Emmy Eats the UK: Part 2 - UK Sweets

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  • Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024
  • Tasting more treats from the United Kingdom in this episode of Emmy Eats the UK on Emmymade in Japan.
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @Ozzpot
    @Ozzpot 10 лет назад +54

    Let me clear this up. In the UK (well, in England at least):
    Candies = Sweets. Popsicles = Lollies (or Ice Lollies). Lollipops = Lollipops. Hard Candies = Boiled Sweets (this one might be a little old fashioned now, the term "Hard Candy" is increasingly used in the UK).
    Very occasionally you will see or hear a Lollipop described as a Lolly, but it's unusual, and let's be clear, it's always going to be on a stick. Regular candy, or candy in general, is called "sweets". What we call a "lolly" is usually a frozen treat; if you asked someone for a lolly, they would give you a "popsicle".

    • @Ozzpot
      @Ozzpot 9 лет назад +5

      ***** I did specify England. This is why you should have got independence!

    • @robynwithay3359
      @robynwithay3359 9 лет назад +2

      Ozzpot we do say just lolly in Scotland too, it's quicker.. ice lolly and lolly - same difference tbh

    • @misscraftygamer
      @misscraftygamer 9 лет назад +3

      Yeah I say lolly not Popsicle (I'm scottish)

    • @SIRlodgey
      @SIRlodgey 9 лет назад +2

      I say ice lolly for popsicle and lolly for lollipop but im from yorkshire, we're abit different

    • @johnhowe50
      @johnhowe50 9 лет назад +2

      In Wales it's lollipop and ice lolly.
      A "candy" is a "sweet" in the UK.

  • @AdcrofromTikTok
    @AdcrofromTikTok 10 лет назад +27

    In the UK we only call lollipops "lollies" too. Chocolate is called chocolate too, but what you call candies we call sweets.

  • @GrapeSodaFanatic
    @GrapeSodaFanatic 10 лет назад +8

    Sainsbury's is a supermarket here in the UK. We call lollipops, 'lollies' for short. We call candy, 'sweets'. I used to find Trebor mints waaay too strong when I was a kid, my dad used to eat them all the time. But now I love them, they are great for freshening breath! Trebor also make a gum as well. I love foam shrimps, you can also get foam bananas and sometimes you can get them together in a packet, known as 'shrimps and bananas'.

  • @Talshere88
    @Talshere88 10 лет назад +17

    A lot of the artificial colours used in the US to dye food are illegal in the UK due to proven links with fairly terrible health issues. Little things like cancer. As a result we tend to have less extreme colouring.
    I think we also didnt have red smarties for a while because people got all up in arms about the fact they were still dying them with crushed beetle shells. I think they have found a substitute dye now though.

  • @Sarah-uc2sh
    @Sarah-uc2sh 10 лет назад +21

    someone send this woman some Toxic Waste!! Such a trick to eating those things, the way she eats her sweets I think she will have a really fun time with them haha

    • @evildesu
      @evildesu 10 лет назад

      That would be great! I'm surprised no-one has sent her a pick'n'mix yet or haribo!

  • @xxtalzixx
    @xxtalzixx 10 лет назад +6

    When she produced the dip dab a wave of nostalgia hit me.

  • @Womberto
    @Womberto 10 лет назад +8

    Something I've just remembered from childhood....
    Sing - Trebor mints are a minty bit stronger,
    Stick 'em up your arse and they last a bit longer.
    ;-D

  • @ArcanineFire
    @ArcanineFire 11 лет назад +4

    Emmy: "hm, twist to open"
    "how do I open it?"
    "Oh, I see you twist it"

  • @Goldie267
    @Goldie267 10 лет назад +10

    Someone needs to send Emmy some Maynards Wine Gums, I'm sure she'd love them.

  • @productplacement39
    @productplacement39 8 лет назад +4

    I think this is the first video I've seen of you reacting negatively after tasting a food product and it's too cute :-)

  • @marniyawni
    @marniyawni 8 лет назад +5

    I know this is random but in the UK we call 'Popsicles' 'ice lollies'

  • @DrZiplock
    @DrZiplock 10 лет назад +1

    "Tree-bore mints are a minty bit stronger, stick 'em up your bum and they last a bit longer!". A refrain that was sung more than once when I was a kid at school! :-)

  • @Paper_Gangsta17
    @Paper_Gangsta17 8 лет назад +8

    In the UK, we mainly call them sweets

  • @iiblakegii5871
    @iiblakegii5871 10 лет назад +9

    C'mon, where are the
    1. Crunchies
    2. Mars Bar
    3. Aero Bar
    4. Cadbury Flakes
    ESPECIALLY FRY'S TURKISH DELIGHT!!!!

    • @Shonnie6
      @Shonnie6 10 лет назад

      She tried Aero in the previous UK Sweets vid :) Was a sheep and not a bar though, different shape but same thing xD
      But I agree, someone get this girl a Mars Bar! And Deep fry it! xD

    • @TheAngloSoviet91
      @TheAngloSoviet91 10 лет назад +1

      Shonnie Cairns Aye!

    • @daisyrichards9751
      @daisyrichards9751 10 лет назад

      Ikr honestly it's funny to see the reactions to all the food

  • @ellaproductions009
    @ellaproductions009 10 лет назад +19

    The UK calls candy 'sweets' and lollies are just Lollypops like the US

  • @emmymade
    @emmymade  11 лет назад

    I appreciate that she was thoughtful, and took the time & expense to send me something.

  • @elliewilson1521
    @elliewilson1521 10 лет назад +7

    Nice video, but in england, we dont call them lollies, we call them sweets, and if its on a stick we call it a lollipop

  • @FindingGreenOS
    @FindingGreenOS 10 лет назад +1

    The foam shrimps (and bananas) are more a thing that is held in a nostalgic way in our minds. They're so cheap they're always at school parties and fetes and things.

  • @colesskylanders7355
    @colesskylanders7355 9 лет назад +3

    With the sherbet fountain and dub dab, you can pour the sherbet into a cup and add water to make non fizzy lemonade! It's a bit artificial flavoured tho 💕🙊

  • @ferociousgumby
    @ferociousgumby 6 лет назад +1

    In Canada, we had a liquorice fountain: a little paper bag full of powdered sherbet, with a hollow liquorice stick that you used to suck up the sherbet powder. It always went up your nose.

  • @Faye8901
    @Faye8901 11 лет назад +4

    In the uk, we call candy sweets , not lollies , we call Lollie pops , lollies xx

  • @twinkleandsparkle9658
    @twinkleandsparkle9658 5 лет назад +1

    My childhood! Foam Shrimps! Love them! Foam bananas, gummy mushrooms and flumps and...now I’m missing cola cubes and beef puffs...🤣

  • @oliverlane9716
    @oliverlane9716 10 лет назад +8

    I love the attempts at the cliché accent when she tries to pronounce the names :P

  • @PureZOOKS
    @PureZOOKS 8 лет назад

    I love watching these, not for what she enjoys but for what she gets wrong. I find it interesting when you present people from another culture with your own and see all the new and interesting ways to interpret things.

  • @Gravelforknees
    @Gravelforknees 10 лет назад +34

    It's so weird to hear retardation in a polite way :/ I know it's genuine medical terminology in the US but it's uncomfortable for my British ears. Language eh.

    • @XxxLoveBug76xxX
      @XxxLoveBug76xxX 10 лет назад +16

      In England, It's an urban insult >.< Horrible word!

    • @keyaidracannon8078
      @keyaidracannon8078 10 лет назад +2

      I'm American and I didn't like the word either. ( I know this vids old)

    • @kaytlyncole1207
      @kaytlyncole1207 10 лет назад +1

      I live in canada and that term is frowned apon by many people. To me i would refer to this as mental disability.

    • @robbinsnest6163
      @robbinsnest6163 7 лет назад +4

      I'm American and I have a sister with special needs and when the words "retarded" or "retardation" are used appropriately, medically, as Emmy used it, I'm fine with it. What is not fine is using it in reference to someone being "stupid" or "dumb". That is what makes it insulting.

  • @himynameishelen
    @himynameishelen 10 лет назад +1

    In the UK candy is "Sweets" I think Australia is "Lollies" for everything, but here lollies only refers to a stick-type sweet

  • @Bruce1983
    @Bruce1983 9 лет назад +5

    You make sainsbury sound a lot posher than it is

  • @DrBrennan
    @DrBrennan 10 лет назад +2

    The look of those foam shrimps makes me think of circus peanuts.

  • @thegalaxy6160
    @thegalaxy6160 10 лет назад +4

    Hey emmy luv ure vids
    Im from england and u pronounce most of the stuff really funny
    Also sainsburys is a supermarket

  • @Chillionmars
    @Chillionmars 10 лет назад +1

    I love the way she said Sainsbury! ^_^

  • @GreySnowOfficial
    @GreySnowOfficial 10 лет назад +8

    I love foam shrimps

    • @joannewilliamsAuthor
      @joannewilliamsAuthor 10 лет назад +5

      and foam bananas!

    • @jesshowes7529
      @jesshowes7529 10 лет назад +6

      I prefer foam bananas

    • @GreySnowOfficial
      @GreySnowOfficial 10 лет назад +2

      nope shrimps all the way hahahah

    • @jtk5585
      @jtk5585 10 лет назад +2

      NerdTube My mums favourite. lol

    • @ThisIsYourOnlyWarning
      @ThisIsYourOnlyWarning 5 лет назад

      They look like compressed cotton candy. I think y’all call it fairy floss? It’s hot air spun extra fine granulated sugar into a cotton like fluff and the foam sweets y’all have look like that compressed into shapes. I wonder if that’s what they are though?

  • @himynameishelen
    @himynameishelen 10 лет назад

    The "1/4 of" sweets are all old-fashioned sweets, that you'd buy in an old-fashioned sweet shop, which is why they're pretty much pure sugar but without very specific/strong flavours

  • @morgan4224
    @morgan4224 9 лет назад +9

    Sainsbury are a supermarket chain that are pretty good

    • @floragosling84
      @floragosling84 9 лет назад +5

      Morgan Anderson Meh, I'm team tesco.

    • @morgan4224
      @morgan4224 9 лет назад

      Flora Gosling I actually have a horse called tesco

    • @floragosling84
      @floragosling84 9 лет назад

      Morgan Anderson Why did you call it that?

    • @morgan4224
      @morgan4224 9 лет назад

      Flora Gosling Because when it dies tesco will buy it and use it for burgers

    • @floragosling84
      @floragosling84 9 лет назад +1

      Morgan Anderson Jeez, that is dark! (Iceland didn't suit him then?)

  • @emmymade
    @emmymade  11 лет назад

    yes

  • @qzxerty
    @qzxerty 9 лет назад +3

    lollies is more what AUS/NZ call them. In the UK we call them sweets

  • @Mad_Madalyn
    @Mad_Madalyn 11 лет назад

    In the US, we also use the term "suckers". Spherical hard candy on a stick is a sucker, while lollipops refer to the flat ones.

  • @CaitlinMxO
    @CaitlinMxO 10 лет назад +5

    lollies in the uk are lollypops, we call candy sweets

  • @johnhowe50
    @johnhowe50 9 лет назад +1

    Treebor not Tre-bor.
    Sainsbury is a major UK supermarket, and the 1/4 probably refers to a 1/4 pound in weight.

  • @rossjames271
    @rossjames271 10 лет назад +12

    Sainsburys is a supermarket XD

  • @JonnieFarrow
    @JonnieFarrow 9 лет назад

    It's amazing how much entertainment I get out of watching someone's reactions to something that is normal and every day to me.

  • @jahladagaming
    @jahladagaming 10 лет назад +3

    Candies are sweets. Lollies are lolly pops.

  • @Thadious
    @Thadious 9 лет назад

    The 1/4 for the white mice is a 1/4 lb (1kg = 2.2lbs). Old sweet shops you would ask for sweets by the lb and they would pour them out into a set of scales with a metal bowl on top then pour them into white paper bags and twizzle them round by the corners and hand them over. It used to be very fun.
    Also with Trebor mins, Trebor gets its name from being Robert spelled backwards :)

  • @wackiemackie100
    @wackiemackie100 10 лет назад +6

    Live in the uk and never seen sour spray candy!

    • @amzlog773
      @amzlog773 10 лет назад

      I live in the uk London to be exact and we do have nice foods just some of the ones shown in this video weren't the best lol

    • @pawsycuddles7787
      @pawsycuddles7787 10 лет назад

      I've seen them in one pound shops

  • @diesel_dawg
    @diesel_dawg 5 лет назад

    "Lollies" is just another term for "Lollipops" in the UK. "Lolly" also applies to what Americans call "popsicles". We call them "ice lolly".

  • @erinwalker6114
    @erinwalker6114 9 лет назад +5

    Here in the uk the sherbert fountain us Brits normally just eat the sherbert lol xx

  • @SnowdropWood
    @SnowdropWood 11 лет назад

    In the UK, 'lollies' is only used to refer to ice lollies (popsicles). Some people will call lollipops 'lollies' but not very often, we just say lollipops. What you call candy, we call 'sweets'.

  • @miannehime107
    @miannehime107 10 лет назад +4

    i prefer smarties over m&ms. :)

    • @bodhiswayze1892
      @bodhiswayze1892 10 лет назад

      RANDOM

    • @ladym31
      @ladym31 9 лет назад

      Smarties are different in the us compared to the uk too :)

    • @bodhiswayze1892
      @bodhiswayze1892 9 лет назад

      Smarties are BRILLIANT, a lot of British kids first sweets were smarties. They used to come in a resealable tube,& the lids had letters of the alphabet on,so everyone would open them looking for certain letters!-
      Have you tried pork scratchings yet? VERY British,and you either love 'em or hate 'em x

  • @emmymade
    @emmymade  11 лет назад

    Ha! I actually likened them to circus peanuts in the original video but edited it out for length. :)

  • @nono-ld8pw
    @nono-ld8pw 10 лет назад +3

    we say prawns

    • @bouquettragedy
      @bouquettragedy 10 лет назад +3

      Prawns and shrimps are different animals^^

    • @nono-ld8pw
      @nono-ld8pw 10 лет назад +3

      no they are not

    • @kizziefield2369
      @kizziefield2369 7 лет назад

      CHEF PABLO SHITASTICO 2 shrimps and prawns are different things

  • @johnbenton4488
    @johnbenton4488 9 лет назад

    This lady is worth listening to for her candid appraisal of UK sweets. Her descriptive narrative is second to none. While I do not necessarily agree with every verdict I respect her for holding and voicing an honest opinion.

  • @em-lp7fw
    @em-lp7fw 10 лет назад +3

    Shoulda had toxic waste....

    • @beccamarch1802
      @beccamarch1802 10 лет назад

      Lol love them never swallowed one except once when it slid down my throat

    • @em-lp7fw
      @em-lp7fw 10 лет назад

      Never have 4 at once.....Paaaaiiiinnnn

    • @em-lp7fw
      @em-lp7fw 9 лет назад

      .....Challenge accepted.
      Actually no I should sell them for more money

    • @isabelkingston6331
      @isabelkingston6331 9 лет назад

      tyler derby ya they are sooo sour I had one but I spat it out ps im in irish

  • @amberharrison5187
    @amberharrison5187 10 лет назад +2

    We call candy "sweets", not lollies. Lollies are things on a stick, short for lollipop.
    I'm from the UK, and have lived in both England and Scotland. We definitely call them either "sweets" or "sweeties". Just for future reference :)

  • @cjddalton
    @cjddalton 9 лет назад

    A quarter refers to quarter of a pound. Back in the old days we all used to buy sweets by the measurement and the most common was the quarter. I remember going to a sweet shop where all the sweets were in the window and behind the counter in big jars and they'd get weighed to your order and put into paper bags. Doesn't happen so much now.
    Love your vids!

  • @simonc586
    @simonc586 10 лет назад

    I'm glad I watched this video as I haven't seen sherbet fountains in years, nice to know they still make them.

  • @DeeEll86442
    @DeeEll86442 7 лет назад +1

    Hi Emmy, I was wondering if you have ever had circus peanuts? The reason I asked is because the way you described those foam shrimp made me think of circus peanuts. In case you have never has circus peanuts they are not actually peanuts, nor do they taste like peanuts. They taste exactly like you described the foam shrimp. They are an old fashioned candy that are like super sweet compressed cotton candy, they are orange in color and shaped like a large shelled peanut. If anyone is reading this that has had both candies can you tell me if they do taste alike. I never liked the circus peanuts either because they didn't really were just way too sweet for me.

    • @hayleerunnels2385
      @hayleerunnels2385 6 лет назад

      DeeEll86442 I was thinking the same thing it probably is the same kind of texture and taste

  • @squirrelnutters07
    @squirrelnutters07 11 лет назад

    Foam shrimp sounds like Circus Peanuts! They're bright orange 'foam' peanuts that are almost like whipped taffy. Super sweet. And i love them!

  • @CoreyPOKEMONEames
    @CoreyPOKEMONEames 11 лет назад

    Sainsburys is a supermarket in the uk because thats why those quarter of a pound of white mice are a supermarket brand of sweets

  • @dalekdalekdalek
    @dalekdalekdalek 10 лет назад +1

    In the UK, we call "candy" Sweets or Sweeties. Only lollipops are called lollies x

  • @revengeguy
    @revengeguy 11 лет назад

    UK supermarkets ranked from cheapest to most expensive: Aldi/Lidl

  • @PinkCupcakes13xxx
    @PinkCupcakes13xxx 10 лет назад +1

    Oooooooh SHERBERT. we Brits sure do love our SHERBERT

  • @sliceofheaven100
    @sliceofheaven100 11 лет назад

    I always giggle when you make you're little "bleh" noise, like when eating the foam shrimps :) love you Emmy

  • @NOIRIST
    @NOIRIST 11 лет назад

    In the UK, we actually call candies "sweets" or "sweeties". We call candies ("sweeties") on a stick "lollies" or "lolly pops", and frozen ones "ice lollies." :)

  • @AimeeColeman
    @AimeeColeman 10 лет назад +2

    Hmmm, we don't really use the word candy that much in the uk, we call them sweets, but candy isn't just referring to lollipops, it means any kind of hard-boiled sweet. :3
    Love the video! :D

  • @KKAngel13
    @KKAngel13 10 лет назад +2

    My favorite England candy is curly Wurlys

  • @jonwickings5122
    @jonwickings5122 9 лет назад +1

    I am from England and when I walk to school I go past a shop and sometimes buy things, everything in this video can be found it there and I LOVE the sour spray that she found not very nice

  • @portraitsalt2143
    @portraitsalt2143 10 лет назад +1

    I'm British, I've never heard anyone call different candy's 'lollies'. We only call them lollies when they are lollipops. We call candy 'Sweets'.

    • @moylezz
      @moylezz 10 лет назад

      They call chocolate candy I really don't know why

    • @youthmsp9844
      @youthmsp9844 10 лет назад

      moylezz bc there chocolate isn't as fab as ours and tastes like shit

    • @moylezz
      @moylezz 10 лет назад

      aha yup

  • @samb4843
    @samb4843 10 лет назад +1

    In the UK Cotten candy is called candy floss

  • @thisnthat42
    @thisnthat42 11 лет назад

    We called candy sweets and lollies are either hard sweets on a stick or a short for ice lollies.
    I used to love Sherbet Fountains but I hated liquorice too. As they used to come in cardboard packets instead of plastic I used to slowly tear pieces of the packet away so I could eat the sherbet using my tongue (not polite but it works) and gave the liquorice stick to my sister.

  • @ultjeja
    @ultjeja 12 лет назад

    In Quebec, we call the peppermints candies "Bonbons de grand-mère" which means Grandma's candies :P

  • @callumsmith3962
    @callumsmith3962 8 лет назад

    thankyou,I enjoyed your tasting of our british sweets.most americans just say "dairy milks crap".or"hersheys is better". i like how you have an actual opinion! :)

  • @happysmily100
    @happysmily100 11 лет назад

    The diffrence is in the usa, they put things in it to keep it safe in the hot weather but here in the UK they don't cause its mostly colder, so there is a diffrence in the taste, I know because I have aunties in australia and when they come here they want chocolate because of the diffrence in taste, hope this helped :)

  • @SuperBatJam
    @SuperBatJam 11 лет назад

    Rhubarb and custards are delicious! the rhubarb bit is sweet but sharp and the custard is creamy and smooth. So nice together :D

  • @pamplemoussenoir
    @pamplemoussenoir 11 лет назад

    great to see you enjoying our sweeties

  • @Whimswirl
    @Whimswirl 11 лет назад

    In the UK we call candies 'sweets' and candy bars as chocolate bar pronounced as 'joclet' and lollipops as lollipops or lollies :)

  • @ufewl
    @ufewl 9 лет назад

    Sainsbury is a big supermarket chain, as are Tesco and Asda, Sainsburys is considered a a bit posher than those, Waitrose is considered the poshest chain, we also have Aldi and Lidl which are considered the cheapest, but they also considered quite good quality, they are German companies though.

    • @joyo9323
      @joyo9323 9 лет назад

      the poshest is booths is a rare one but the have one in knutsford and i shop there sometimes and i often see celebs in there normally soap stars but some real stars lol

  • @AttackOfTheBees
    @AttackOfTheBees 11 лет назад

    Smarties are originally from England (Rowntree company), since 1882. Nestle now owns it.

  • @Natlatify
    @Natlatify 11 лет назад

    Im from the UK, and I don't call candy lollies, I call lollipops lollies and candy is mostly called "sweets" where I'm from just outside of London.
    "I'm going to go get some sweets from the shop" :)

  • @HeyLaserLips
    @HeyLaserLips 11 лет назад

    The white mice will be a 1/4lb, a throw-back to when sweetshops sold them in that weight in paper bags. :)

  • @H31MU7
    @H31MU7 11 лет назад

    The ones I used to get back in 2004/05 from Aldi were in those party packs. They came in a gold bag like the goldbarren but they were tiny little brown and crimson gummi 'sticks' covered in sugar. I just can't remember the name of them, and a google image search brings up every Haribo product except that one! They might still be in the more southern states like NSW or vic, though

  • @CrimsonNorway
    @CrimsonNorway 11 лет назад

    In the UK we call candies sweets or sweeties (if you're younger). We call lollipops lollipops or lollies (and popsicles and ice lollies). :P
    I believe Aussies and Kiwis call candies lollies ;D

  • @xXSmores4LifeXxMSP4Lyfe
    @xXSmores4LifeXxMSP4Lyfe 10 лет назад

    and the Trebour is actully a breath freshener

  • @cybilesister
    @cybilesister 10 лет назад

    Also if you have just tried black liqourice its the most icky one you can get more palatable flavours like strawberry apple coke melon ect ....

  • @TheFlyingGerbil
    @TheFlyingGerbil 3 года назад

    You often get the foam shrimps with foam bananas. Not sure who decided bananas and shrimp go together, very odd when you think about things you don’t question when you grow up with them!

  • @kendon81
    @kendon81 10 лет назад +1

    regarding the Smarties and their natural colour, in the 90's there was a concern about artificial colours causing behavioral problems in children so manufactures switched to natural colours.

  • @lostinthemoment19
    @lostinthemoment19 11 лет назад

    Australians say lollies for all kinds of candy, in the UK we say sweets and lollies are like lolly pops or (ice) lollies, think you call them ice pops.

  • @TheTormentedshadow
    @TheTormentedshadow 11 лет назад

    No in the uk we generally call all candy sweets, but usually differentiate between types of sweets more. Like in america you would perhaps sometimes call chocolate candy were as we would say chocolate. The only thing we would call lollies are lolly pops. And the only thing we would call candy is something made of only sugar like pure boiled sugar for candy apples or pure spun sugar for candy floss. So we are more picky with what we call things ha ha.

  • @jinga1023
    @jinga1023 10 лет назад

    Sainsbury's is one of the UK's biggest supermarkets. It's like wal-mart

  • @sally_stitches4273
    @sally_stitches4273 10 лет назад

    The foam shrimp, kinda seems like the texture are sorta like those foam peanuts. They are weird but I love it.

  • @Ben-eu8sc
    @Ben-eu8sc 8 лет назад +1

    Sainsbury's is a supermarket in the U.K

  • @JinxieMinx
    @JinxieMinx 12 лет назад

    Lolly is lollipop, but there is a lollipop in there hence the name. We tend to call candy 'sweets'. I've never heard people refer to candy in general as 'Lollies'. -Jo, London.

  • @SuperSweetlove123
    @SuperSweetlove123 10 лет назад

    The uk we only have plain, crispy and peanut m&ms but if you go to Londons m&m world you get awesome colours

  • @emmymade
    @emmymade  12 лет назад

    How interesting, I've never actually met someone with PKU - thanks for sharing :).

  • @jennicarter6786
    @jennicarter6786 10 лет назад

    In England..and the UK ..we just call them sweets, we use lolly pops as well but they are used for only the lollies. (:

  • @stephcollins5601
    @stephcollins5601 10 лет назад

    the trebor extra strong mints are meant to be sucked, like after dinner or on a long car ride, they are so strong and last forever!! :D

  • @MsSarahEllis98
    @MsSarahEllis98 10 лет назад

    In the uk we call them 'sweets' and 'lollipops' but I know my Aussie family call all candy 'lollies'. :)

  • @sugarwolf2077
    @sugarwolf2077 10 лет назад

    when she took out the mini smarties, I assumed they'd be like the little fruit flavored tablets we have here in the US x'D not like mini M&Ms, lol. the more you know~

  • @tmatrix1
    @tmatrix1 5 лет назад +1

    I like the way you said Sainsbury... like an Englishman )

  • @beaminion9172
    @beaminion9172 10 лет назад +1

    sainsbury's is a shop, for extra info.

  • @morganmurray6204
    @morganmurray6204 9 лет назад

    The shrimps, are kind of like Circus Peanuts that my father eats. Theyre orange, peanut shaped, sweet and the same texture :)

  • @MonkeyTurtle100
    @MonkeyTurtle100 11 лет назад

    In the uk, they all just come under the category of sweets, and then we have things like, gummy and lolly and sour subcategories beneath them