If I ever see a clip as I am flicking through the channel searching for something, I ALWAYS stop my search and watch these two. They are simply fantastic entertainment, if they find something funny they laugh, and Oh Boy....Do they laugh! I have to be honest, there are not many videos that I watch more than a couple of times, but I could watch these two anytime. Big Thanks to you both for entertaining a 90 year old British guy.
We have baths in our bathrooms as well. I’m assuming that’s where it comes from. Not all bathrooms have it. But again these are words that came about decades back. We don’t stop and think about each thing and all that. I’m sure there slang where you live that is a similar deal
I have always wondered why Americans call the garden the yard!! A yard in the UK is usually a rather untidy and rough place like a builders yard, or a scrap metal yard!! We have gardener to come and tend our garden, what do you call someone who comes to tend your Yard....a yardner????🤔🤔🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
It's one of the very few examples that, although there's no reason for them to use it, it does originally mean the enclosed area around a house from long before the other examples it means today in the UK. So it can get a pass. Although it was spelt differently at the time, it would have been pronounced along the lines of "yard".
@jemmajames6719 Yes, but that really is generally only used when referring to old Victorian back to back houses that often had a privy, ie. an outside toilet in the back yard, so no I'm not wrong!!😁😁🇬🇧
Not all yards here have a garden in it. The word yard refers to what you said. Just land. If it’s nicely landscaped then it’s a nice yard or a well maintained yard
I think the idea of people in a single country using lots of terms for one thing is fairly universal . To take your example of bathroom- in Australia we could ask for the bathroom, toilet, the facilities, ladies / men’s room, loo, dunny, little boys/girls room, the pisser, the shithouse, bogger, brasco, john..
Every country has different words, sayings and slang and after the advent of the Tv/internet, we are able to hear soo many more options from different countries and different parts of our own countries. I'm in the UK and I don't always understand different words and sayings from other parts within my own country. And in certain situations I will occasionally use American terms and words especially ones that have made me laugh from a sitcom, like friends, cheers, big bang theory etc . E.g. I have used Bazinga, twice this week. Loved 😍 the reaction guys 🎉🎉🎉
Your 'L' in 'english' is too dark for that accent, Jodi 😄 If you lower the back of your tongue while you say the 'L' sound, it'll be a lot closer! A 'dark L' is one with the back of the tongue further up towards the roof of the mouth - it makes the 'L' sound closer to a 'W' sound, which tends to be a more American feature. We use the dark L at the end of words but not at the beginning or the middle usually. Love these reactions! ❤
There is nothing wrong with calling it sidewalk. It’s easy and clear. It’s the part of the pavement for pedestrians. Originally, you paved the road surface with different kinds of materials and stones. Not it’s mostly asphalt concrete. You could argue it’s _more_ confusing to say: “walk on the pavement”. Because the whole surface is pavement. Here in Sweden we say trottoar, which comes from French. Greetings from Sweden
The road is called the carriageway and is normally made of tarmac (never heard of asphalt) and the pedestrian areas are the pavements. If you drive on the pavement there would be casualties 😂
_Asphalt concrete_ is used in making of road surfaces. That is why we here in Sweden say asphalt, for example. Tarmac, I think, is especially North American. As far as I know, pavement is the surface you lay down for vehicular or pedestrians. So, sidewalk, in my opinion, is not too bad. It’s very simple and direct. 🙂
Gor blimey Mary Poppins ! Loved the accents , interestingly there is a Taskmaster task involving glasses of you could find it . We used to have waste paper baskets in our school in the 60's - they were actually made of wicker .
Great interduction. 😂. There are many reasons why the USA speak different. Here a few I remember. A lot words and pronouncements from USA are from old English. The colonists had little contact with England back then. Also from other cultures that mixed into it. . I think in some places in USA. that have defenders of the English language. Am from Britain and I can't understand it, some of time. 😂.
The name Bob has three letters, yet an American says it sounds like Booobb. In Australia just ask for the toilet, if you ask for the bathroom you be surprised when their is no toilet in there. 🍻🇦🇺
I take your point about 'eye glasses' (though there's very few situations/contexts where there would be ambiguity over the term), but that still means there was a point when you guys decided that the ocular variety was the one that got the prefix, rather than the other. You could have kept just "glasses" for spectacles but gone with 'mouth glasses' to describe the thing you drink from instead :D
@@jericoba Did they, though? Google suggests spectacles (I'm not calling them 'eyeglasses') were invented in the 13th Century whereas, whilst glass was used as a receptacle material back to prehistoric times, a drinking glass as we know it wasn't invented until the 1400s. Either way, it's rather irrelevant as both predate the evolution of the US vernacular replacing the English in the States by a long way so wouldn't be the decider when it happened.
@BigAlCapwn Well, you were the one proposing they kept just “glasses” for spectacles but gone with “mouth glasses”. So I simply suggested that naming often comes with what comes first. Glassblowing to create vessels are older than spectacles for reading.
@@jericoba I wasn't proposing it per se, just suggesting it could have been an equal alternative. I take your point, in a society where X already existed and Y comes along later that could use the same word, it makes sense to amend Y with a prefix or suffix to avoid confusion with X. My point is this makes sense in British English as both predated it, but both "eyeglasses" and drinking glasses existed when the dominate British English that colonist spoke departed to what we know today as 'American English' so neither 'came first' in their timeline
Independence day, ''Ok, we are free, well done lads, should we keep English as our official language? yes, yes, yes, yes, etc, etc, no, no, the yes's have it but to keep the no's happy we will butcher it a bit to make it a little different and call it American English'' 😂😂
That was actually not a bad accent, it did move around and sound a bit European English but way better than the normal Cockney accents done by Americans.
A stick is something for a dog to fetch.Not a manual gearbox.Football is something you play with your feet.Why do you call it a touchdown if you dont have to touch it down?A trunk is at the front of an elephant and not the back of a car.LOL
People call large suitcases trunks as well. These are called homonyms. Same word spellings with different meanings. It’s technically called stickshift. I never did research on why they call it touchdown. But you do have to be in the end zone with both feet touching the ground in bounds. So maybe for that reason
I think Americans have become more descriptive due to so many people that have immigrated to America first language not being English. Think it’s also part off the reason words are different such as colour/color and the tendency to pronounce English words as they are spelt and not as they are pronounced. Always makes me laugh listening to Americans trying to say Leicester
Didn't trashcan become popular from computer desktops. Before then it was Waste Paper Basket in an office. Of course you have a cast system, it's based on wealth and celebrity.
@BoringReviews if your splitting hairs like that it's not a unique point-of-view. How do you differentiate between cast and class? You're born into each and mobility is limited.
I think the overly descriptive terms is because America is a country of immigrants. And to make it easier for them to understand American English has been simplified
She sees the humour in this, but he doesn’t. The claim is Americans cant speak the English language. It’s true, they’ve also changed the spelling of words to suit themselves, like colour, neighbour, tyre and cheque.
I’m curious why you think I didn’t see/understand the humor? Are you judging off of how much or little I’m laughing? If you can tell how much I understand a joke by my reaction you should work for an agency that needs to read people on whether they are lying or not. That’s impressive. By the way I did get the humor. This video, these jokes weren’t hard to understand
Restroom comes for a time when you could rest in a room, which were at or near the public toilet facilities. It’s not a word invented by a fancy upper class. The term lived on till modern times.
American English is very simplified version of English. And since English is the most spread second or third language people learn, it's not that hard to learn basic English. Ps I'm terrible speller no matter what language
I enjoy your reactions. I think you have probably seen enough British humour by now to realise that at least part of the reason this humour works is because Americans (to mean people from the United States) do not have a good reputation in most of the rest of the world. The fairly isolated nature of American society in some respects and the cultural impact of having been the global hegemon for about a century means people in other countries consider poking fun at Americans to be fair game. It's rarely personal towards individuals.
You're showing your French origins... Vestibule is a French term from the 17th century for a small entrance. It's not English it's adopted American from your heavy yet hidden French ties. It's where your pants definition comes from.
@@davidsayers9772Except the -oline bit is just the suffix at the end which is greek for olive, meaning oil, so Gasoline is a Gas-Oil which is contradictory
To be fair, I don't think she was claiming it to be the definitive British accent 😅She even said she wasn't sure, what she was trying to do. I'm a Brummie and I couldn't do a Geordie, Scouse, West Country, Manc, Cockney accent etc.. Must be one Jodi has heard whilst watching Pride and Prejudice 😊
Speaking as a UK colonial, I think sidewalk is a much better word than pavement, which simply means a paved surface. An aircraft runway is a pavement, literally speaking.
language changes and evolves. I find the britsh claim to the one, true english always a bit irritating (and i'm not american). By the same notion a ancient roman could come along and rightfully mock the British (and Americans) for how they massacre THEIR good old latin,.. like butchering "pavimentum" into "pavement".
Your explanations are just digging you a bigger hole,especially your pavement.😵💫 Al Murray has a saying we’re divided from America by the English language and a great big ocean .
Obviously as you are USA-ians you speak USA-ian not English(neither American English, America is a continent not a country, there are more than 20 countries in America).
Terrible English accent love, also best not to say British accent that is really offensive tbh, you’re trying and not pulling off an English accent England and Britain is very different ❤❤😂😂😂😂
Squash and racquetball are slightly different, to be fair. Different size racquet and ball, for starters. A squash ball is smaller and doesn’t bounce as much. You really have to smack it.
Yes!! I remember as a kid my sister was really good at squash. I’d get dragged along every weekend and eventually they made me try it. I was so bad at it, they decided to “demote” me to racquetball as the ball was much bigger and so was the racquet!! 😂
I don't understand why you find that offensive. This is a reaction channel and they were reacting to comedy skit. Jodi was clearly trying to have a bit of fun and interact with their followers. If we keep critiquing and judging every little thing they say or do, we will make them afraid to say anything. We always bang on about us Brits having a good sense of humour and tell other nations not to take things to heart and that we are just taking the pee or having a laugh, yet we don't seem to afford the same luxuries to other people.
Don’t take our mindless bits too seriously. We never claim that our accents are the exact way people talk. We react to comedy. Never take it too seriously
What an achievement- Jodie managed to do all English based accents across the world simultaneously
Definitely heard some South African coming in there at the end :)
I'm here for it
Made me chuckle, love hearing them be silly and having fun 🎉. One of the things I enjoy about Nick and Jodi
I thought she sounded like a cross between Mary Poppins and Agnes Browne!
Wrongly!!
If I ever see a clip as I am flicking through the channel searching for something, I ALWAYS stop my search and watch these two. They are simply fantastic entertainment, if they find something funny they laugh, and Oh Boy....Do they laugh! I have to be honest, there are not many videos that I watch more than a couple of times, but I could watch these two anytime. Big Thanks to you both for entertaining a 90 year old British guy.
Pavement is the large blocks of stone slabs we have in the UK for the bit we walk on whereas the road surface is asphalt.
The pavement can also be made of asphalt. Pavement regardless of it construction material is the area next to a road where pedestrians walk.
idk where you grew up but inthe midlands we say pavement, and tarmac
I can never understand why American call the toilet, the bathroom. A bathroom in the UK has a bath in it
It's some bizarre thing about not being rude. They think toilet is too direct although everyone knows what you are doing in the bathroom
@@Stuffthatsfunny1 It’s not that bizarre when you think about that other term and manners existed to not be too blunt. It’s all about social norm.
We have baths in our bathrooms as well. I’m assuming that’s where it comes from. Not all bathrooms have it. But again these are words that came about decades back. We don’t stop and think about each thing and all that. I’m sure there slang where you live that is a similar deal
In this country it isn't the social norm to say the bathroom when referring to the toilet.@@jericoba
Tbf it is weird we call the room the toilet and the object a toilet as well 😂
I have always wondered why Americans call the garden the yard!! A yard in the UK is usually a rather untidy and rough place like a builders yard, or a scrap metal yard!! We have gardener to come and tend our garden, what do you call someone who comes to tend your Yard....a yardner????🤔🤔🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
It's one of the very few examples that, although there's no reason for them to use it, it does originally mean the enclosed area around a house from long before the other examples it means today in the UK. So it can get a pass.
Although it was spelt differently at the time, it would have been pronounced along the lines of "yard".
Your wrong, haven’t you heard of other yards? Like someone’s backyard in the UK?
@jemmajames6719 Yes, but that really is generally only used when referring to old Victorian back to back houses that often had a privy, ie. an outside toilet in the back yard, so no I'm not wrong!!😁😁🇬🇧
Not all yards here have a garden in it. The word yard refers to what you said. Just land. If it’s nicely landscaped then it’s a nice yard or a well maintained yard
It’s funny how you freely criticize us but when someone challenges you you get defensive. Hypocrisy in its finest form.
I think the idea of people in a single country using lots of terms for one thing is fairly universal . To take your example of bathroom- in Australia we could ask for the bathroom, toilet, the facilities, ladies / men’s room, loo, dunny, little boys/girls room, the pisser, the shithouse, bogger, brasco, john..
Waste Paper Basket is the bin you have in your office.
I thought it was what Americans call a paper recycle bin
Nice one i enjoyed that! Great reaction as always
Love your reactions! Michael McIntyre‘s video „Sarah with an h“ is very funny as well! Kevin Bridge‘s video „If facebook was a pub“ is great too!
Being a little biased as I'm Scottish, but the best tap water you can drink is here in Scotland 🏴
Can’t deny that. Hi from Edinburgh
@@Retrositcom from which distillery?
Can agree with that. Hi from the black isle
How many different tap waters have you tried though
If jodi did that voice in the UK, people would think she was european and struggling with the language. Not judging it though.
Jodi is hilarious 😂
Let me guess Jodi was that the accent of an Irish born Traveller who attended an English public school ? So good.
The accent was half English Irish slash south African... but the right volume.
This was a fun reaction thank you.
My guess with "horseback riding" is to distinguish it from other methods of using a horse as a mode of transport (e.g. to pull a carriage or a cart).
I noticed in yesterday's video Jodi said horseback riding 😂
It would be easy to be offended - thank goodness you're not. There's an affection behind it all. 🙂
That intro went from an English accent to Scottish then to Irish 😂😂
lol it went all over the place haha
There definitely wasn’t Scottish in there, Americans simply cannot do the Scottish accent aside from trained actors and even then most struggle
Every country has different words, sayings and slang and after the advent of the Tv/internet, we are able to hear soo many more options from different countries and different parts of our own countries. I'm in the UK and I don't always understand different words and sayings from other parts within my own country. And in certain situations I will occasionally use American terms and words especially ones that have made me laugh from a sitcom, like friends, cheers, big bang theory etc .
E.g. I have used Bazinga, twice this week.
Loved 😍 the reaction guys 🎉🎉🎉
Nick always wears cool shirts.
Your 'L' in 'english' is too dark for that accent, Jodi 😄 If you lower the back of your tongue while you say the 'L' sound, it'll be a lot closer! A 'dark L' is one with the back of the tongue further up towards the roof of the mouth - it makes the 'L' sound closer to a 'W' sound, which tends to be a more American feature. We use the dark L at the end of words but not at the beginning or the middle usually. Love these reactions! ❤
There is nothing wrong with calling it sidewalk. It’s easy and clear. It’s the part of the pavement for pedestrians.
Originally, you paved the road surface with different kinds of materials and stones. Not it’s mostly asphalt concrete. You could argue it’s _more_ confusing to say: “walk on the pavement”. Because the whole surface is pavement.
Here in Sweden we say trottoar, which comes from French.
Greetings from Sweden
"dont understand English" in the intro was probably the best Irish accent Ive heard an American do.
Indicators = turning signals
Crisps = potato chips
Off licence = liquor store
Hundreds and thousands = sprinkles
There are so many examples
Don't worry Jodi, I can't do a British accent either!
Thanks guys
The road is called the carriageway and is normally made of tarmac (never heard of asphalt) and the pedestrian areas are the pavements. If you drive on the pavement there would be casualties 😂
_Asphalt concrete_ is used in making of road surfaces. That is why we here in Sweden say asphalt, for example. Tarmac, I think, is especially North American.
As far as I know, pavement is the surface you lay down for vehicular or pedestrians. So, sidewalk, in my opinion, is not too bad. It’s very simple and direct. 🙂
Gor blimey Mary Poppins ! Loved the accents , interestingly there is a Taskmaster task involving glasses of you could find it . We used to have waste paper baskets in our school in the 60's - they were actually made of wicker .
Squash and racquet ball are totally different games with different types of racquets.
What-er! lol Wa-Ah mate, Wa-Ah! The Wa-ah in Majork-ah ain't quite what it orta! :)
Great stuff guys, Mic-Mac-i is always so good!
Could I request your reaction on the SNL skits "Washington's Dream" 1 & 2!! I'm sure you could love it!!
Dont worry Jodie, there are people in the south of England ,who think thst the rest of the UK dont spesk English properly 🙄
Great interduction. 😂. There are many reasons why the USA speak different. Here a few I remember. A lot words and pronouncements from USA are from old English. The colonists had little contact with England back then. Also from other cultures that mixed into it. . I think in some places in USA. that have defenders of the English language. Am from Britain and I can't understand it, some of time. 😂.
english is such a difficult langauage to learn...laughing in german.
The name Bob has three letters, yet an American says it sounds like Booobb. In Australia just ask for the toilet, if you ask for the bathroom you be surprised when their is no toilet in there. 🍻🇦🇺
Not sure who you’re listening to. I don’t say it that way
@ are you sure😉
I take your point about 'eye glasses' (though there's very few situations/contexts where there would be ambiguity over the term), but that still means there was a point when you guys decided that the ocular variety was the one that got the prefix, rather than the other. You could have kept just "glasses" for spectacles but gone with 'mouth glasses' to describe the thing you drink from instead :D
Probably because glass vessels for drinking came before the eyeglasses.
@@jericoba Did they, though? Google suggests spectacles (I'm not calling them 'eyeglasses') were invented in the 13th Century whereas, whilst glass was used as a receptacle material back to prehistoric times, a drinking glass as we know it wasn't invented until the 1400s. Either way, it's rather irrelevant as both predate the evolution of the US vernacular replacing the English in the States by a long way so wouldn't be the decider when it happened.
@BigAlCapwn Well, you were the one proposing they kept just “glasses” for spectacles but gone with “mouth glasses”. So I simply suggested that naming often comes with what comes first. Glassblowing to create vessels are older than spectacles for reading.
And so many words in English are homophones so it’s just weird that glasses need to be specified
@@jericoba I wasn't proposing it per se, just suggesting it could have been an equal alternative. I take your point, in a society where X already existed and Y comes along later that could use the same word, it makes sense to amend Y with a prefix or suffix to avoid confusion with X. My point is this makes sense in British English as both predated it, but both "eyeglasses" and drinking glasses existed when the dominate British English that colonist spoke departed to what we know today as 'American English' so neither 'came first' in their timeline
Love the Ireausweedlilsh accent!
Independence day,
''Ok, we are free, well done lads, should we keep English as our official language?
yes, yes, yes, yes, etc, etc, no, no,
the yes's have it but to keep the no's happy we will butcher it a bit to make it a little different and call it American English'' 😂😂
That was actually not a bad accent, it did move around and sound a bit European English but way better than the normal Cockney accents done by Americans.
that was the best scullery maid accent ive ever heard haha
Jodie went into Eliza Doolittle at one point. 😂 ❤
Look up an old Carlsberg ad. Search for “The water in Majorca” all time British classic
A stick is something for a dog to fetch.Not a manual gearbox.Football is something you play with your feet.Why do you call it a touchdown if you dont have to touch it down?A trunk is at the front of an elephant and not the back of a car.LOL
People call large suitcases trunks as well. These are called homonyms. Same word spellings with different meanings. It’s technically called stickshift. I never did research on why they call it touchdown. But you do have to be in the end zone with both feet touching the ground in bounds. So maybe for that reason
Its almosr even less eords in the UK, you'd normally just go Riding, not even horse riding, or horse back riding.
I think Americans have become more descriptive due to so many people that have immigrated to America first language not being English. Think it’s also part off the reason words are different such as colour/color and the tendency to pronounce English words as they are spelt and not as they are pronounced. Always makes me laugh listening to Americans trying to say Leicester
I heard an American also say neck tie the other day...
Wow, wrestlemania VI the first one I remember watching. 😅
Didn't trashcan become popular from computer desktops. Before then it was Waste Paper Basket in an office.
Of course you have a cast system, it's based on wealth and celebrity.
We don’t call it caste though. That was what I said. We have classes. Not castes
@BoringReviews if your splitting hairs like that it's not a unique point-of-view. How do you differentiate between cast and class? You're born into each and mobility is limited.
It's warter down south or watter in Yorkshire
It is a great South African accent that Jodie does 👍🏻
I think what you call things has a lot to do with what your parents call things, or say things.... to a certain degree.
Blimey Jodie, you sounded eastern European 😂
That was a good go at a reallllly posh English accent, I'm from Liverpool so sound NOTHING like that though lmao.
I think the overly descriptive terms is because America is a country of immigrants. And to make it easier for them to understand American English has been simplified
She sees the humour in this, but he doesn’t. The claim is Americans cant speak the English language. It’s true, they’ve also changed the spelling of words to suit themselves, like colour, neighbour, tyre and cheque.
I’m curious why you think I didn’t see/understand the humor? Are you judging off of how much or little I’m laughing? If you can tell how much I understand a joke by my reaction you should work for an agency that needs to read people on whether they are lying or not. That’s impressive. By the way I did get the humor. This video, these jokes weren’t hard to understand
2:58 to skip the interminable intro/waffle
Restroom comes for a time when you could rest in a room, which were at or near the public toilet facilities. It’s not a word invented by a fancy upper class. The term lived on till modern times.
In South Africa they call traffic lights "Robots"!
The British accent wasn't too bad Jodi. The problem is it was all of them at once.
The word I cringe at with Americans is "aluminum." It is an alloy, invented in England and is aluminium. You haven't changed other alloys so ...WHY?
it's too difficult for them to say
No, it's not an alloy...it's an element (no matter how you say it!)
A classic.
Dick van Dyke impersonation is quite good.
Aww Liam Payne was there 😢❤
Got help the kids in school who you teach😂😂👍🇬🇧
Jeremy Clarkson has a similar type about words Americans use
Congratulations Jodi. You've just taken the "World's Worst English Accent" trophy from Dick Van Dyke. 😂
American English is very simplified version of English. And since English is the most spread second or third language people learn, it's not that hard to learn basic English. Ps I'm terrible speller no matter what language
I enjoy your reactions. I think you have probably seen enough British humour by now to realise that at least part of the reason this humour works is because Americans (to mean people from the United States) do not have a good reputation in most of the rest of the world. The fairly isolated nature of American society in some respects and the cultural impact of having been the global hegemon for about a century means people in other countries consider poking fun at Americans to be fair game. It's rarely personal towards individuals.
Good effort.
water has foul smell in Florida
I’ve lived there. I don’t drink the tap water there. It’s nasty
Yeah to be fair i don't get eye glasses and horse back riding😊 i mean over explanatory ❤
That was scarily good impression of a UK accent by Jodie, honest. Thanks for uploading.
No it wasn’t!!!
We don't have a cast system
We just call it riding. We assume the horse.
Jodie: not a bad selection of accents but you have a mild speech impediment sometimes ending words, kind of a Katherine Hepburn sound to it...
It's not water. I'm from London and it's pronounced warter
I has English by taught Senor Lara.
Tarmac rather than asphalt over here
Roads are not paved. Paving is done with slabs.
7:57 code switching :)
Also, I find horse riding to be needlessly long in Engling. In Danish, it's just 'riding', and if it's not on a horse, you specify the animal.
America is not a homogenous society, therefore they needed more descriptive terminology for all the immigrants
You're showing your French origins... Vestibule is a French term from the 17th century for a small entrance. It's not English it's adopted American from your heavy yet hidden French ties. It's where your pants definition comes from.
React to episodes of celebrity juice
shall we was said very english
Intro confused me a little. Couldnt tell if you qas brits or american. Pretty good accent tho😅
Calling liquid fuel ‘gas’ is like calling hot cold
Short for Gasoline.
@@davidsayers9772Except the -oline bit is just the suffix at the end which is greek for olive, meaning oil, so Gasoline is a Gas-Oil which is contradictory
@@paulquaife7974 No. I don’t find anything on that. It’s probably influenced by another brand in the 19th century.
It’s a common mistake to not know the full term.
@ I think everyone knows it’s an abbreviation of gasoline you moron
accents are not Jodis strong point
I don't know about that. I've rarely heard so many different accents in such a short amount of time - including several brand new ones.
@@papaquonis🤣
For the love of god Jodi, never attempt a “British” accent again (as though there is only one in the entire place).
To be fair, I don't think she was claiming it to be the definitive British accent 😅She even said she wasn't sure, what she was trying to do.
I'm a Brummie and I couldn't do a Geordie, Scouse, West Country, Manc, Cockney accent etc..
Must be one Jodi has heard whilst watching Pride and Prejudice 😊
I’m English but love the American accent ❤️
These two are Painful. ☹️
Speaking as a UK colonial, I think sidewalk is a much better word than pavement, which simply means a paved surface. An aircraft runway is a pavement, literally speaking.
Ho ello.
language changes and evolves. I find the britsh claim to the one, true english always a bit irritating (and i'm not american).
By the same notion a ancient roman could come along and rightfully mock the British (and Americans) for how they massacre THEIR good old latin,..
like butchering "pavimentum" into "pavement".
Your explanations are just digging you a bigger hole,especially your pavement.😵💫 Al Murray has a saying we’re divided from America by the English language and a great big ocean .
Don’t call it a British accent. That doesn’t exist.
Obviously as you are USA-ians you speak USA-ian not English(neither American English, America is a continent not a country, there are more than 20 countries in America).
Not a fan of Michael McIntyre and im English.
Terrible English accent love, also best not to say British accent that is really offensive tbh, you’re trying and not pulling off an English accent England and Britain is very different ❤❤😂😂😂😂
Only offensive to crazies, best to ignore them.
English is a British accent, there's no comlplaining that changes this.
@ Scottish idiot
No need to be offended. We’re just being silly. Just like how we didn’t complain about MM’s American accent. It’s all just fun
Squash and racquetball are slightly different, to be fair. Different size racquet and ball, for starters. A squash ball is smaller and doesn’t bounce as much. You really have to smack it.
Yes!! I remember as a kid my sister was really good at squash. I’d get dragged along every weekend and eventually they made me try it. I was so bad at it, they decided to “demote” me to racquetball as the ball was much bigger and so was the racquet!! 😂
Nearly as bad as Dick van Dyke🤔
Please stop the accents. They are just offensive. For furture reference, water gas an a in it, not an o.
I don't understand why you find that offensive. This is a reaction channel and they were reacting to comedy skit. Jodi was clearly trying to have a bit of fun and interact with their followers. If we keep critiquing and judging every little thing they say or do, we will make them afraid to say anything. We always bang on about us Brits having a good sense of humour and tell other nations not to take things to heart and that we are just taking the pee or having a laugh, yet we don't seem to afford the same luxuries to other people.
Warning, easily offended snowflake above.
Don’t take our mindless bits too seriously. We never claim that our accents are the exact way people talk. We react to comedy. Never take it too seriously
@@BoringReviews Just ignore her. Love your reactions and banter. Killjoy Helen doesn’t speak for most of us! 😃
Appreciate that