 2 года назад +3

      @@gavinreid2741 I remember that, and several closed early on Friday and Saturday.

    • @gavinreid2741
      @gavinreid2741 2 года назад +2

      @@ladyjustice1474 yes, it was actually in law until 1994 that shops had a half day closing., usually Wednesday.

    • @thecraftycyborg9024
      @thecraftycyborg9024 2 года назад

      A LOT fewer places in the US are fully 24/7 now. Covid stopped that and many places have stuck to a schedule somewhere between what they had pre-Covid and what they had in the very early days of Covid (once they re-opened, that is, for the spots that had closed). Walmart’s here now close at 11pm, same with all local groceries. Which sucks as someone who loves to bake at 2am, lol.

  • @alvick353
    @alvick353 3 года назад +56

    This was fun. I'd like to see a video on table setting and etiquette. I think that could be fun as well.

  • @susangarner9290
    @susangarner9290 3 года назад +20

    Great video. As a Brit living in Las Vegas I have to get used to saying dish and laundry detergent. The English say washing up liquid and washing powder. A tap in America is a faucet.

    • @maryokeefe5351
      @maryokeefe5351 3 года назад

      Garbage (Canada), rubbish (UK) or trash (USA). Bin it! Boot of the care (trunk), the list goes on. Thank you very much indeed in stead of simply thank you. Well done you, instead of well done or good job.

    • @tally1604
      @tally1604 3 года назад

      Pants. I rest my case. No other word can lead to so much confusion and embarrassment. It means trousers in North America, and underwear in the UK and Ireland.

  • @agould105
    @agould105 3 года назад +62

    Thank you for reminding me of the many things I learned when I moved to England at the age of five. I spent many mornings at a British school bringing up the queue which meant being the last one in line walking to the park! I have to tell you it was a rude awakening moving back to the states at age 18 to attend college. I did not spend the entire time in England I also lived in France and Belgium. You are familiar with Belgian chocolate? When I came back to the states I spit out a Hershey bar thinking it had gone off (that’s British for gone bad). Every once in a while I slip back into my British lingo and there are times that I cannot think of words in English because I only know them in French! And that is over 40 years ago from living in Europe.

    • @kathymcfarland5516
      @kathymcfarland5516 3 года назад +9

      There is no comparison of European chocolate to Hershey's. Hershey's is just plain awful and DOES taste nasty if you've been used to European chocolate. I sympathize!

    • @Hattonbank
      @Hattonbank 2 года назад +4

      @@kathymcfarland5516 I agree with you, but the reverse is reading about an American visiting the UK who thought our Cadbury chocolate was awful, can you believe it? It's what you are used to.

    • @patriciabailey1937
      @patriciabailey1937 2 года назад

      @@kathymcfarland5516 p

  • @catherinerobilliard7662
    @catherinerobilliard7662 3 года назад +115

    It’s interesting so many Americans state British food is improving, and they’re absolutely right. The Lend-Lease Act of 1941 was skewed massively in America’s favour when Britain, standing alone to fight fascism, paid a heavy price for clapped out warships. By the end of World War II Britain had amassed an immense debt of £21 billion. A further loan was made in 1946 as Britain, bombed heavily in the blitz, was on its knees. Rationing didn’t end until 1953 but good food was still hard to come by. US troops stationed here, and tourists, must have thought British people ate badly on purpose, their jokes certainly implied we did.
    I, and a whole generation, grew up in the 1960’s on a diet of spam and potatoes, the best food being exported to pay off the debt, with interest of course. Food gradually improved until the 1980’s, when things were back to near normal. However, the debt was not paid off until 2007, after a final payment of about $83m USD (£45.5m) to the United States, and about $23.6m USD (£12m) to Canada.
    British food is the best it’s been for four generations - all we have to do now, is pay for a pandemic.

    • @johnohara1433
      @johnohara1433 3 года назад +8

      You seem to resent having to pay America back for the help she gave you. I guess Britain much preferred the old way where you would just take whatever you wanted from other countries without paying a penny.
      As for standing alone against Germany, perhaps if you hadnt exacted such a heavy penalty against Germany in WW1, you wouldnt have had to face that problem.

    • @costakeith9048
      @costakeith9048 3 года назад +7

      The price for the destroyers was naval bases in the west Atlantic whose only real use would have been to either defend or invade the North American continent. They were desired by the US so that they could not be used by Germany for an invasion of North America in the even the British Empire fell; in hindsight perhaps not a realistic threat, but a threat that genuinely concerned the US government, in general, and FDR, in particular, at the time. The only money the British spent on them was the money to refurbish the destroyers. Furthermore, the Lend-Lease Act is what permitted arms and supplies to be sent to Britain without payment, the debts were incurred under the previous scheme, 'Cash and Carry', which replaced the Neutrality Act in 1939, this allowed belligerents to trade with the United States, provided they payed in full for the goods and carried them on their own ships, in practice it meant trading with the UK was allowed as Germany was under blockade did not have access to the Atlantic trade routes. But by 1941 Britain had run out of money which is why Lend-Lease was ultimately implemented.
      As for the reputation of British food being bad, that predates WWII and I've seen such references going back to the 19th century...both in the US and in Britain. It seems to be more a result of the status French food had at the time and to be a stereotype largely perpetrated by the French and Francophiles in both the UK and US. I don't think it was ever particularly true, it was just the prejudice of the age which has been fossilized in culture through jokes about bad British cooking.

    • @allenwilliams1306
      @allenwilliams1306 3 года назад +18

      @@johnohara1433 Personally, since they started them both, I think Germany should have been forced to repay the entire cost of the two wars they waged against us. WW1 reparations due to the UK were never extracted in full, and nobody in Germany ever suffered any serious consequences as the result of them. Had there been a full military and economic occupation of Germany until they had repaid the damages due to the Allies from 1919 onwards there would never have been a WW2.

    • @noneofyourbusines9976
      @noneofyourbusines9976 3 года назад +3

      'paid a heavy price'???? But you DIDN'T pay !! 90 + % of the debt was forgiven.

    • @allenwilliams1306
      @allenwilliams1306 3 года назад +8

      @@noneofyourbusines9976 90% of the Lend-Lease debt was forgiven; the support provided to help rebuild Britain was not.

  • @cherylbutler446
    @cherylbutler446 3 года назад +16

    When we went to the Chelsea Flower Show in 2001, it was sunny every day for a whole week! Beautiful everyday. ❤️

  • @Lori_en
    @Lori_en 3 года назад +108

    Loved the video, pretty funny! Although as a Brit, I can say the dinner etiquette and the no hugging is very much an aristocratic thing! For dinner in a “commoners” house it’s just a plain old knife and fork, and in our house they’re just thrown in the middle of the table so our toddler doesn’t grab them! 😂
    And I always hug my friends when I see them! I only shake hands in a formal situation (like an interview or a business meeting) and the air kiss i do with European acquaintances!

    • @Adam_Adam_Adam_Adam
      @Adam_Adam_Adam_Adam 2 года назад +8

      Everyone I know is a big hugger too. I don't get that one at all.

    • @hessmountainhomeschool3660
      @hessmountainhomeschool3660 2 года назад +5

      I’m from WV in the USA. I’m glad you said this haha I was thinking “woah, they’re fancy all the time!“ haha I couldn’t keep up as a momma if I had to make the table like that all the time hahahah

    • @Lori_en
      @Lori_en 2 года назад +6

      @@hessmountainhomeschool3660 none of us got time for that! 😂

    • @artifexi3570
      @artifexi3570 2 года назад +1

      Yep! It’s a bit funny sometimes, because my great grandmother was more aristocratic, so whenever I go to my grandmother’s she’ll have loads of cutlery and I panic EVERY TIME 😂 we’re a regular family lol and it trips us up

    • @richard6440
      @richard6440 2 года назад +3

      @@Adam_Adam_Adam_Adam My Mum said i was a bit of a hugger , then years later , i realised she had said " You're a little bugger " :)

  • @anitarosen5550
    @anitarosen5550 3 года назад +109

    Do house terms next. I watch English house shows like Grand Design. It took me a while to learn: skip=dumpster; render=stucco; snug=TV room; skirting=baseboards; cornices=crown molding; glassing=windows; homely=homey (never tell an American they are homely); ceiling rose=ceiling medallion, bed head=headboard; valance=bed skirt. I'm sure there are a lot more.

    • @risalangdon9883
      @risalangdon9883 3 года назад +6

      I agree. They refer to tools differently as well. If you want a good laugh, watch the programs with the English sub titles on. Sometimes the translations have me chuckling.

    • @kate_cooper
      @kate_cooper 3 года назад +7

      And the “Which floor is referred to as ‘the first floor’ ?” confusion

    • @TWROC96
      @TWROC96 3 года назад +9

      The homely one gets me all the time- "What a homely room." Whatttt? laugh.

    • @pawlieblog7967
      @pawlieblog7967 3 года назад +3

      And they call the stovetop a hob! Or is that the oven as well!?

    • @budgie204
      @budgie204 3 года назад +1

      Err excuse me, that's crown moulding :) How about architrave?

  • @maureencoyle666
    @maureencoyle666 3 года назад +16

    That was fun! I was in London about 28 years ago, a week before Christmas and it was bitter cold…and I’m from Boston, where we have some extreme winters and can have tons of snow! Apparently it was the first time London saw snow in about 20 years…and it was just a dusting! So beautiful there!!!!loved every minute if it!!!

    • @gavinreid2741
      @gavinreid2741 3 года назад +1

      We get snow every winter on the northern hills in England.

  • @tattyshoesshigure5731
    @tattyshoesshigure5731 2 года назад +5

    LOL @ “when the sun comes out it’s like a celebration”. So funny, yet so true! England is a country where you can have all four seasons in one day - often in August!

    • @1234-m7w
      @1234-m7w 2 года назад

      Well that is generalization .If u live in Maine, our weather is same as N.B or cooler than England

  • @natalierivera5997
    @natalierivera5997 3 года назад +131

    I love setting a table so I would love to see a video on table etiquette.

    • @maggiegray1698
      @maggiegray1698 3 года назад

      Please no. Sounds very boring.

    • @MacSherry
      @MacSherry 3 года назад +9

      Table laying is an art form…please table etiquette.

    • @natalierivera5997
      @natalierivera5997 3 года назад +6

      @@ethicalpepper8253 I find laying out a beautiful table shows your guest you care. I find they always appreciate it and are inspired to create their own unique table settings.

    • @Turk-yv6un
      @Turk-yv6un 3 года назад +5

      I’m not sure my Sunday dinner table would come even close to passing! My question is.... Does everyone set a table even during the work week or is it just a weekend or special entertaining thing?

    • @mrbear1302
      @mrbear1302 3 года назад +6

      The whole lack of dinner etiquette here in the US really disappoints me. My mother always made us set the table each night when we were younger (before school activities later in high school (which usually started around dinner time-sports/band practice etc. and ended late.)). She wanted us to eat together and actually talk to each other about how our day was. The table should always be set at least on Sundays. My brother totally lost that tradition with his family. They eat on couches in front of the TV. So disappointing his kids don't get to experience those "old" traditions.

  • @eowyn1964
    @eowyn1964 3 года назад +54

    Actually, the weather, when I visit the UK, is quite comfortable for me. I'm from Oregon, where we have the same type of weather as the UK--the marine climate. (At least on the west side of the Cascades.) It's often overcast, hardly ever snows, and looks as if it will rain, even when it doesn't.

    • @thenetnat
      @thenetnat 3 года назад +1

      The PNW always gets a nice summer though.

    • @scrosby9186
      @scrosby9186 3 года назад +3

      We do have more normal summers now here in western Oregon but growing here in the 1950-1960sit was cold. We have to say west of the mountains for the rain discussions because east of the mountains is a desert. The Cascade Mts are so high they block most of the clouds from continuing east.

    • @rhyfeddu
      @rhyfeddu 3 года назад +3

      @@thenetnat But shorter than I was used to in the Midwest. And no mosquitoes, which was a treat!

    • @elizabetholiviaclark
      @elizabetholiviaclark 3 года назад +3

      Funny to read your comment. I'm from Virginia, but as I was watching this video, I was thinking, "I'll bet Oregonians and Washingtonians would feel right at home."

    • @PS-ru2ov
      @PS-ru2ov 3 года назад +3

      remember the UK is not Just England....this annoys me americans equal the UK with England forgetting Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland (where i comefrom)

  • @dalemoore8582
    @dalemoore8582 3 месяца назад +1

    I love you say “ you guys” fort the Brits and “we” for American. Never lose your American side!!

  • @christinewright110
    @christinewright110 3 года назад +67

    Fish on a Friday is a Catholic tradition. In our household, we never have meat on a Friday, it's always fish (my mother is Catholic). When I was a little girl, we always had roast beef and Yorkshire pudding on a Sunday. Chicken was reserved for other days of the week.

    • @tomshea8382
      @tomshea8382 3 года назад +8

      It still holds sway in America, even after Vatican II. Every major city (and small towns probably) have restaurants that all serve clam chowder and have fish specials on Fridays.

    • @stephanbateman5410
      @stephanbateman5410 3 года назад +2

      As well as being a Catholic tradition my understanding is that people were encourage to eat more fish , during the reign of Elizabeth I, to increase the number of sailors who ib turn could be called upon to serve in warships.

    • @Al-Hunt-acrylic-painter
      @Al-Hunt-acrylic-painter 3 года назад +2

      We're no Catholic and we eat chips on a friday

    • @CatieDoll
      @CatieDoll 3 года назад

      It's for lent

    • @Awenda18
      @Awenda18 3 года назад +1

      Or Anglican, we always had fish on Friday too.

  • @dawnchute7449
    @dawnchute7449 3 года назад +38

    I loved this. My gran was Scottish I didn’t realize how “English” I was raised!! I knew most of the words and much of the foods!!! Thank you for the smile!! (We take no cream in our tea lol)

    • @AmericanViscountess
      @AmericanViscountess  3 года назад +3

      I'm so glad!

    • @robynmurray7421
      @robynmurray7421 3 года назад +6

      Scotland is part of Britain and the United Kingdom but it is definitely not part of England.

    • @dawnchute7449
      @dawnchute7449 3 года назад +4

      @@robynmurray7421 I know that.. what I was saying is I didn’t realize how close the traditions were. That’s why English is in quotation marks. But thank you for treating me like I’m an idiot. I appreciate it.

    • @matildamartin2811
      @matildamartin2811 3 года назад

      Could have a lot of fun with the Scottish words. Even your English guests would be flummoxed

    • @lyndafayesmusic
      @lyndafayesmusic 3 года назад

      @@AmericanViscountess Love these, normally, but so much yapping just to get to the "point" my dear ? Get to the WORDS ? Bye Bye.

  • @pathfinder8195
    @pathfinder8195 2 года назад +2

    I am German living in Germany, married to an American. I have lived in the States for several years and I am very fond of Great Britain and its culture. This being said, to be an outsider of both cultures being discussed above, I listened to this video with a grin on my face. Very entertaining and delightful!

  • @eamonnohalloran2254
    @eamonnohalloran2254 3 года назад +14

    Julie is the most relaxed I've seen her. Lovely video. The video with your son Nestor and your sailing adventure was very enjoyable ,Your energy is infectious. Nestor's rewilding video was very educational and it is wonderful to see his interests and environmental concerns being spotlighted and encouraged. Thanks Julie and team for showing how your back of house vlogging methods are done.

  • @theresaterri
    @theresaterri 3 года назад +17

    I visited England 10 years ago and have stayed very good friends with a few of the people I visited. All of the verbiage mentioned is so spot on! I have to add a few more though... simply because I had to acquaint myself to it very fast while there. One is the way English call the money they use, obviously we know 'pound' but I also would hear 'quid' and that confused me a lot until I realized that 'quid' is basically the slang version of 'pound' and that it's much like in America we say 'dollar' and use 'buck' as slang (think five bucks is five dollars, and in England five pounds is the same as five quid). Plus, there's the word 'Ta' and I found out that it's used not only as a greeting but as a farewell and also as a thank you. That one threw me for a loop! I also noticed too that when I was paying for things at a store and would say "Thanks! Have a nice day!" as I'm accustomed to here in America (and hear it all the time as well from cashiers or other employees) but in England I would say that and get a look of utter astonishment back. It was quite funny to realize that people in England just don't say things like that to each other when shopping and I had to get used to it quite quickly, but I still said it since I can't not do it haha. I absolutely LOVE England and the people and would visit every year if I could afford it :) Love this video!

    • @inatwirlingram2540
      @inatwirlingram2540 2 года назад +1

      I am English and never heard of ta as a greeting, ta ta can be used for goodbye and ta for thank you.
      I lived in US for ten years and find our differences endearing. That's what makes travelling such fun.
      American people were so kind to me and I loved being special as everyone loves my accent 😁
      Glad you enjoyed our small country do come back, you are most welcome 😀

  • @dianeb3919
    @dianeb3919 2 года назад +3

    Hello...great video! It was wonderful to hear you (Viscountess : ) ) Clare and Stephen have a fun, laid back conversation! And you asked such fun questions (things we all want to ask ourselves!). I will be watching you faithfully. Thank you....such fun!
    P.S. - the weather conversation is so funny!

  • @jamesallison4875
    @jamesallison4875 3 года назад +31

    I must have been born to live in England: love cold cloudy weather, adore rain, live in the country on a narrow winding road, hate hugs, love my labs and was raised to set a correct table. Haha! You are a great old girl and very entertaining. Thanks

    • @solatiumz
      @solatiumz 3 года назад +3

      It rains much more in Wales, Ireland and Scotland!

  • @yvonnebirch6026
    @yvonnebirch6026 3 года назад +8

    I am glad I found you ! I admire your courage ! It can be a challenge to fit in with another culture. I am Dutch and I have lived in California for over 40 years.
    I lived in the UK for a year after high school as a mother’s helper. I love England so much !!!! I will love your channel !! 💕🌷

  • @inatwirlingram2540
    @inatwirlingram2540 2 года назад +8

    Absolutely loved this.
    I lived in America for 10 years in various states from the early eighties. I didn't realise how English I was until strangers wanted to hug me and I felt most uncomfortable LOL (this has changed so much over the last 20 years, people hug a lot here now)
    I had some confusing moments. An American friend used to call me and say "what's up" and I thought that she was asking me if there was anything wrong when she actually meant what are you up to, what's going on.
    Then there was the time I was going to my usual workout class and the 4 ladies logging everyone into class said, buy x amount of tickets and you get a free fanny pack, I just burst out laughing in shock, and they were all intrigued, why was I laughing. I had to delicately explain that fanny is a rude word in Britain that means a ladies private parts. The class was in hysterics.
    There were so many times I would say something only to see a blank face particularly if I was being ironic (the dry English sense of humour) and I would have to explain that I was just kidding.
    I have lived back in England for about 30 years now but still say trash, loved my time in America 🙂
    Love to my American cousins 😘

  • @treytrip8
    @treytrip8 3 года назад +9

    This is my favorite Julie video! You seemed so relaxed! My favorite difference is No Hugs. I work in Entertainment and for years have been hugged by virtual strangers and/or persons I don't really like that well. It's just what they all do. Hugs should be for special people and special moments. Don't cheapen hugs!!! :)

  • @pamelaw7771
    @pamelaw7771 3 года назад +101

    I remember overall a quietness to places but especially pubs. I didn’t realize how it contrasted with places in the US until I returned home after a month of travel in the U.K. when I went to dinner I suddenly was feeling a bit overwhelmed by the loud noise of the restaurant.

    • @paullewis2413
      @paullewis2413 3 года назад +13

      Quietness in pubs depends on where you are. Country pubs tend to be quiet but city pubs can be just the opposite, same goes for restaurants.😊

    • @DavidEVogel
      @DavidEVogel 3 года назад +5

      I recall "social parlors" similar to a formal parlor in a house. Stuffed sofas and small tables. The bar had no more than 2 chairs. No TV. No distractions.

    • @imme6954
      @imme6954 3 года назад +7

      I finally went to a restaurant this year after 5-7 years of avoiding them and realized again why I just get take out.

    • @avalondreaming1433
      @avalondreaming1433 3 года назад +11

      I went out to a restaurant after COVID lockdown and it blew my mind how noisy it was. I had been really looking forward to going out and I had a horrible time. Not to mention when I asked for a menu and was shown a place on the table where I would now have to download the menu to my phone.

    • @bieuxyongson
      @bieuxyongson 3 года назад +6

      Don’t feel bad. After 2years in the Azores and nearly 3 in the UK, the noise in many American places (malls) was overwhelming to me also. I had a panic attack the first time we went out shopping in a mall. I really missed our quieter country life. Later the AF sent me to Seoul for a year. That was a sensory overload for a few months! 😳

  • @DevPreston
    @DevPreston 3 года назад +11

    The production and editing in this video are excellent, setting it apart from the many videos on RUclips about the same topic. Being hosted by a Viscountess and the rather grand setting are points of interest, but it is the action off camera that will make me subscribe. Well done on some very enjoyable viewing.

  • @mcneca1
    @mcneca1 3 года назад +21

    I would watch a dining etiquette video... remembering the rules is another story! LOL

  • @christinelee3344
    @christinelee3344 3 года назад +14

    Absolutely loved this! Growing up in the Caribbean we used words like grip vs suitcase, press vs cupboard, primary vs elementary and secondary schoo etcl. I still love using the English words, even though we've become somewhat americanised these days. We still follow the English language and spell words differently colour vs color, neighbour vs neighbor.

    • @AmericanViscountess
      @AmericanViscountess  3 года назад +2

      Thanks for sharing!

    • @eattherich9215
      @eattherich9215 3 года назад +2

      I recognise grip, too. Yard means home and when we got home from school, we changed into yard clothes.

    • @gideonriddell4535
      @gideonriddell4535 2 года назад

      "Press" is a traditional Scottish word for a cupboard in the wall.

  • @melaniemann5446
    @melaniemann5446 Год назад +1

    Loved this video! Having a dear English friend that visited when we lived in Southern California, her comment upon visiting Disneyland was “Walt Disney sure knows how to cue people!” Keep up the great work, Julie! Love this series!

  • @captainMAE
    @captainMAE 3 года назад +6

    Visiting London when I was younger , my family and I were lost and I asked a random stranger the directions somewhere. He ended one of his sentences calling me "love". I thought that was so endearing. More videos like this please!!

    • @lornam3637
      @lornam3637 3 года назад +1

      When I visited Liverpool some people called me 'queen' - hard to top :)

    • @donamills863
      @donamills863 3 года назад

      Yes! I had a cab driver say “Thank you me love” I just about melted. One thing, they still use the word “groovy”. When my kids heard it from a very young person, they found it hilarious.

  • @MyAGGirls
    @MyAGGirls 3 года назад +18

    Most of the things you mention I've learned from watching British comedy over the last 40 years or so. Watch more TV -- I mean, telly, and you'll soon pick it up. I scored 100 in your words section! Yes! As for the grocery bagging -- since the pandemic, we have been bagging our own groceries more often. Although, I must say, the cashiers seem uncomfortable watching us struggle with it. Maybe that's a New York thing. I personally would love the cold and the rain. Can I come over now? It's way too hot here.

  • @VistanTN
    @VistanTN 3 года назад +6

    As a dad and grandad with an ex-pat daughter who has been in UK for 27 years and three frightfully British grandchildren (ages 18-15) I really enjoyed this (and got all but one of the American-British word equivalents correct!

  • @snaomi67
    @snaomi67 3 года назад +13

    This was so good! It made me laugh because I’ve learned to figure these things out by watching RUclips. I plan to go to the UK for the first time hopefully soon. Greetings from Northern California!

  • @MadeNCda
    @MadeNCda 3 года назад +19

    This was fun to watch esp as a Canadian. We adopted many names and mannerisms of the British so for me, it doesn't feel strange to use English words 😊

    • @eattherich9215
      @eattherich9215 3 года назад +1

      I appreciate that Canadians spell the British way.

    • @Julz796
      @Julz796 2 года назад

      @@eattherich9215 Unfortunately, not for everything. Most Canadians will spell colour/neighbour/etc with a “u”, but that’s usually where it ends. In Canada, it’s realize/apologize instead of realise/apologise, pediatrics instead of paediatrics, etc. I’m British/Canadian raised in Toronto

  • @fday1964
    @fday1964 3 года назад +10

    Yes, the narrow twisty roads left me a nervous wreck, and I was a passenger! I wasn't too surprised at some of the differences in common words, after years of watching British TV and movies.
    Great video!

  • @louisscalera1176
    @louisscalera1176 3 года назад +48

    Nice video, brought back memories of my younger years when I was an airman in the USAF stationed in East Anglia at RAF Lakenheath(77-80).
    I was in motor car heaven there, I grew up with a passion and owned a few, for MG's, Triumph, Sunbeam, Austin Heally, Daimler, Singer, Lotus and Aston Martin sports cars. Also the F1and stock sports car races were high on my list of things to do, went to Silverstone, Brands Hatch, Snetterton, and Donnington as well as the drag races at Santa Pod
    I traveled the country with some like minded chaps/friends from lands end too Lossiemouth , new years in 79 in Edenborough Scotland, to Bath. Wales, I even started a dance craze in Bury St. Edmonds at The Castle pub on a night of pub crawling which started at the worlds smallest pub, so many places we went too see, Norwich, Cambridge, Peterborough, Oxford, Isle of White, Harwich, Sheerness, slept on top of the cliffs of Dover, Portsmouth, Boston , Great Yarmouth, Haverhill, Cromer, Ely and London etc etc so many places and lots of old castle's and ruins, but I thought Stonehenge was a ripoff , I loved it there I lived in old WW2 RAF officer barracks on RAF Feltwell and I didn't want to leave. but all good things come to an end eventually
    Another thing I really liked were the Imperial war museums all over the country, Bovington, London, Duxford, the Battle of Britain Museum at Henley and the RAF museum at Coltishal. And of course can't forget the music scene, so we went to Denmark St. the Royal Albert Hall, Hammersmith Odeon, the Marquee Club and the Knebworth Festival.
    Of course a cup of Rosie with a cheese sandwich on white bread or a cucumber sandwich, steak and kidney pies, and a monthly Sunday roast beef dinner with all the fixings with Yorkshire pudding at the Brandon Station pub for a change from the chow hall. I could go on and on and on, it was a wonderful time in my life. Oh and I can't forget 301-501 darts in the pubs and snooker , us yanks can hold are own pretty good even though we are overpaid , over sexed and over there. LOL

    • @maggieashton2111
      @maggieashton2111 3 года назад +9

      Great tour of.our. British heritage and your marvelling at all the exciting attractions we take for granted. Thanks.

    • @handyandy6488
      @handyandy6488 3 года назад +4

      You DID get the most out of your time there!
      And... Thank You for helping defend us.

    • @dianesicgala4310
      @dianesicgala4310 3 года назад +2

      I lived near Lakenheath Air Force base. A little town called Brandon. Married a young Air Force man from Northeastern Pa. lived with them while he served in Vietnam. They treated me so unkind.

    • @welshpete12
      @welshpete12 3 года назад +3

      Glad you enjoyed your time here . I do hope you can come back in the future .

    • @roymaddocks3184
      @roymaddocks3184 2 года назад

      My dad was an RCAF navigator and bomb aimer assigned to 349 squadron RAF at Lakenheath during WW2. Small world

  • @robertmcnamara5407
    @robertmcnamara5407 3 года назад +39

    Loved this episode especially being from down under where we seem to have taken on some of both England and America especially the word differences. Lots of fun here.

    • @joh9593
      @joh9593 3 года назад +3

      I think that's the exact thing that makes people from Australia and New Zealand sooooo weirdly compatible with Canadians.

    • @robertmcnamara5407
      @robertmcnamara5407 3 года назад +2

      @@joh9593 totally agree

    • @joh9593
      @joh9593 3 года назад +2

      @@robertmcnamara5407 It was kind of a surprise to me when I first recognized it.
      We're so geographically far apart, but the colonial history has the same foundation, plus American films! :D
      But we're wayyyyyyyyy more laid back, and critical thinkers. I like that about us! (Especially in times like these ;) )

  • @daveholt8422
    @daveholt8422 3 года назад +41

    Our accents and different dialects is something I love about Britain. Even where I live on the outskirts of Manchester all you have to do is to travel in some cases 5 or 10 miles and the accent/dialect will change. It's very localised for the most part and from town to town in a lot of cases. There's slight differences if you listen closely.

    • @blackbob3358
      @blackbob3358 2 года назад +3

      bang on Dave. i live 7 miles out of Leeds, and as soon as ya go in to town ya notice the change in accent. it's uncanny....love it.

    • @kets4443
      @kets4443 2 года назад

      @@blackbob3358 I live in Batley which is 9 miles from Leeds, we could be very close to each other

    • @mattiasandersson2315
      @mattiasandersson2315 Год назад

      Same here in Sweden,, depending on where you live,,accents and dialects however are changing,, perhaps by our big immigration,but i've noticed It's more of a generation thing rather than distance between two places. it's distance in time. Older people speak more of the regional dialect and younger people much less. I don't know it's in the u.k

    • @adiproud2065
      @adiproud2065 Год назад

      I think she protests to much, winging for the sake of it. Given the length of time she has been here, she should of got over some of this. At the end of the day she is living in a different country which is not the United States.

    • @rodjones117
      @rodjones117 Год назад

      @@mattiasandersson2315 Pretty much the same here in England.

  • @brucecggallagher1949
    @brucecggallagher1949 3 года назад +19

    In the city of Hamilton, in the province of Ontario, Canada...Friday was always fish and chips, wrapped in newspaper, from the fish and chip shop, when I was a child.

    • @EmilyTienne
      @EmilyTienne 3 года назад +1

      Yes, and the inks they used in newsprint contained lead.

  • @natpleo
    @natpleo 3 года назад +14

    Besides the table setting video, I'd appreciate a tutorial on tea time in particular! Thanks for the extraordinary content

  • @agnesdix-dehert9454
    @agnesdix-dehert9454 3 года назад +17

    I moved to the UK in 1988, and the first summer I had a job (1989) and went wandering around the local market during my lunch hour, sometime in August, I got sunburnt and started suffering from prickly heat. Even year before then, when my family were on a fortnight's holiday in Scotland, the first week we had wall-to-wall rain, but the second week was the most glorious sunny holiday we'd ever had. So I think it's a little unfair to comment that it's "always" raining during summer holidays... it's variable, as you'd expect from a temperate climate. (Cream first on the scone, then jam - it's logical because the jam is soft and shifts around, the clotted cream is stiffer and more spreadable like butter.)

    • @ulysses2162
      @ulysses2162 2 года назад

      Where did you move from if you don't mind me asking?

    • @lukewalker3
      @lukewalker3 2 года назад

      Ya it do t always rain at all it’s funny right now 🤣

  • @JenningsCraftsBoutique
    @JenningsCraftsBoutique 3 года назад +318

    Hi Julie, Fi here from Leeds up in good old Yorkshire! (I sent you a parcel recently, hope you received it, some jewelry and a vintage dress). Anyway, I've been to America twice and I have to say that I was blown away by the kindness that was shown to me by all.
    On my first visit, I went for 4 weeks. I stayed an hour away from Niagara Falls for two weeks and then went from there across country to Oregon for two weeks. On my second visit some 4yrs later, I took my 2 eldest grandsons for 3wks on an adventure break to show them how lovely America and its people really are and its the best holiday they've ever had.
    We here in England are more stiff upper lip kinda people, we take life too serious by working working working when in fact, we should be enjoying family and the country that we live in more :0) One of the best things to come out of this Covid lark is that we HAD TO SPEND TIME WITH OUR CHILDREN MORE at home, it brought about a NEW connection and bond between many families.
    Lovely video as usual, hope the dress fits lol bless you, you're a joy to watch!
    Fi x

    • @AmericanViscountess
      @AmericanViscountess  3 года назад +68

      hi Fi!!! Package received! But I"m waiting to open it b/c I'm going to film me opening an putting on as part of one of my videos here. So stay tuned, you will see it here! I can't thank you enough and you will also be getting a proper thank you card once I open it. You are the best!!! xx

    • @JenningsCraftsBoutique
      @JenningsCraftsBoutique 3 года назад +17

      @@AmericanViscountess Bless you Julie, looking forward to it. It would be nice to see your face lol :0) Like I mention on the notes, if no good, pass it on lol lol, I will not be offended at all! xx

    • @MagentaOtterTravels
      @MagentaOtterTravels 3 года назад +28

      I’m so glad that you were warmly welcomed in the US! I am an American who recently spent the summer in Britain and loved visiting my friend in Leeds. She and her mum taught me how to make the best Yorkshire puddings!❤️

    • @JenningsCraftsBoutique
      @JenningsCraftsBoutique 3 года назад +15

      @@MagentaOtterTravels Oh yes, our Yorshire puddings :0) My late father used to make ours when we were small children and he'd have to cut them out of the over they were so big, mind you there was 10 of us! lol. But I did teach my 3 children how to make them and their children love them now :0) xx

    • @kimberlyperrotis8962
      @kimberlyperrotis8962 3 года назад +29

      As an American, I’m so glad you were treated well, we love our visitors here!

  • @yovondahall9428
    @yovondahall9428 3 года назад +20

    One thing we noticed when visiting were cold floors-without central heat some places we visited had pervasively seeping into the feet through the soles of the shoes chilliness. Also some older buildings retrofitted to be hotel lodging-March in Edinburgh-despite heavy drapes (which we put our food behind so it would stay refrigerated) the drafts from the window made our room like an icebox. We unpacked our wool tourist blankets and added them to the hotel bedding to stay warm. Woke up to snow everywhere. In London, we noticed the locals bundled up in heavy coats and scarves wound around-it was 65 degrees-we were in shirtsleeves-with a light sweater in the tote for later if needed-we did receive odd looks. We also noticed that drivers were mostly all politeness and turn taking to navigate the streets-rarely any aggressive drivers-unlike in the USA.

    • @LondonEE16
      @LondonEE16 3 года назад +4

      I lived in the UK for about ten years. Houses were always cold as heat is so expensive. What got me is that the people I lived with or visited, spent a lot of money on wine. I always wished they'd do without the expensive vino and turn up the heat instead. Priorities...

    • @grandmajane2593
      @grandmajane2593 2 года назад

      We seem to have a lot of angry people here in the U.S. Maybe its our political leadership.

  • @gardenjoy5223
    @gardenjoy5223 2 года назад

    So like the eloquent, friendly and understanding young man. This is what the good Brits are to me. Such behaviour. A gentleman indeed and very accommodating.

  • @sherryhudson9075
    @sherryhudson9075 3 года назад +13

    When I visited London two years ago, the waitresses had a hard time understanding me. I’m from Texas. They had no idea what I was saying 🤣

    • @betht60
      @betht60 3 года назад +1

      Our Royal Navy friend did a great impersonation of a Texan, apparently it was a popular pastime 😂🇺🇸😂🇬🇧😂

    • @christina5545
      @christina5545 3 года назад +1

      Same for me being from NY! And I think I speak very clearly but I suppose it’s about what you are or aren’t used to

    • @tidefanyankee2428
      @tidefanyankee2428 3 года назад +3

      What always amazes me is the vast differences of the accents in the UK for such a small country. We have accents in the U.S., but you'll only see the larger differences after you've gone a fairly great distance.

    • @judithscobee8102
      @judithscobee8102 3 года назад

      Texas drawl! Lol

    • @sheilaenglish7329
      @sheilaenglish7329 2 года назад +1

      I am Canadian and tried asking for a glass of water in a restaurant. The waitress looked confused then looked at my cousin who translated : a glahss of water, with distinctly pronounced ts. I said, What do I sound like ? An American cowboy? “I’ll have a glaass of wadder ma’am.” 😄

  • @maureenb6095
    @maureenb6095 3 года назад +8

    This was great! So informative. I have a friend in Lincolnshire and when we text each other she’ll use words or phrases and I have to have her explain to me what she’s saying. She gets a kick out of it and sent me a book titled, “A Salute to the Lincolnshire Dialect. Nobbut A Yellerbelly.” 🌸🌸

  • @susancooper7314
    @susancooper7314 2 года назад +4

    My parents lived in the UK, in Kent. I didn’t have culture shock when I visited, the different words things are called were talked about all my life. I loved visiting in England I felt very much at home. I was lucky the weather was warm the two weeks I visited the last week in August and first week in September.

  • @WonjiDharma
    @WonjiDharma 3 года назад +35

    My mum was born in Dublin, Ireland, and at 16 moved to Manchester to seek out work. 10 years later she met my father who was an American station at Burton Wood Air Force Base. They fell in love, got married and my sister was born in Manchester. 18 months later I was born in Orlando, Florida. We returned to Ireland and England when I was 3 for a year as my father was sent on a remote assignment. After this we moved to California. In 1966 my Father got stationed at High Wycombe Air Base, and we lived in High Wycombe for 3 years, returning in 1970. So, growing up with my mum, I became literate in British and American, and I feel comfortable with both dialects. I spent 3 months when I was stationed in Germany in 1977 at Lakenheath Air Base. Then much later in the 1990's I worked for an American associate of Lucas Automotive, and for 3 years was traveling back and forth to Birmingham. Thanks for the video series I love it.

    • @janetlynn3397
      @janetlynn3397 3 года назад +1

      Hello
      Why do you call your mom mum?
      -or- mummy instead of mommy? What do you call a mummy (person who has passed away wrapped in cloth)

    • @WonjiDharma
      @WonjiDharma 3 года назад +4

      @@janetlynn3397 It's just an Irish and British term of endearment for one's mother.

    • @mancyank564
      @mancyank564 3 года назад +1

      My father was stationed at Burtonwood during the Berlin airlift. Mum was from Manchester. My older sister and I were born in Manchester, my younger sister was born in New York state. When dad was stationed to places where we couldn't go with him (Canada & Viet Nam) my mother would take us to live in Manchester. Grew up 'bilingual' and appreciated both countries and cultures.

  • @ursulaclarke6066
    @ursulaclarke6066 3 года назад +6

    I’m from the UK, but moved to New Zealand in late 2009. I came home for my Dads birthday in March 2019 and the cold and constant grey cloudy sky really hit me, I hadn’t noticed it when I lived in the UK. However nearly always a little bite homesick for the UK even though I live in NZ. Just found this channel and loving it , thanks Julie, Luke and team.

    • @brianclark9948
      @brianclark9948 3 года назад +1

      Is New Zealand hot? I thought it had a similar climate to the UK as it's so far south.

    • @ursulaclarke6066
      @ursulaclarke6066 3 года назад

      @@brianclark9948 much hotter and generally better weather. I've been here over 12 years and I've yet to wear winter clothing like I did in the UK and I lived in the South. We do have snowy mountains so yes you need to dress for snow there and up north is sub tropical. Deep south is colder, really cold in winter, very hot in summer.

  • @stevenmccart5455
    @stevenmccart5455 3 года назад +43

    What surprised me when I spent time in England is...there is a pub on practically every corner of the city and ,they DO have cold beer. Even if it's a warm or even hot summer day it gets freaking cold as soon as the sun goes down. Absolutely no one in the states can make a decent fish and chips!! No matter how many restaurants I try the fish is always soggy.

    • @welshpete12
      @welshpete12 3 года назад +2

      The secret is using the right type of potatoes . The ones called King Edward are the best .

    • @eattherich9215
      @eattherich9215 3 года назад +3

      'Absolutely no one in the states can make a decent fish and chips!! ' I had a problem with tea in both the States and Canada. I don't know if it's the tea, milk, water or some combination. I only found a single instance of a decent cuppa and that was in a luncheonette in Chelsea, NYC.

    • @stevenmccart5455
      @stevenmccart5455 2 года назад +3

      @@eattherich9215 it seems in America a good cuppa is a tea bag dipped in hot water??? Mind you I love a good cup of coffee but ,there's an enormous difference in a well brewed cup of tea and a bag of crud dipped in hot water.

    • @stevenmccart5455
      @stevenmccart5455 2 года назад +4

      I lived in Golders Green for awhile. An absolute beautiful area and fairly close to everywhere. The L is nearby and the Bus picks you up Accross the street. I'm a bit of a shop holic so I spent an inordinate amount of time in Camden Town

    • @blackbob3358
      @blackbob3358 2 года назад +1

      @@welshpete12 love the irony, i DO hope ya can see it, are kid.

  • @WonjiDharma
    @WonjiDharma 3 года назад +68

    The reason the British drive on the left side of the road goes back to medieval times and is due to jousting. The knights strongest arm was the right arm and they would sit on the left side of the board separating the horses, holding the joust across their chest which was the most powerful position. The tradition was kept and use when car production began.

    • @markr.h.2574
      @markr.h.2574 3 года назад +6

      There are even archaeological hints or goes back to Roman times.

    • @maggiegray1698
      @maggiegray1698 3 года назад +2

      Yes,I knew we were first on this
      Not being competitive or anything......

    • @mikesaunders4775
      @mikesaunders4775 3 года назад +12

      Everyone in Europe did until Napoleon came along, you can blame him for metrication also.

    • @tifrap
      @tifrap 3 года назад +3

      Cars slowly replaced horses, and horses are universally mounted from the left hand side, so we drive on the left because traffic has done just that since the domestication of the horse. The protocol also transferred to shipping which always passes to starboard and docks to port.

    • @marguaritetherese3156
      @marguaritetherese3156 3 года назад +3

      I just find it fascinating that the design on the car didn't follow the dominant hand idea. Operating a manual vehicle with the left hand instead of the right feels counterintuitive.

  • @kathyschmidt7312
    @kathyschmidt7312 3 года назад +18

    I have been watching a lot of British TV via You Tube. From home improvement and restoration shows, to real estate programs. Now I am watching a lot of vlogs of Brits that have moved to France and bought chateaus. It seems like all the trades people they hire for reno work are all British too. As a result, I have picked up a few British turns of phrase, like: "I have it all sorted" rather than the American version of "figuring it out". I didn't even realize I was doing it.
    And of course there are things like the British "pudding" Spotted Dick, that would have Americans howling with laughter.

    • @drcovell
      @drcovell 3 года назад +1

      “Spotted dick” sounds like a terrible social disease. However, my favorite is “ Toad in the hole!” (Sounds like roadkill.) 😂😂😂😂

  • @m.r.e.5731
    @m.r.e.5731 3 года назад +4

    Great memories from when I lived in a British community in the Middle East. We had such fun learning all the language differences.

  • @allsorts4041
    @allsorts4041 3 года назад +20

    Really enjoyed this Julie! Have been to the UK and Ireland many times and I think the number one thing for me is the pronunciation of places. We N. Americans tend to pronounce things according to the spelling.

    • @christina5545
      @christina5545 3 года назад

      Yes! My husband and family laughed at me endlessly about my pronunciation in the UK. I think the way Americans pronounce things makes more sense because it’s more straightforward, but don’t tell a Brit that!! 😂

    • @maryokeefe5351
      @maryokeefe5351 3 года назад +1

      What about enough or thorough?

  • @insightbytes2136
    @insightbytes2136 3 года назад +11

    Here in central Indiana, we have adopted many roundabouts. It's helps prevent many people running stop signs.

    • @SCLana
      @SCLana 3 года назад +3

      Gosh I hate them😫

    • @tidefanyankee2428
      @tidefanyankee2428 3 года назад +1

      It also can make the flow of traffic more efficient. Rouand-a-bouts also save money, because there are no traffic lights to power or maintain.

    • @maryokeefe5351
      @maryokeefe5351 3 года назад +1

      We call them traffic circles in parts of Canada.

  • @diannastrending5364
    @diannastrending5364 3 года назад +2

    I was born in England. Moved to US at 2 years old. I enjoyed this video and learned so much!

  • @ceciliasims7374
    @ceciliasims7374 3 года назад +9

    My parents lived in England for 3 years & we would visit them. The 5 things that surprised me were rubbish instead of garbage, garden rather than yard, boot instead of trunk, Hoover rather than vacuum & loo instead of bathroom.

    • @solatiumz
      @solatiumz 3 года назад +2

      I don't understand why Americans call a garden a yard; after all you do gardening, not yarding/yardening.

    • @rawleymyers5647
      @rawleymyers5647 3 года назад +2

      @@solatiumz Likewise with bathroom. I was in Blackwell's, the famous Oxford bookshop and a man standing next to me asked a passing assistant, "Excuse me, but do you have a bathroom here?" She directed him, but left me wondering why on earth an American would come into a bookshop for a bath!

    • @solatiumz
      @solatiumz 3 года назад +2

      @@rawleymyers5647 Bathroom I can cope with, it's the use of "restroom" that makes my mind boggle!!

  • @merrywalsh2809
    @merrywalsh2809 3 года назад +14

    Subbed! American here, who loves all things British. My favorite was no hugs. I am not a hugger and neither were my parents or their parents. My grown kids make fun of me for this, but now it makes sense. Some of my ancestors are from the UK, emigrating to the colonies before the Revolutionary War. I guess old habits are hard to break.

    • @irpriestley
      @irpriestley 3 года назад

      Yes but we English shake hands with everyone. In Washington state( country area. I shook hands with a lady, she looked strangely at my friend’s wife, who quickly said, “ It’s ok, he’s English.”
      I pestered them asking, “What did I do wrong?”
      After a little persuading they told me, “ We would think you were being forward. Like hitting on someone.”
      I was very embarrassed. Explaining “ but we shake hands with everyone!”
      They told me a woman has to offer first to shake hands.
      This may have changed now. It was 1981.

    • @merrywalsh2809
      @merrywalsh2809 3 года назад

      @@irpriestley Mostly we shake hands in business situations. I never heard that a lady must extend her hand first. Some country folk have limited experience with “outsiders”, a narrow world view, so they take offense where none exists.

    • @irpriestley
      @irpriestley 3 года назад

      @@merrywalsh2809 yes but it was a long time ago.

    • @Rayrayray-fv3oo
      @Rayrayray-fv3oo 3 года назад

      @@irpriestley they are insecure nothing wrong with that

    • @irpriestley
      @irpriestley 3 года назад

      @@Rayrayray-fv3oo she thought I was being fresh!

  • @26kitn
    @26kitn 2 года назад +1

    I love her she's sooo down to earth! I'm moving to London so I love her videos like this so I can learn British culture before I move there!

  • @AmericanViscountess
    @AmericanViscountess  3 года назад +16

    Great news, we've recorded 10 more culture shocks, which you can watch here: ruclips.net/video/pnpPwR46rTg/видео.html

    • @madyottoyotto3055
      @madyottoyotto3055 2 года назад

      Sorry I have to correct this
      Milk in first isn't a regional decision
      Adding milk before the hot water and tea bag is a sin
      Ask anyone who understands the science in what I am about to say
      Milk is thicker and has a higher surface tension
      Thus meaning it's seals the tea bag delaying the impending infusion
      Try it both ways and look at it with what I say in mind
      You will see for your own eyes what I'm saying
      The method I use is this
      Sugar first
      This way if reusing a cup that is wet from being rinsed the tea bag or the coffee won't stick to the floor of the cup
      Then coffee or tea bag then hot water
      Milk is always last
      Some add milk with hot water to "stop the hot water from burning the coffee"
      Not at all required unless using real coffee not from a machine
      Vast majority use instant coffee and it's pointless
      Also if you add the milk last you stick with British tradition as you would make drinks without milk or sugar and have a pot of sugar and small jug of milk to allow guests to customize there drink
      This tradition is mostly lost in homes

    • @barrycaldwell2924
      @barrycaldwell2924 2 года назад +1

      @@madyottoyotto3055 milk goes in first, due to tradition, when tea first became fashionable (1750's or so), the cups of the time would shatter if you poured boiling tea into them while they where empty, pouring milk in first cooled the hot tea enough, when poured, to prevent the cups shattering. Also, when you're making tea you should always use a pot, not put a bag in a cup 🙂
      From a 'dyedin the wool' brit!

    • @madyottoyotto3055
      @madyottoyotto3055 2 года назад

      @@barrycaldwell2924
      yes right you are but do it now with tea bags no flavor or steep twice as long
      Or coffee getting stronger as you drink because it's become treacle at the bottom
      So today has to be sugar first
      I hadn't thought about it but going way back you are 100% spot on
      Nice bit of info for us all that
      Thank you

    • @splodge561
      @splodge561 2 года назад

      You move in very different circles to most Brits and becomes very obvious in this I'm afraid.

  • @annasteele9464
    @annasteele9464 3 года назад +6

    We in Iceland did learn to stand in line when Covid came.
    This is a nice show. Regards from Iceland 🇮🇸

    • @acommentator4452
      @acommentator4452 2 года назад

      very friendly service on delivery but the blueberries were past their best.

    • @sheilaenglish7329
      @sheilaenglish7329 2 года назад +1

      Did you really not stand in lines before that in Iceland? We in Canada are practiced liner uppers, perhaps due to our country’s British history.

  • @lizgilman522
    @lizgilman522 2 года назад +2

    This has been such a fun video, I had to write. I am not a Viscountess but I am British. I met my American husband and moved to Minnesota. Your top ten were some of the same for me however, in reverse!!! I have had my work cut out trying to teach my family the table manner etiquette taught by my English mum! My American inlaws have no idea what the table settings are for when they come for special meals like Christmas dinner. This has been such a delight, thank you!

  • @carrieannmcleod5219
    @carrieannmcleod5219 2 года назад +5

    I love everything British. It's amazing how such a little country has so much history and traditions. I was fascinated by the round abouts and the length of time it took to drive from England to Scotland since it looked so close. Best fish and chips hands down. Love taking afternoon tea. Confused about fried Mars bar and curried chips. Always look forward and enjoy my visits there.

    • @missharry5727
      @missharry5727 2 года назад

      Culture and traditions are more to do with age than size. The British Isles have been successively occupied by the Celts, the Romans, the Norsemen, the Anglo-saxons, the Normans and people from the old British Empire for over 3000 years.

  • @janehall2720
    @janehall2720 3 года назад +10

    I love table etiquette. I am from NJ outside of Philadelphia. It was expected for every dinner and when guests were over. In college, I studied at the Culinary Institute of America and did a fellowship in Dining Room service. I can set a mean table. Recently moved to Idaho and the culture is beyond different. Most people barely eat at the table let alone use multiple utensils. To call it casual is an understatement. I have visited alot of Europe and it is just crazy different.

    • @maroulio2067
      @maroulio2067 3 года назад +2

      I lived across from CIA while I was at Vassar, and my granddaughter is now a bakery student at CIA. My friends and I loved going to CIA for tea in the afternoon. I now live in Washington state, so I/m too far to enjoy my granddaughter's baking.

    • @acommentator4452
      @acommentator4452 2 года назад +1

      is that perhaps because it is more an agricultural area, and people only stop for quick re-fuelling and out again to the fields, rather than lingering in an urban evening way over foodie delights.

  • @tomwalker779
    @tomwalker779 3 года назад +5

    Greetings from Canada, the country caught in between.
    You are likely to hear both sets here
    We generally lean toward the standard British pronunciations... But not always.
    Cookies are usually a filled cookie, but shortbread are always biscuits, there are places to have afternoon tea with scones jam and clotted cream, or finger sandwiches.
    I believe it was Winston Churchill who observed that Britain and The US are two great countries separated by a common language.

  • @tomredd9025
    @tomredd9025 2 года назад +6

    Love your videos. I am from Michigan so I can relate to your down-home Midwestern accent. Here's a culture shock that I experienced some years back. We live in Detroit, Michigan which is just across the Detroit River from Windsor Ontario, Canada. One day we were traveling and crossed into Windsor enroute to our destination, Niagara Falls. Just over the bridge we decided to stop at a McDonalds to get breakfast before getting on the freeway. I went in and ordered some sausage biscuits. The girl at the counter gave a look that clearly conveyed that I was some kind of nut. I finally pointed to a picture on the menu and ordered it. When I got in the car, we all had a good laugh that I had ordered in Canadian parlance "sausage and cookies." Now you have to understand that this happened about 5 miles from our house!

    • @theresanoble1695
      @theresanoble1695 2 года назад

      I’m Canadian and that is funny!
      I was in the US years ago and ordered a Western sandwich the waitress looked at me like I was from another planet! She then came back to me a very shyly stated she didn’t know what I had ordered! I told her it’s egg, bacon, onion, and green peppers on toasted bread! My order came on two pieces of bread with a fried egg, slice of onion on that topped with slices of bacon!! I didn’t tell her the veg and bacon should be chopped and scrambled with the egg !
      They still do not know what a Western sandwich is in the US!!! 😂

  • @stuartdoyle3140
    @stuartdoyle3140 3 года назад +26

    I can relate to this being an Englishman who emigrated to Canada 14 years ago. In my case the 'reverse' culture shock is also true so I can relate to all of these things as well. What is clear to me are the major differences between different regions of all countries (I also lived in Germany) and between the rural and urban areas of those regions. Also, do not call Canadians 'Americans' even though its all part of North America, they dont like it.

    • @eattherich9215
      @eattherich9215 3 года назад +7

      '... they dont like it.' They HATE it. I no longer make assumptions when I hear a North American accent because in my experience, they are usually Canadian.

    • @heathercbc7287
      @heathercbc7287 2 года назад

      @@eattherich9215 Am Canadian. Will wholeheartedly confirm! 🤣

    • @k4949
      @k4949 2 года назад +3

      I don't think Americans enjoy being called Canadian.

    • @tsanseverino950
      @tsanseverino950 2 года назад +1

      @@k4949 You got that Right!!

  • @Mac62671
    @Mac62671 2 года назад +9

    I’m doing my MBA at a UK university online and I am an American and hug prone. The first time I met a particular classmate I went in for a hug and she looked nonplussed. I thought it was amusing at the time as she looked nonplussed and confused and now I get it! Also you forgot beans for breakfast. Went to a breakfast buffet and was literally like what are these beans on here for?

    • @acommentator4452
      @acommentator4452 2 года назад

      well you won't get on in business if you make people uncomfortable.

    • @angelicar451
      @angelicar451 Год назад

      Pilling peas on the back of the fork!

    • @Stephen-lx9nm
      @Stephen-lx9nm Год назад +1

      ​@@angelicar451Mine in usa was peopleeating like animals ,can't use a knife and fork😂

  • @wendypetersen7529
    @wendypetersen7529 3 года назад +10

    Mine was in reverse. The first time I went shopping in the US to get milk I was met by rows and rows of all different kinds; It was like playing 20 questions. I was used to opening the front door and taking it inside - end of transaction..Then they charged me more than the labels said. In England the tax is included in the price - in America - it's added after the purchases.

    • @marguaritetherese3156
      @marguaritetherese3156 3 года назад +1

      Sales tax laws are dictated by each state and, though commonly added at the register, you'd never pay sales tax on milk in my state. Food and clothes are exempt from sales tax here.

  • @lorddaver3019
    @lorddaver3019 3 года назад +8

    As a Brit, I do get fed up by the constant criticism of the British weather. Yes, the winters are grey and damp. But in the summer, especially in the south of England, there are usually fairly frequent spells of warm to sometimes hot, and dry, weather. I have often experienced periods of a week or two of blue skies with temperatures in the 80s or 90s degrees F. OK, these may be interspersed with periods of somewhat cooler temperatures. But then a week or two later temperatures will often rise again. It is an exaggeration to say summers are always cold.

  • @hughporter5234
    @hughporter5234 3 года назад +19

    I spent much of my early life going between Texas and the UK, and I have noticed a number of differences. One of my favorites is the silent W in words like Warwick and Fenwicks in the UK. Or the pronunciation of Saints, saint in the US, Sint, in the UK. Another is the difference between Men's Trousers and Men's Pants. In the US they are the same but not in the UK where men don't wear pants. I don't find the UK, at least in London, as cold (temperature) as the Viscountess seems to. In fact I have spend some very warm summers in London, longing for Air Conditioning. The great joy I have as a collector of dialects it the difference between London, Yorkshire, and Cornwall, Versus New York, Delaware Water Gap, Great Lakes, Southern and Texas accents. All of which tell us something interesting about our English speaking cousins.

    • @testosteronic
      @testosteronic 3 года назад +1

      Men definitely wear pants in the UK, it means underwear, unless you're in the north of England cos then pants gets used for p much any garment with two legs

    • @Penguin_of_Death
      @Penguin_of_Death 2 года назад +2

      @@testosteronic And obviously pants is also used to describe something that's rubbish

    • @azurephoenix9546
      @azurephoenix9546 2 года назад

      The Cornwall dialect is like marzipan; it is utterly unto itself. It's just so unique and honestly, I adore it.

    • @1234-m7w
      @1234-m7w 2 года назад

      I agree it is warm

    • @1234-m7w
      @1234-m7w 2 года назад

      @@testosteronic what is it the English call a diaper lololol a nappie I can't do that one

  • @anxen
    @anxen 3 года назад +4

    This has been delightful. As someone who recently 'celebrated 30 years in the UK by making a passing comment about omg where has the time gone and how am I still here, I have seemingly developed a trauma bond with this country and I miss it terribly when I'm away and even start fretting about tea even though I almost never drink it while I'm here and certainly never with milk. LOL @ me. My favourite culture shock from the list has to be the weather as that one is just so pervasive and completely impossible to understand unless you live here.

  • @mariadegan1029
    @mariadegan1029 3 года назад +9

    This was very interesting Julie, l can relate!! I was brought up by an American father and Italian mother, living in various parts of the world, and l started speaking in England, where my brother and sister were born, so l actually had a British accent until l was 7 and we lived in the States for a year. Then it was mixed!! Of course l lost my British English by going to American schools, but still have retained certain expressions, or words🧐

  • @cherchezlavache5183
    @cherchezlavache5183 2 года назад +6

    Oh, hahaha, yes, I can identify with all of this. I first went to visit family in London back in 1968. At that time, if you asked for a glass of water in a restaurant (which they never gave you as a matter of course) they would look at you as if you might be planning to bathe at the table. And if, when asked, they did give you water, it was always tap water, without ice. The ice maker was something foreign to them.
    Fish & Chips also had a far better taste than today. They were fried in beef fat, & packaged up with real newsprint. It was wonderful. Today, it is still OK, but not the same. Still, I absolutely LOVE England, & was last there toward the end of 2019! 👍🙋‍♀️🥂

  • @AndreaD.
    @AndreaD. 3 года назад +15

    I would love to see an etiquette video! I would probably enjoy the cooler weather after living in the Southern US. Heat & humidity are not my friends!

    • @betht60
      @betht60 3 года назад +2

      Me too! My family is from Ohio, I grew up in Virginia and live in Southern Maryland. I am dying from the heat from May to September! I rarely wear sweaters, even in winter. When I had my dna analyzed, and it came back "northern European, mostly British isles and Ireland", I had scientific proof-it's in my genes! Lol

  • @valentinak3838
    @valentinak3838 3 года назад +6

    This is so good! Such a good points! I am from Russia, living in the UK and everyone goes about how cold it is in Russia is but we do have great summers :)

  • @debbielanman4197
    @debbielanman4197 3 года назад +2

    I am a Canadian living in the US and find so many differences. Thanks for sharing yours. I do find that Canadians do share alot with our English friends.

  • @gerseygal3633
    @gerseygal3633 3 года назад +15

    When my Dad went over to England in 1962 to marry my Beautiful English Rose, Mom it was much different...It took 15 hours from New York to Reykjavik Iceland then to Manchester...My Grandparents were the first to have a TV set and a telephone in the house..The neighbors always came over to use the phone...Everyone called my Dad the American Yankee...When my Grandad took my Dad to the pub..he asked for ice in his drink...Ice..we don't have ice here..Yankee...I was very lucky..I had my American family and my English family...My parents were married for 57 years till my Beloved Mother lost her battle sadly with cancer...

  • @marcfiore4319
    @marcfiore4319 3 года назад +5

    Julie, perhaps your viewers would like a tour of your lovely Aga behind you! My sister has lived in England since 1969, and wouldn’t dream of living anywhere else. I visit her often, and am completely fascinated by European History. She also married a Viscount, who later became an Earl when his father passed. They lived at Shirburn Castle in Oxfordshire for many years, and I spent lots of time exploring that thousand year-old castle and the beautiful Estate grounds.

  • @AmericanViscountess
    @AmericanViscountess  3 года назад +47

    Watch the first episode of my new series, American Viscountess, right here: ruclips.net/video/i8cIytz2WrA/видео.html

    • @deborahbarry8458
      @deborahbarry8458 3 года назад +2

      Oh my word! You really are a viscountess !

    • @pawlieblog7967
      @pawlieblog7967 3 года назад +9

      Actually Julie has many jobs and it seems a broadcast tv background. I just saw her commentary on the new CNN series on Princess Diana. She’s smart, funny and talented. Get over yourself, Steven! Lol 😂

    • @annaverano5843
      @annaverano5843 3 года назад +4

      I lived a year in milton keynes 3 years ago during a heat wave and it was lovely , we use to go to a different historic place every weekend, my favorite is still stowe garden, i also loved blenheim palace or walking through a little village, during the winter i did have a hard time getting use to it getting dark at 3 in the afternoon but i loved that in the summer it was still light out at 11 pm that was heaven . The UK is so laid back compared to america and that was a real culture shock but i loved how the public had access to walking anywhere they wanted to we dont have that in the states .. i sometimes get home sick for my beloved england ..

    • @angelawhite7898
      @angelawhite7898 3 года назад

      If you let me come stay with you for a vacation I will happily call you Vis-countess. LOL I actually watch so much British TV that I knew all the words. I love the English history.

    • @MrJgohde
      @MrJgohde 3 года назад

      @@pawlieblog7967 - Learn how to reply in RUclips.

  • @cherylwilson8519
    @cherylwilson8519 3 года назад +7

    I feel that coming from our lovely country of Canada, our culture is has a lot in common with both English and American culture. Many influences from the world wars and our involvement in them. My grandmother came over as a war bride and I picked up a lot of those sayings and love of their food from her.

    • @maryokeefe5351
      @maryokeefe5351 3 года назад

      And how to you feel about marmite?

    • @cherylwilson8519
      @cherylwilson8519 3 года назад

      @@maryokeefe5351 I have never gotten used to it!. Unfortunately lol. My grandmother used to say to me, Come now dah, just try a bit more."

  • @kellywellington7122
    @kellywellington7122 3 года назад +9

    Ha! I'm from the Pacific NW in the US and I went to the UK for three months, April through June, expecting the weather to be much like home. It wasn't. It was, on average, drier, sunnier, and warmer than I expected. I did experience rain, but it was rare and usually light. Lots of gusting winds, particularly in the Wales and the Orkneys. My last week was a hellish heatwave in Cambridgeshire. And London. In June.

    • @eattherich9215
      @eattherich9215 3 года назад

      Weather in the UK used to be more predictable - hot summers and snow in the winter. My advice to Americans visiting England in the Spring/Summer is that you will need an umbrella and something warm to wear on at least one day during the visit.

    • @sheilaenglish7329
      @sheilaenglish7329 2 года назад

      Were you there in 2018? I was in Kent during April and May of that year and saw very little rain and endured a short heatwave too. No a/c 😓. I ended up hanging around the refrigerated section of Sainsbury’s where it was a bit cooler. I also got my free Sainsbury’s shorts there. The guy running my purchase through got distracted by my Canadian accent and forgot to charge me 😁

    • @kellywellington7122
      @kellywellington7122 2 года назад

      @@eattherich9215 Well, I came expecting much more rain. More like at home during that time of year.

    • @kellywellington7122
      @kellywellington7122 2 года назад

      @@sheilaenglish7329 2017. Wales, Isle of Man, Lake District, Orkneys, Shetlands, Grampians, Ayr, Hadrian's Wall, Cosford, Duxford, and Cambridgeshire.

  • @LizJr88
    @LizJr88 3 года назад +5

    I’m so glad I discovered your channel. You both seem so genuine and down to earth. England is so beautiful, and the culture so interesting.
    If you know any single English gentlemen, Vis-Count or not… 😉