AMERICAN Guesses BRITISH Words and Brands (Funny!)

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024
  • How do you think Shelby did in this quiz? Don't forget to check out my Patreon at www.patreon.com/girlgonelondon for exclusive weekly videos!
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Комментарии • 896

  • @grantmason740
    @grantmason740 3 года назад +89

    Shelby gets maximum points for having the courage to appear on RUclips, in front of the world. Something I could never do. Well done!

    • @AutoAlligator
      @AutoAlligator 3 года назад +4

      Agreed

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  3 года назад +9

      Definitely agreed, Grant! I have very supportive friends and I don't forget that!

    • @flumpah
      @flumpah 3 года назад +6

      And Shelby has discerning taste also, by liking The IT crowd (have you tried turning it on and off again ?).

    • @dave_h_8742
      @dave_h_8742 3 года назад +2

      Shelby did well but you were struggling lol blaming guy for the window, classic transference. 😉
      A Vest is what bruce Willis keeps ending up in in the Die hard films. 😀

    • @garypotter1461
      @garypotter1461 3 года назад +2

      Absolutely. She did pretty well to be fair. Well thought out answers. Good video

  • @keithevans9544
    @keithevans9544 3 года назад +107

    For me Gilet is a newish affectation in my younger days it was a "body warmer"

    • @dannywlm63
      @dannywlm63 3 года назад +4

      Correct I had to ask my kids what the hell it was

    • @Big-Si2253
      @Big-Si2253 2 года назад +10

      @@dannywlm63 French word.

    • @chrissanders1027
      @chrissanders1027 2 года назад +1

      I purchased a gilet for cycling in 1989 and it was sold as a gilet

    • @simonrook5743
      @simonrook5743 2 года назад

      Gillet is am old French word for a sleeveless jacket, I know it was in use in the 17 and 18 hundreds.

    • @marklegg79
      @marklegg79 2 года назад +1

      "Hey kid, did you jump ship?!"

  • @markpstapley
    @markpstapley 3 года назад +63

    Debenhams in an ex-store, it has ceased to be. Bereft of life, it rests in peace.

    • @Brakdayton
      @Brakdayton 3 года назад +3

      Pushing up daisies…

    • @lu_shulmu
      @lu_shulmu 3 года назад +1

      Alas, it is pining for the fjords.

    • @thespiderspeed
      @thespiderspeed 3 года назад

      Debenhams was bought out by the person who owns BooHoo. It went online only.

    • @miaschu8175
      @miaschu8175 3 года назад +1

      @thespiderspeed - It's now a zombie. I'd advocate running away from those things

    • @Girl-101
      @Girl-101 3 года назад

      I loved Debenhams

  • @martynadams2011
    @martynadams2011 3 года назад +128

    Another vote for ‘never heard of Bills’.

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  3 года назад +4

      Interesting! I've seen them in London and Cambridge, so maybe a SE thing?

    • @HyperDaveUK
      @HyperDaveUK 3 года назад +3

      @@GirlGoneLondonofficial They seems to be a branch in most proper cities in the UK. (Apart from Newcastle)

    • @martynadams2011
      @martynadams2011 3 года назад +8

      Having checked Google they appear to be mainly in shopping “malls” and such. No wonder I’ve never heard of them.

    • @andrewbaker7839
      @andrewbaker7839 3 года назад +3

      @@HyperDaveUK Welwyn Garden CIty has a "Bills" and technically speaking, we're not a city.
      They're OK. Reliable, but in a slightly over-priced and meh sort-of-way.
      I have "independents" nearby which do better food, for the same or less money. I prefer those.

    • @sianchatfield3052
      @sianchatfield3052 3 года назад +4

      A vest is a wife beater shirt. You wear them under your clothes in the winter as an extra layer to keep warm

  • @TrevorandThea
    @TrevorandThea 3 года назад +44

    In Die Hard, John McLean spends most of the film wearing a vest… a really, really grubby one! Kippie eye aye, Mother… Oh, and a nice red gilet is what Michael J Fox wears in Back To The Future (it’s from the French word for “waistcoat” which is what we call a formal “vest”, usually worn as part of a three piece suit - confused? You soon will be!).

    • @sgtspanky0
      @sgtspanky0 3 года назад +2

      I believe it's commonly called a "wife beater" in parts of the US

    • @nicholasjones7312
      @nicholasjones7312 3 года назад +4

      Gilet is just the modern name for 1970’s body warmers.

    • @crose7412
      @crose7412 3 года назад

      Trevor_R Although waistcoat is correctly pronounced "wess cut"!

    • @jennetscarborough5145
      @jennetscarborough5145 3 года назад +5

      @@sgtspanky0 whereas "wife beater" in the UK typically refers to Stella Artois beer.

    • @elemar5
      @elemar5 2 года назад

      @@jennetscarborough5145 Not in my world. Cheap cider is called 'a bottle of bate the wife'.

  • @paulclarke5933
    @paulclarke5933 2 года назад +1

    A vest is worn by men and women, they come with or without sleeves to keep warm during winter, with sleeves is a thermal vest to keep warmer than a normal vest, A Gilet is commonly known as a body warmer.

  • @philipmason9537
    @philipmason9537 3 года назад +49

    A Vest in the U.K. is usually associated with menswear and is also known as a SINGLET.
    The U.K. vest is worn under the shirt and a Waistcoat is worn over the shirt and under the suit jacket as part of a three piece suit. In the U.K. men’s trousers can be held up with BRACES but in N.America they’re called Suspenders which has a VERY different meaning in the U.K., as different a meaning as Fanny has !!

    • @TrevorandThea
      @TrevorandThea 3 года назад +10

      Yes, you seriously do not want to suggest your husband wears suspenders… unless you’re all getting dressed up to go out to the Rocky Horror Show! ;)

    • @grahvis
      @grahvis 3 года назад +4

      @@TrevorandThea .
      Men used to wear suspenders to hold their socks up, they went round the leg just below the knee.

    • @philipmason9537
      @philipmason9537 3 года назад

      @@TrevorandThea I’m a guy so I don’t have a husband, thankfully.

    • @TrevorandThea
      @TrevorandThea 3 года назад

      @@philipmason9537 Lol, I was thinking the advice was more for Kalyn ! ;) :D

    • @TrevorandThea
      @TrevorandThea 3 года назад +1

      @@grahvis indeed, gone the way of spats, macassar and snuff boxes as essential items in a man’s wardrobe!

  • @timglennon6814
    @timglennon6814 3 года назад +18

    Oh 10/10 for your friend putting herself forward to do the quiz.

  • @andibing
    @andibing 3 года назад +32

    B&Q was originally Block & Quayle - the surnames of the founders.

    • @richardwani2803
      @richardwani2803 3 года назад +2

      Fun fact I met Richard block he used to come into the store in Chesterfield

    • @tonyollier7098
      @tonyollier7098 7 месяцев назад

      How have I lived to almost 70 without knowing that!

  • @W417on
    @W417on 3 года назад +16

    You just called them crisps by default, rather chips, you're almost one of us 😅

  • @amandafischer184
    @amandafischer184 3 года назад +6

    Never used an airing cupboard to dry clothes. They were used for clothes that were fresh off of the drying line (berore the days of tumble dryers), The washing was neatly folded on the multiple shelves, then left for a couple of days, the heat from the water boiler sorftened up the washing.

    • @roberttaylor5997
      @roberttaylor5997 2 года назад +1

      The airing cupboard gets the clothes completely dry, but as Amanda points out they're already as dry as they'll get on the clothesline before they go in there.

  • @torros1839
    @torros1839 3 года назад +47

    Never heard of Bills either. A vest was something you wore when you were a kid it was made of cotton and looked liked something you woukd see basketball players wearing but usually white. The number of points awarded should be related to the football team Shelby supports. Getting pissed for the first time and being pushed around in a trolley I feel is something everyone has done

    • @England91
      @England91 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, I haven't heard of Bill's and a vest is a wife beater for Americans

    • @Mugtree
      @Mugtree 3 года назад

      We have a Bill’s here in Gloucester 👍. Yeap a vest can be long sleeved or no sleeve (more common). Worn in winter to keep warm. Can be thermal too to help keep you warm

    • @wessexdruid5290
      @wessexdruid5290 3 года назад +2

      My first wife (a Magistrate's Clerk) heard a case in Bath, where a tramp was charged with criminal damage and being drunk in charge of a shopping trolley.
      Apparently, it was his dog's birthday, so they both went out for a drink or three... The dog couldn't stand afterwards, so he loaded it into a Sainsbury's trolley which had been dumped outside the pub, at the top of a hill. Halfway down, he fell over and lost control of the trolley (complete with dog). It went through one of Sainsbury's front windows, at the bottom of the hill.

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 2 года назад +1

      Bills is a limited chain in the south of Englandshire, roughly from Bristol to London

    • @michaelrue1400
      @michaelrue1400 Год назад

      I've always called it a tank top, not a wife beater, which sounds like someone who belongs in jail.

  • @stevefrost64
    @stevefrost64 3 года назад +96

    Anyone else in the UK never heard of Bills, or just me?

    • @ruthgrimley7653
      @ruthgrimley7653 3 года назад +9

      Nope, never heard of it

    • @grapeman63
      @grapeman63 3 года назад +4

      Me neither.

    • @user-mq4kz7qd8x
      @user-mq4kz7qd8x 3 года назад +4

      Not me

    • @TrevorandThea
      @TrevorandThea 3 года назад +6

      Love Bill’s… very yummy food! Maybe it’s a SE England thing rather than other parts of the country?

    • @grapeman63
      @grapeman63 3 года назад +6

      @@TrevorandThea I'm in Hampshire and I've never heard of them.

  • @Lentonist
    @Lentonist 3 года назад +24

    Shelby did great! Bill's must be a regional chain as I have never heard of it (from the midlands). I still call a gillet by the far more practical and less pretentious name - body warmer.

    • @mystified1429
      @mystified1429 2 года назад

      Bill's started in Lewes, East Sussex. The Banoffee pie was created @ the Hungry Monk restaurant, Jevington, East Sussex.

  • @miaschu8175
    @miaschu8175 3 года назад +9

    A gilet is a body warmer.
    A vest is an undergarment. They're usually sleeveless.

    • @DuartJansen
      @DuartJansen 8 месяцев назад

      It's basically what the Americans call a tanktop... But mostly plain colored and worn underneath a regular shirt.

    • @Lazmanarus
      @Lazmanarus 5 месяцев назад

      @@DuartJansen Not quite, that would be a singlet - an undervest.
      A gilet is a quilted (normally) sleeveless bodywarmer.

    • @lindapankhurst4513
      @lindapankhurst4513 2 месяца назад

      The word singlet comes to mind…..!

  • @andrewbaker7839
    @andrewbaker7839 3 года назад +36

    Shelby deserves an extra point. We have (had) "Trolleybuses" - these are like trams, except they don't run on rails, but do get their power from overhead cables. The last one ran in the early 1970s, but they were considering them again in Leeds.

    • @JenMaxon
      @JenMaxon 3 года назад +5

      Trolley means something built on wheels used for transporting things

    • @alanelesstravelled8218
      @alanelesstravelled8218 3 года назад +4

      @@JenMaxon "Off your trolley" means something completely different.

    • @JenMaxon
      @JenMaxon 3 года назад +1

      @@alanelesstravelled8218 It means you have lost contact with your trolley - it means you're potty. But not sure how that would contradict my definition.

    • @davidfaraday7963
      @davidfaraday7963 3 года назад

      When first introduced trolleybuses were known as "trackless trams". I was interested to note when I visited San Francisco that they have trolleybuses there, but they are single-deckers unlike the British trolleybuses which were, with rare exceptions, double-deckers.

    • @wessexdruid5290
      @wessexdruid5290 3 года назад +1

      @@JenMaxon It can also mean a wheel attached to a pole - for collecting electrical current. But the first meaning is a wheeled frame for carrying heavy objects, e.g. luggage, at railways stations.

  • @miketrevarrow9795
    @miketrevarrow9795 3 года назад +2

    Americans always seem to get confused about what is a VEST, Well a VEST in BRITAIN is a thin under shirt without any arms, not a tee- shirt, worn under a work or dress shirt (it's more like a running singlet) which does help keep you warm, years ago there use to be string vests, a VEST with holes in usually diamond shaped, which if you can believe it, did surprisingly helped keep you warm, my father wore them all the time, and always in white.

  • @teresaqureshi6342
    @teresaqureshi6342 3 года назад +19

    Gilet also known as a body warmer. Trolley also common name for a bag on wheels. A vest is an undergarment

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  3 года назад +1

      Ah ha, I forgot about a trolley being a bag on wheels too. We definitely don't use those in the US as much so that would stump someone!

    • @Corialtavi
      @Corialtavi 3 года назад +5

      I've never heard of a Gilet, I'd call it a body warmer where I live but I'm not a Posh southerner. If someone offered me a Gilet I'd think they were giving me a disposable razor ....

    • @CrazyInWeston
      @CrazyInWeston 3 года назад +6

      @@Corialtavi I live in the south, I've never heard of "gilet" either. Everyone I know calls it a body warmer.

    • @davidfaraday7963
      @davidfaraday7963 3 года назад +6

      @@CrazyInWeston Likewise. Despite living in southern UK for my entire life I'd never heard of a gilet either. To me those things are "body warmers".

    • @MrRandy269
      @MrRandy269 3 года назад +3

      Gilet is french, only know posh hunting types use that term... its a body warmer

  • @TheHookahSmokingCaterpillar
    @TheHookahSmokingCaterpillar 2 года назад +4

    B&Q stands for 'Block & Quayle' the founders of the chain in the late sixties.
    Also, Lays and Walkers are part of the same company.

  • @GinervaWeasleyPotter
    @GinervaWeasleyPotter 3 года назад +7

    I love this guest! She seems like a mix of all my closest friends, just American 😂

  • @weedle30
    @weedle30 3 года назад +35

    “A vest” - something your mum insists that you should wear under your clothes, as it “will keep you warm…it’s cold outside…” your response (at the age below 30 😉) “me….. wear A VEST.??!!!??? whaaaat? Huh! “ *shrug shoulders and look at parent as if she had just stepped in the house from the 1900’s* * gets cold* …. Travel forward in time to the age of 30+ “a vest? Of course! I wear a long sleeved thermal one under my clothes, it’s bloody cold outside!” So yes - vests…. A marvellous item of clothing - short or long sleeved, - keeps the upper body warm as toast in the winter….

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  3 года назад +1

      Haha, love this insight into vests, Helen, thanks!

    • @crose7412
      @crose7412 3 года назад +2

      @@jillhobson6128 A vest surely is always sleeveless and occasionally a string vest i.e. with holes.

    • @paulthomas8262
      @paulthomas8262 3 года назад

      @@jillhobson6128 vests are usually underclothes that is a tank top.
      Basically the point of a vest is so you shirt won't get as unclean from use, and to keep you warm.
      A lot of time people just used T-shirts for is but originaly it was vest and a v neck mean it won't be visible at the collar of the shirt.

    • @richardgraham4512
      @richardgraham4512 3 года назад +1

      @@GirlGoneLondonofficial An iconic variant of the vest in the UK was the "string vest". Alas, like the bowler hat (US: derby), braces (US: suspenders) and the waistcoat (US: vest), a cornerstone of the British male wardrobe has now mostly passed into obsolescence.
      A terrible blow for professional northerners and unreconstructed males, who wore and loved the revealing undergarment for decades. Worn by miners and builders, the string vest, like the flat cap and donkey jacket, became a garment associated with the working class. In a country that was fluent in the subtlest of class indicators, the vest became easy sartorial shorthand.
      We Brits no longer want to wear the vest immortalised by Rab C Nesbitt and Andy Capp. Men (more likely wives and girlfriends) now associate string vests with old men and pot-bellied plumbers. Metrosexual chaps apparently prefer solid cotton singlets or tee-shirts; many even eschewing vests altogether and going commando underneath their all-organic Fairtrade blouses...

    • @paulthomas8262
      @paulthomas8262 3 года назад

      @@richardgraham4512 The string vest is alive and well in Jamaica but a much more colourful variety.

  • @GenialHarryGrout
    @GenialHarryGrout 3 года назад +6

    A vest, either sleeveless, short sleeved or long sleeved is used mainly to keep you warm. In cold climates wearing layers of clothes is better than wearing the thickest garment you possess.

  • @phuckerby
    @phuckerby 3 года назад +18

    "Bills" must be very new or regional, because I have lived in the Midlands for 70 years and never heard of it. 😎

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 2 года назад

      Yep , In the south of Englandshire only.

    • @MikeyFilm85
      @MikeyFilm85 2 года назад +3

      @@Thurgosh_OG I live in the south of Englandshire and I've never seen one either; or noticed one atleast.

    • @callum9693
      @callum9693 2 года назад

      circa 2001 I think

  • @markpstapley
    @markpstapley 3 года назад +5

    Gilet, from the French. Vest from vestment from clergy. Vests can be sleeved, but are usually sleeveless, and come in many types like the sailor style string vest, through to more conventional ones. They are made for both men and women, but are rarely unisex. They are usually used for layering to keep you warm, but some also wick away perspiration.

    • @chrisy8989
      @chrisy8989 3 года назад

      I'd call a Gilet a body warmer.

  • @raymonde4272
    @raymonde4272 3 года назад +17

    Congratulations to Shelby, she did very well, every half point matters.

  • @BennyJlakid
    @BennyJlakid 3 года назад +6

    I seem to becoming obsessed with American reacting to Britain video. They can be irritating but you are not. Well done and good job.😂 I might even watch another one now.

  • @andysutcliffe3915
    @andysutcliffe3915 3 года назад +5

    Allotments were a wartime thing, growing stuff to eat was encouraged, but most people didn’t have the space, so allotments were created in town public land.

    • @andrewbaker7839
      @andrewbaker7839 3 года назад

      They were typically sized to be able to provide a major part of the vegetables for an average family. Some were more realistic than others in this regard.
      I live in Welwyn Garden City, famed for it's green spaces and public gardens. A lot of these were dug up to create allotments during WW2.

    • @philcoogan7369
      @philcoogan7369 3 года назад

      There is great demand for allotments if you want one in a great many places you will have to go on a waiting list.

    • @ianprince1698
      @ianprince1698 3 года назад

      my dad loved his allotment grew fruit and veg on it

    • @jamesmason3348
      @jamesmason3348 3 года назад +1

      Allotments as we know them today, started taking shape in 1908 with the Small Holdings and Allotments Act. They we originally set up to help the poor grow their own food and later to help people returning from war.

  • @paulrobson7887
    @paulrobson7887 3 года назад +31

    A vest in the UK is technically underwear. Like a tight fitting, sleeveless T-shirt, generally worn by men under a shirt or in the Summer when it’s hot. Australians use the horrible term ‘wife beater’ to refer to it.

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  3 года назад +3

      Sadly the Americans also use wife beater to refer to it, now that I have read the comments section - I always thought a vest was thicker than that, but it makes sense now!

    • @itsmephil2255
      @itsmephil2255 3 года назад +4

      Another word for a gilet is a body warmer

    • @philcoogan7369
      @philcoogan7369 3 года назад +1

      Gilet is the French for body warmer

    • @morganetches3749
      @morganetches3749 3 года назад

      @@philcoogan7369 No it ain't. Gilet is the french for vest or waistcoat

    • @chrislawley6801
      @chrislawley6801 3 года назад +1

      @@itsmephil2255 Thanks as being born in UK from up t'north I had no idea what a gilet is 😀

  • @JenMaxon
    @JenMaxon 3 года назад +4

    Vest is a piece of underwear - usually lightweight, can be like a t-shirt, doesn't need to have sleeves - and, yes, is used to keep warm in the winter.

  • @duckwhistle
    @duckwhistle 3 года назад +2

    A vest is a just sleeveless garment, usually worn under your shirt or t-shirt, as an extra layer but also worn on its own in hot weather. For women they can refer to a garment specifically designed as an outer layer, but for men it's normally either sports wear or underwear.
    Gilet is a French word for what we call a body warmer, that has been popularised in the UK a few years ago by the French Gilets protesters, also referred to as the yellow vests! Because we also call a high visibility sleeveless garment as a vest.

  • @mistycrom
    @mistycrom 3 года назад +14

    Vests are sleeveless. I think the US equivalent'd be tank top. Though a tank top in the UK is what you'd maybe call a sleeveless sweater. It's all very confusing.

    • @Sylvander1911
      @Sylvander1911 6 дней назад

      Sometimes referred to in the States, derogatorily, as "a wife beater"

  • @garry-t5056
    @garry-t5056 3 года назад +3

    Don't know why the RUclips algorithm popped your video into my feed Kalyn but it was fun to watch you testing Shelby and I think she did great. I'm certain I would know less about US brands and stores but it's over twenty years since I last visited America. I will watch a few more of your videos now.

  • @lesley585
    @lesley585 3 года назад +1

    Vests in the UK are long or short sleeved. Can also be sleeveless. They are classed as underwear and an extra layer worn for added warmth when required. They can be worn by men and women. The term vest has in modern times been taken to refer to sleeveless t shirts too. The US vest is what we refer to as a waistcoat. A gilet is also a type of waiscoat designed for warmth.

  • @robertyoung5298
    @robertyoung5298 3 года назад +2

    An allotment is traditionally measured in rods (perches or poles), an old measurement dating back to Anglo-Saxon times. 10 poles is the accepted size of an allotment, the equivalent of 250 square metres or about the size of a doubles tennis court.

  • @lawrencegt2229
    @lawrencegt2229 3 года назад +3

    Technically, in the UK the term 'gilet' would only be applied to an external, sleeveless garment such as a puffy bodywarmer or the sleeveless fluorescent top worn by cyclists. The sleeveless garment that goes over a shirt and under the coat of a suit we call a waistcoat, or 'weskit', depending on which part of the country you come from (note, suits do not have 'jackets'; a suit has a coat and to protect it you wear an overcoat (which goes... yeah). A sleeveless woollen jumper is a 'slipover', or more colloquially a 'tank top'.

  • @carlhartwell7978
    @carlhartwell7978 3 года назад +5

    Lloyds is not only a bank, but also a pharmacy and a pub chain (which is just a brand of the massive JD Wetherspoons pub company which owns several other individual pub brands). All three _Lloyds_ are totally unrelated other than having the same name.
    I should say technically the Lloyds pubs are officially called _Lloyds No 1 bar,_ but I feel everyone just call's them Lloyds.

    • @rachelpenny5165
      @rachelpenny5165 3 года назад +1

      Lloyd's pharmacy group also do a home health care service where they deliver my injections every 4 weeks, and take back a full sharps bin when needed. The injections I get delivered is a disease modifying treatment for multiple sclerosis.

    • @carlhartwell7978
      @carlhartwell7978 3 года назад

      @@rachelpenny5165 That's awesome.

  • @AutoReport1
    @AutoReport1 5 месяцев назад

    Allotments are or were linked to your residence. At one time there was a trend for garden space to be separated from housing plots in one area. Every house would have an allotment of garden space. Part of the reasoning was that your yard attached to the house might be small, shaded and not have good soil, but people needed garden space in order to get fresh vegetables.

  • @ragereaver8576
    @ragereaver8576 3 года назад +10

    B&Q actually stands for Block and Quayle. It's mentioned in their company history page.

    • @Zooumberg
      @Zooumberg 3 года назад

      It's owned by the Kingfisher Group now. A huge group that owns loads of different companies.

    • @eddhardy1054
      @eddhardy1054 3 года назад +1

      Yep and George Lucas based The Empire in Star Wars on Kingfisher.

  • @karenbirch6222
    @karenbirch6222 3 года назад +7

    In Yorkshire a vest is a thin t-shirt without sleeves usually worn under clothes. I used to watch the American show Cops and we'd always spot the criminals because they'd be the ones wearing just vests and shorts in the middle of the night - bit too cold for that here.

  • @sharonbennett5675
    @sharonbennett5675 3 года назад

    A vest to me are mainly worn by kids. Under their clothes. Babies have vests with poppers for easy change of nappies. Kiddies were vests tucked into knickers (girls) or underpants (boys). I worn these when I was little (nearly 50). However when I had little ones , yes my babies worn a vest but my little kids did not. Houses are now central heated so the extra warmth/ layer is not needed. You will find adult vests both sleeveless, shirt and long sleeved. Worn for outdoor activities or by the older generation who need an extra layer to keep warm. 😀

  • @martifingers
    @martifingers 3 года назад +5

    Very entertaining. You might be interested to know that up until the late 60s in Northern Ireland we had electric buses that were known as "trolley buses".

  • @brianwhittington5086
    @brianwhittington5086 3 года назад +1

    A vest in the UK is a sleeveless cotton undergarment, with a low round neck. Traditionally white, but darker colours for work too. You can also get them in an open mesh style, called a String Vest, which are supposed to keep you warmer by trapping warm air in the mesh. Think Bruce Willis in the Die Hard film for an example, and look up British comedy show, Rab C Nesbitt for the string vest type.

  • @andysutcliffe3915
    @andysutcliffe3915 3 года назад +3

    Customer service is very different in the UK. Because they don’t require tips to live, they are unobtrusive, and only try to interact when you need them.

  • @euanthomas3928
    @euanthomas3928 3 года назад +6

    Gilet is a recent import from French and is the french word for a type of sleeveless jacket, e.g. "gilet de sauvetage" - lifevest

  • @captelegance
    @captelegance 2 года назад

    A vest is a sleeveless t shirt that goes under your normal clothing to help keep you warm. I don't wear them.
    The long armed under shirts are typically known as thermals. You go outside and it's -3 Celsius, you want to keep warm but not be wearing a big heavy coat. You put your thermal shirt on under your normal shirt

  • @hughtube5154
    @hughtube5154 Месяц назад

    In UK supermarkets, you have a basket (handheld), a trolley (wiry structure on wheels for larger shopping ), but in an Aldi or Lidl there's a plastic basket on wheels which you drag/push around by the large collapsable handle that (I think) would be called a cart.

  • @mikebaylie
    @mikebaylie 2 года назад +1

    A "brolly" = " umbrella" also its known as a "gamp:" I love the way you throw questions to your Best friend.

  • @itsmephil2255
    @itsmephil2255 3 года назад +1

    Well done Shelby 👍
    You were brave enough to appear on the channel and some of your guesses were hilarious
    Love how Kayln is like totally slipping back into American mode more and more 🇬🇧🇺🇸

  • @henrycopeland7316
    @henrycopeland7316 3 года назад

    A vest, also known as a singlet, is usually worn on the top half of the body next to the skin for males to keep worn. Usually sleeveless and can be thermal like fleece material or thin cotton. Designed originally to absorb sweat and keep you warm and save outer garments from washing so much.

  • @yorkshirehousewife784
    @yorkshirehousewife784 3 года назад

    A vest is an undershirt (can be both sleeveless and with sleeves, often thermal, silk or jersey cotton), Women generally call them camisoles and they come in many different fabrics including: silk, satin, jersey cotton, thermal fleece, these are predominantly a cold weather layer, but in summer we tend to wear the vest under a blouse or shirt or indeed on its own as a strappy top.
    Lloyds is a bank and also a private leisure facility/ sports club.
    A Gilet is essentially a body- warmer that can be worn under a coat in winter as a layer or can be worn over a top or jumper in Autumn/Spring.

  • @gingerbaker4390
    @gingerbaker4390 3 года назад

    A vest is a waistcoat in England. A vest in America is a undershirt.
    A Gillet in the UK is a padded jacket sometimes without sleeves. The American version is called a bodywarmer. Not needed in Flowerland (Florida)..

  • @martinHearndrums
    @martinHearndrums 2 года назад

    An allotment is of course mainly used for growing your own produce and although in many cases (especially in areas where people live in high rise flats) they are rented from the council, you can however have your own allotment in your garden as we did when I was a kid (radishes were my thing) so really it's more of a generic term now for vegetable patch.

  • @denisehill7769
    @denisehill7769 2 года назад +2

    My husband, a huge Bob Dylan fan, finds it hilarious that Bob's onstage outfit was described as "a leather vest and pants". To us this is underwear and normally made of soft cotton :)

  • @maxplanck9055
    @maxplanck9055 3 года назад +3

    I can see why kalyn is married,she seems like a nice fun woman,interesting to see her in America after many years, much love Kalyn❤️❤️🇬🇧

  • @Matahalii
    @Matahalii 7 месяцев назад

    A trolley in Germany would be the "Shopping bag on 2 wheels" that older people often use or any single- or multi-axle contraption to help moving big or heavy items but is pushed/pulled by hand or other motor vehicle.
    A vest we would call "Weste" and it can be anything that you wear on the upper half of your body, has no steeves and has buttons (maybe a zip) on the front. It can be a suit vest under the suit jacket, a "jacket without arms" as the outermost clothing or anything that fits the description.

  • @roymiller5531
    @roymiller5531 3 года назад +3

    Good fun guys, well done Shelby. I find it interesting the names for items our forefathers had that now separates our common starting language. Keep up the good work Caitlin x

  • @annaburch3200
    @annaburch3200 3 года назад +2

    I live near Seattle. We had a "pea patch" which would be the same as an allotment that we just paid a fee for. It happened to be at our church. There are pea patches in downtown Seattle on top of parking garages and empty land.

  • @morganetches3749
    @morganetches3749 3 года назад +2

    A vest is a sleeveless undershirt (although I think sometimes they have sleeves - usually not).
    What you call a vest, we call a waistcoat.

  • @AmericansMarryCousins
    @AmericansMarryCousins Год назад

    Vest is a weird one as it actually has multiple uses here in UK.
    1. It can mean the sleeveless ''undershirt' vest, like an American wife beater vest, but ours are tighter fitting and usually white and cotton and worn under a shirt or t shirt for added warmth. Serves same purpose as undershirt
    2.A rugby vest is long sleeve and won on the outer layer when playing rugby, also known as rugby shirt.
    3. Jumper vests/bodywarmer style things.
    4. Sports training vest, also known as a bib.

  • @ynysvon
    @ynysvon 2 года назад

    A vest is a sleeveless T shirt and is usually worn as an undershirt for extra warmth in the winter. Or as an alternative to a T shirt on hot days.

  • @Terrahawk_
    @Terrahawk_ 3 года назад +1

    I feel like airing cupboard deserves about 2 bonus points.

  • @LauraNozkla
    @LauraNozkla 3 года назад

    A vest to me, is basically a top you wear (it can look like a sort of tank top or small women’s summer T-shirt, that doesn’t have sleeves) that you put on under another T-shirt or something as en extra layer to keep warm or I suppose you could just wear one out in the summer time when it very warm:) something you wear underneath to keep warm with sleeve I’d call “thermals” or “skins”

  • @keithygadget381
    @keithygadget381 2 года назад

    A Vest is a sleeveless undershirt. Worn usually in winter as an extra layer for warmth and not common these days. I can’t say we even see them in the shops anymore.

  • @hugh5365
    @hugh5365 2 года назад

    Vest in the UK is an undershirt worn by men it never has long sleeves and usually haas no sleeves at all, kind of like you sometimes see for working out. Traditionally you would wear them as an extra layer to help keep your core warmer (old houses have no central heating and can be deadly). They aren’t worn as commonly now

  • @hughtube5154
    @hughtube5154 Месяц назад

    The best way to describe a gilet is the orange coat Marty McFly wore in Back To The Future over his denim/jean jacket, which the '50s folk called a life preserver ("Dork thinks he's gonna drown"), which I guess we'd call a life jacket in the UK.

  • @williebauld1007
    @williebauld1007 3 года назад +4

    We will give her 30 points for being brave enough to attempt it 👍🏻
    Bill’s???? Never heard of it!

  • @stephenhodgson3506
    @stephenhodgson3506 2 года назад +1

    there are actually two Lloyds. There is Lloyds the bank but there is also Lloyd's the insurance company who insure things like ships and countries against major disasters.

  • @pollyhacker952
    @pollyhacker952 3 месяца назад

    A lot of parents put young children in vests (all sleeveless) under their school uniform shirts to keep them warmer in the cold weather. I personally don't know any adults who wear them but they come in adult sizes so I guess they must do. Shelby was a real trooper - good on her!

  • @krisjonesuk
    @krisjonesuk 3 года назад +5

    I suspect Shelby has good negotiating skills - she managed to get you to award points. I’m not sure how many British people nowadays know about allotments. Since your channel is about sharing knowledge, we also have Lloyds Pharmacies, Lloyds gyms, Lloyds of London insurance and Lloyds List, for the international shipping trade. Walkers Crisps is now owned by PepsiCo, who also own Lays. Gilet comes to us courtesy of our neighbours in France, who we seem to get a lot of our culinary names from (courgette, aubergine, Comis Chef, etc). A vest is generally, though not exclusively, a sleeveless undergarment. It can also refer to what you would call a vest, which we often call a waistcoat. We also have bulletproof vests. To complicate matters more, and add to the gaiety of the language, we also have tabards, which are a bit like vests or waistcoats.

    • @grahamtravers4522
      @grahamtravers4522 3 года назад +2

      My grandfather, Frank MIlls, used to maintain 3 allotments. Strictly, you are only allowed one, but he had a second in his son's name and a third which "belonged" to a man who couldn't maintain it. He kept us (his children and grandchildren) supplied with vegetables and pulses for many years. He would walk about a mile to the allotments, spend several hours working there, then walk a mile back. In the evening, he would take his dog out for a second walk, invariably over to his allotments, and back again. Pretty remarkable for a man who had his foot blown off in WW1.

  • @LecheVitrineUK
    @LecheVitrineUK 2 года назад

    In the UK a vest is a tank top, it does not have sleeves as that would be a t-shirt, we can have 'vest top' you could have a 'thermal vest' to keep warm both men and women wear them, they can also be a summer top. I wear vest tops as an extra layer in winter, I live in the north and Im 'nesh' meaning I get cold easily. we used to call gillet ' body wamer' is a sleeveless jacket.

  • @nongrockle
    @nongrockle 3 года назад

    Vests (undershirts) are also worn in hot climates so that shirts are not stained with sweat, often seen when I worked in Africa

  • @nicholaswoodhead9944
    @nicholaswoodhead9944 6 дней назад

    A vest is a piece of underwear that covers the top half of the body. It is not a bra, and not a t-shirt. It is sleeveless with a low neckline, though you can get winter vests which look like plain t-shirts as a part of thermal underwear. Confusingly, nowadays, there are designer vests that are worn as the top layer of clothing, especially in summer. Also, rugby and association football shirts are also called vests, and athletes wear vests that show their team or national colours.
    A gilet is what we still call a body warmer or a puffer.
    There is a chain of pharmacies also called Lloyds, though they are unrelated to the bank called Lloyds.

  • @DavidCookeZ80
    @DavidCookeZ80 2 года назад +1

    Gilet is a French word for a sleeveless jacket. Often it refers to a the padded kind (think Marty in Back to the Future), but is also used for a life-preserver (Marty again) or the reflective jacket used when working at the side of a road or for construction. I'm surprised you came across the term in the UK, as when it's cold enough to require a padded jacket, it's usually also raining, and you'd want your arms covered.
    A vest is just another layer for retaining heat - it's not mean to be seen, which is why string vests exist. It's also different to an undershirt/t-shirt that might be colour coordinated with a regular shirt.

  • @hannahadlington9396
    @hannahadlington9396 3 года назад

    A vest is basically a tank top or a camisole style top that can be worn underneath your clothes to give you an extra layer to keep you warm. I used to always wear them as a little kid under my school uniform. I basically stopped wearing them when I hit around 8 years old. I don't own any specific vests anymore but on really cold days I will throw a regular tank top on under my regular clothes just to add that extra layer to keep the cold away.

  • @cathyvickers9063
    @cathyvickers9063 3 года назад

    Me dressed to go out walking in winter in the Midwest:
    Bra, short sleeve (snug t-shirt) or long sleeve undershirt (depending on freezing or below freezing), turtleneck shirt, fleece hoodie; also thermal pj bottoms under sweatpants; and 2 pairs of socks. Then boots, scarf, parka, knit cap; mittens. The cap is worn over the hoodie hood & under the parka hood.
    In my mind, a vest, by definition, has no sleeves, like a waistcoat is a button down vest.
    Sleeveless women's undershirts are called camisoles. According to the mail order catalog I get clothes from.

  • @ItsMeJenBB
    @ItsMeJenBB 3 года назад +5

    LOL I knew about allotments because Ben Ebbers the chef on the Sorted Foods youtube channel (based in London) has one and he grows lots of great veg and herbs!
    As someone who watches British TV almost exclusively (thanks to apps), I didn't do as good as I thought on the stores. I knew B&Q and John Lewis. Whomp whomp. LOL

  • @ElizabethDebbie24
    @ElizabethDebbie24 3 года назад +7

    Debenhans closed all of their shops earlier this year in May and mainly only on line at the present time.

  • @snowfire4194
    @snowfire4194 3 года назад +9

    Fun fact, we had a store in the UK like B&Q called Texas.

    • @GirlGoneLondonofficial
      @GirlGoneLondonofficial  3 года назад

      Haha, didn't know that!!

    • @andrewbaker7839
      @andrewbaker7839 3 года назад

      @@GirlGoneLondonofficial before it finally died a few years ago (and like "Do It All"), going in one was rather like visiting The Land That Time Forgot. You fully expected to see a Mummy down every aisle.

    • @iannewlands2039
      @iannewlands2039 3 года назад +1

      Texas diy was brought out by Homebase in the 90s. Stores and staff re-branded.

    • @andrewbaker7839
      @andrewbaker7839 3 года назад

      @@iannewlands2039 That totally explains why the last time I went to our nearest one, it had turned into The Land That Time Forgot.
      I'm not remotely surprised they went bust.

    • @eddhardy1054
      @eddhardy1054 3 года назад

      @@iannewlands2039 I was one of the staff who were rebranded...it stang quite a bit. 😳

  • @jenniedarling3710
    @jenniedarling3710 3 года назад

    A vest is mostly worn by people over 80, but sometimes younger people ware them if they feel the cold a lot. Vest are normally sleeveless and keep the core of body warm.

  • @Salfordian
    @Salfordian 2 года назад

    Lloyds is also a pharmacy & Walkers are in fact owed by the same company as Lays (Pepsi Co) which is why they share the same logo

  • @robinford4037
    @robinford4037 2 года назад +1

    Fun fact or urban myth: The Vest ( what you wear under a cotton shirt when wearing a suit ) was huge in America, an essential piece of clothing for the man about town, the vest industry virtually collapsed over night because CARY GRANT did not wear one in a film, he was bare chested when he removed his shirt,

  • @shmupperfromhell
    @shmupperfromhell 3 года назад

    An allotment comes with your house purchase most of the time, and is normally located off your property. It's hard to explain but basically imagine a huge garden co-owned by many people, but you have your own land in that communal garden.

  • @gastrickbunsen1957
    @gastrickbunsen1957 3 года назад

    Another name for a gilet is a bodywarmer but they tend be of fleece material.
    A vest is an undergarment but it has no sleeves.
    Traditional seaside postcards often depict a family scene where the father is wearing a string vest and he has knotted hanky on his head.
    What you call a vest, we call a waistcoat.

  • @allysonhughes6138
    @allysonhughes6138 2 года назад

    The vest discussion 😂 very funny. traditionally the shape would be like todays sleeveless t-shirt you would wear out and about in the summer. 👍😊

  • @barneylaurance1865
    @barneylaurance1865 8 месяцев назад

    There's something a bit old-fashioned about wearing a vest in the UK. Since t-shirts became popular from the 1950s on they have been multi-purpose garments - used both as outwear and as warming layers under shirts, jumpers etc. Before that people would have been less likely to own t-shirts and more likely to wear vests for warmth instead.

  • @francisjose702
    @francisjose702 2 года назад

    A vest is a sleeveless undershirt, usually worn by men. Basically a guy’s halter top undershirt. And it’s a base layer to help insulate and keep warm

  • @NRTSean
    @NRTSean 2 года назад

    allotments can be both communal (mostly in villages) or individual... In parts of Scotland these are often called community allotments or gardens

  • @terryneale8663
    @terryneale8663 3 года назад

    I could be wrong but I believe allotments came about in victorian times as most social housing had no yard at all.
    Cookies in the UK, are the soft type of biscuits. The hard biscuits we have started out at ships biscuits. The word originally meant twice baked, although they were often baked even more to get all the moisture out.

  • @barriehull7076
    @barriehull7076 3 года назад

    Henman Hill, Murray Mount, Raducanu Ridge. She was born in Toronto Canada, Dad Romanian and Mother Chinese. She moved to Bromley, Kent/London Borough of Bromley at age two.
    Emma Raducanu[a] (born 13 November 2002) is a British professional tennis player who is the reigning US Open Champion. She reached her career-high singles ranking of world No. 23 on 13 September 2021, and is the current British No. 1.
    Ranked No. 338 in the world at the time, Raducanu was awarded a wildcard into the main draw at the 2021 Wimbledon Championships, and reached the fourth round there in her major debut. Two months later, she entered the qualifying competition for the 2021 US Open, and after reaching the main draw, she went on to become the first qualifier, male or female, to reach and win a Grand Slam singles final. In the final, Raducanu defeated fellow teenager Leylah Fernandez, winning the title without losing a set throughout the tournament. She became the first British woman to win a major singles title since Virginia Wade at the 1977 Wimbledon Championships, and the first to do so at the US Open since Wade in 1968. Raducanu holds both British and Canadian citizenship. She speaks Mandarin, watches Taiwanese television shows and enjoys Romanian cuisine, courtesy of her Bucharest-based grandmother.

  • @johnstevenson1709
    @johnstevenson1709 Месяц назад +1

    Anyone wanting to see a vest in the uk look up onslow from keeping up appearances

    • @peterdegelaen
      @peterdegelaen 18 дней назад

      Yes, one picture says more than a thousand words.

  • @chrissanders1027
    @chrissanders1027 2 года назад

    Gilet is from the french la gilet meaning cardigan which in turn is from Turkish word yelek , gilet has been used in the uk for over 30 years. Also lays chips is a rebranding of walkers crisps to sell in North America

  • @jamesantony3015
    @jamesantony3015 2 года назад

    I'm born and raised in the UK.
    a vest is kind of like a tank top or "wife beater" but maybe even thinner and lighter. To me it acts as an added layer of warmth.

  • @GinervaWeasleyPotter
    @GinervaWeasleyPotter 3 года назад +2

    When you say Lloyds, I thought it was going to be Lloyds pharmacy

  • @589steven
    @589steven 3 года назад +8

    Lays and Walkers are the same, they are owned by PepsiCo. When it comes to vests the one with the filler that you would use for winter is called a puffer vest.

  • @daveofyorkshire301
    @daveofyorkshire301 2 года назад

    What you call a Gillet is a body-warmer, and a vest is a T-shirt worn under a shirt, larger full-sleeve underwear (with leggings) is called thermal-underwear

  • @GaryHayward
    @GaryHayward 3 года назад

    I give her a million points for being a good sport by taking part in the quiz and for being such an obviously nice, friendly person! :)

  • @elemar5
    @elemar5 2 года назад

    I regularly took my one legged friend home from the pub in a trolley. :)
    A gilet is a snobby word for what I call a body warmer.

  • @NickfromNLondon
    @NickfromNLondon 2 года назад

    Shelby was close to the money on trolley being a bus. Electrically powered busses were called a "trolley bus" because of the equipment on the roof that connected the bus to the overhead cables.

  • @littlemisskate4254
    @littlemisskate4254 3 года назад

    B&Q stands for block and Quayle. Yes Debenhams has recently closed sadly. You should’ve asked her what The shop Boots is that some people can mistake it as a shoe shop rather than a pharmacy. You could’ve asked her what a Yorkshire pudding is as some people mistake them is something you would have with your pudding rather than with a roast dinner and also whether you have your porkpie hot or cold as it’s always a cold pie and different to a normal pie. There’s a lot you could ask as we have so many things over here that are very different to your country.

  • @warlock12uk
    @warlock12uk 3 года назад

    Two things.
    1 - Never heard of the chain Bill's. I'm not widely traveled but I've been to London, Birmingham, Sheffield, Newcastle, Norwich, Peterborough and Nottingham without seeing one.
    2 - A vest (in the UK) is usually a sleeveless undershirt, comparable to what is known as a wifebeater in the US. They can also be worn as an alternative to a t-shirt on the rare occasions that it's warm enough to do so. What you may refer to as a vest is what we may call a sweater vest, and is considered very unfashionable.