15 Mistakes & Faux Pas Americans Make In The UK | Americans in the UK Don't Say These Things!! 🙊

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  • Опубликовано: 2 авг 2024
  • In today’s video, we’re sharing some of the top cultural mistakes and faux pas that Americans make when they visit the UK! Are you an American planning a trip to the UK? Follow the guidelines shared in this video and you’ll be sure to leave with more friends than enemies! 🍻😂
    Are you British? What faux pas would you add to our list? 🤔
    Are you American? What kind of mistakes do Brits make when they visit the UK? 🙊
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Комментарии • 4 тыс.

  • @WanderingRavens
    @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +84

    Are you British? Which faux pas would you add to our list? Drop your answer under this comment! 😄🥂

    • @markhindmarsh2811
      @markhindmarsh2811 4 года назад +24

      Hi Ravens . Like your show . First up place names that end in shire are pronounced as sher . I'm a Geordie so Enlglish is my second language 😆
      Secondly watch a second world war documentry starring Burgess Meredith (Penguin from classic Batman) Welcome to Britain I believe its called .
      It is pretty car crash so many years on .
      Stay safe . Hope you get back to the UK soon

    • @animationcreations42
      @animationcreations42 4 года назад +26

      @@markhindmarsh2811 I'm a Geordie as well and I purposely turn up the accent and dialect when I'm talking to a foreigner!
      I'd also say a faux Pas up north is NOT talking to people, we find it quite rude when people don't say hello on public transport, just because those Londoners don't like human interaction, doesn't mean the rest of the country doesn't!
      I had an hour long conversation with some Canadians on the bus to Durham, telling them all the good places to visit that aren't full of tourists

    • @aramakifox2408
      @aramakifox2408 4 года назад +10

      As a Somerset lady who has recently moved to Yorkshire I find the thing of northerners liking to talk to everyone very odd... In the south we get a bit more irritated by people who say hello randomly - we find it odd and think they must be weirdos. Older people can get away with saying hello out and about more, but if a young person does it you might be worried!
      Us southerners like interacting with fellow humans, but I think we like our own space too.
      I can only speak as a somewhat introverted southerner that isn't from London, but I don't think generally it's a rudeness thing, we just like to keep ourselves to ourselves. My northern mother in law would say it's rude, but I think it's more rude to have to talk so much about nothing!
      Oh and I never realised before how crazy Yorkshire is on branding.... flags and roses everywhere. I don't think there are many other counties that do this to such a degree...

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +3

      @@markhindmarsh2811 Thank you for the kind words, Mark! We're so glad you like our show :) We can't wait to make it up to the Newcastle and Tyneside area! Thank you also for the documentary recommendation. We'll watch it!

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +6

      @@animationcreations42 That's good to know! We'll be sure to turn up the friendliness the farther north we go :)

  • @ffotograffydd
    @ffotograffydd 4 года назад +702

    The UK hasn’t had much immigration? Seriously? We’ve had thousands of years of immigration. 😂

    • @f3aok
      @f3aok 4 года назад +39

      Yer especially in the last 20 yrs.😕

    • @ffotograffydd
      @ffotograffydd 4 года назад +35

      You say that like it’s a bad thing. 😂

    • @f3aok
      @f3aok 4 года назад +38

      @@ffotograffydd Well the level of immigration in that period is a matter of opinion but in all opinion polls 70+% aren't happy with it.

    • @57bananaman
      @57bananaman 4 года назад +13

      @Snapper … true, but in The USA they have a long tradition of actively encouraging people to go to live there as, compared to many other parts of the world, they are sparsely populated. In The UK, until recently, "immigrants" have been either uninvited invaders/conquerers (Romans, Anglo-Saxons, Danes, Normans), refugees (Huguenots, Russian/Polish Jews or others fleeing persecution) or individuals who visited here and decided to stay. Generally we have tended to export people much more than we've imported them, it is only in recent decades that this has changed.

    • @ffotograffydd
      @ffotograffydd 4 года назад +20

      The point being made was that the UK doesn’t have a tradition of immigration, but we do. What the USA does is irrelevant in that context.

  • @hannahd9444
    @hannahd9444 4 года назад +255

    All people mean when they say “London isn’t England” is that when a lot of Americans talk about England it’s as if they think London is the only place in England. The majority is completely different to London, especially in the north. It’s just saying that there is more to England than London. If you read this I hope it helps!

    • @raymondpeterson952
      @raymondpeterson952 4 года назад +8

      and on another note...the U.S. isn't New York or Los Angeles...all these RUclipsrs from other countries come to the U.S. and spend all their time in the northeast, CA, Miami and think they know the U.S. there is SO much more to us than that...and just as NY or LA are much glitzier than Omaha or Topeka, London is much glitzier than Bristol or Bath. Just saying...

    • @kenttarbox4918
      @kenttarbox4918 4 года назад +3

      I agree. I was fortunate to spend a couple of weeks in the village of Mere just south of Bath. Spent time in Salisbury, Shaftsbury and other villages located near Mere. I also spent 3 days in London and enjoyed that as well. The states are the same, NYC, LA and Miami are not all that makes up the States.

    • @OrganMusicYT
      @OrganMusicYT 4 года назад +8

      And whilst we are at it, a staggering number of people seem to have the common misconception that the UK means England.

    • @octaviuswhelkstall4661
      @octaviuswhelkstall4661 4 года назад +5

      @@raymondpeterson952 I live in rural Suffolk (England). I once worked for a few weeks in Worcester, Mass. which I liked a lot, and could identify with. A visit to New York felt like a visit to another planet.

    • @notverysur3rightnow145
      @notverysur3rightnow145 4 года назад +1

      Raymond Peterson that must be annoying

  • @jrd33
    @jrd33 3 года назад +53

    Classic from an American, many years ago: "Oooh! I love the way you speak our language!" That grates to an Englishman.

    • @susanstein6604
      @susanstein6604 2 года назад +2

      I do that where English originate. Although sometimes American English accents are older and closer to earlier British accents.

  • @dragonade85
    @dragonade85 4 года назад +140

    Saying "I love England" when you're in Wales or Scotland......

    • @user-ui2px5gg7d
      @user-ui2px5gg7d 3 года назад +7

      That’s just a stupidity at that point lmao 😂

    • @John-Walker
      @John-Walker 3 года назад +6

      Or ‘I love Ireland’ or ‘the Irish’ when in Northern Ireland!

    • @notamused3715
      @notamused3715 3 года назад +2

      @@John-Walker What? The North is still on the island of Ireland, the clue is in the name - "Northern IRELAND"! The separation is political and partially cultural but not geographical and nearly half the population are just as much Gaels as we are in the Republic! The Gaels have lived in the North long before the Planters came!

    • @carldarbyshire4
      @carldarbyshire4 3 года назад +2

      I've had Americans comment on how they like my accent and it's never bothered me. I comment on how I like their accent, especially from the South.

    • @allanbiggs1685
      @allanbiggs1685 3 года назад +5

      Put loads of England flags on a friend's car in a rough part of Swansea. 👍😄

  • @CraigMurraysVids
    @CraigMurraysVids 4 года назад +110

    Ha ha. I'm Scottish. I was once in Boise Idaho, and a woman said to me "I really love your accent. I wish I had an accent". I thought it too polite to point out that she did.

    • @HeelTurnTitan
      @HeelTurnTitan Год назад +1

      Was in LA, got a similar comment from a lady…I responded by saying “I like yours”
      To which she responded “mine?”
      Welcome to planet America 🇺🇸

  • @jamiewilson9280
    @jamiewilson9280 4 года назад +188

    Being called quaint is a little like patting somebody on the head and calling them cute.

    • @tamsinmccormick
      @tamsinmccormick 4 года назад +5

      In England If some one says " Oh how frightfully quaint" That means old fashioned and out of date not up to the minute " However to me quaint can mean pleasantly well mannered in an acceptable older fashion " When I recognise that I will respond in a similar formal manner !!

    • @cjbriggs211
      @cjbriggs211 4 года назад +12

      Quaint is just more of a passive aggressive insult really. If someone were to say my house was quaint I would think they’re a snob

    • @dianeshelton9592
      @dianeshelton9592 4 года назад

      CJ Briggs it is associated with being old fashioned and small.
      Americans with their huge homes tend to generally say how quaint to the majority of British homes.

    • @johnmichaelcule8423
      @johnmichaelcule8423 4 года назад +4

      Do you remember the scene in STAR TREK: The Voyage Home where Scotty is faced with operating a 20th Century computer? He is told to use the mouse and keyboard. His comment: "Oh. How quaint." That is the British definition in action.

    • @888biblestudy
      @888biblestudy 4 года назад

      I think when Americans call something "quaint" they can mean cozy and comfortable and a good use of what is available/ appreciative of what one has - so creative and industrious. That is how I think of the word.

  • @LilMoonBoots
    @LilMoonBoots 4 года назад +35

    I was in America recently and someone told me "I love your accent!!" And I was like "OMG I love yours too!"
    I'm British and don't think its rude at all. Some British are stuck up. Most arent and won't find it a problem

    • @fatherson5907
      @fatherson5907 4 года назад

      Exactly

    • @laurencemajor4837
      @laurencemajor4837 3 года назад

      Kalakala only one... Blimey!! Xx

    • @Coyleravane
      @Coyleravane 3 года назад +6

      I think it is more when Americans say things like “I love the British accent”, like there is only one British accent.

    • @TheJthom9
      @TheJthom9 Год назад +1

      It is not about being stuck up. It is just a boring unimaginative comment without an obvious response

  • @vjaska
    @vjaska 3 года назад +11

    Even as a Londoner born & bred, I can concur that it feels very much like it's own country at times and the minute you step over the border between Greater London & the home counties (Surrey, Essex, Kent, etc), it turns into an entirely different world altogether from the people being nicer in general to the general flow of life feeling much sedate and slower

    • @etherealhawk
      @etherealhawk 2 года назад

      London is alien compared to the rest of the UK for sure. Makes you wonder why the country is run from there

    • @vjaska
      @vjaska 2 года назад

      @@etherealhawk don't get me wrong, I'd wouldn't change the fact I live in London but it's always nice to get out from there every once in a while and go somewhere else

  • @MaggieMMM
    @MaggieMMM 4 года назад +347

    If someone in the U.K. says ‘how very quaint’ they are probably being sarcastic.

    • @cigmorfil4101
      @cigmorfil4101 4 года назад +9

      Just like Scotty in Star Trek IV when given a keyboard to interface with a computer.

    • @teresafinch7790
      @teresafinch7790 4 года назад +31

      If we are speaking, we are usually being sarcastic.

    • @2eleven48
      @2eleven48 4 года назад +6

      @@teresafinch7790 ...oh, I'm not sure that's true at all. We rely an awful lot on irony and artful verbal dislike of speciousness and innuendo.

    • @teresafinch7790
      @teresafinch7790 4 года назад +5

      @@2eleven48 very true, but I do like a sweeping generalisation, now and again.

    • @pouncepounce7417
      @pouncepounce7417 4 года назад +1

      They say "How country bumpkin"

  • @callumderbyshire1454
    @callumderbyshire1454 4 года назад +258

    One really annoying thing is when americans say "I went to Europe" or "I'm going to Europe". Europe is a huge place with loads of different countries in it. So where did you go- to Rome in Italy or Stockport in the uk😂 (there is a big difference between those places btw)

    • @qsweets5629
      @qsweets5629 4 года назад +5

      Stockport 😀 I preferred it to Rome to be honest! Love The Plaza variety theatre and tearooms

    • @iwanthomas8090
      @iwanthomas8090 4 года назад +9

      Big up Stockport

    • @EricIrl
      @EricIrl 4 года назад +1

      @@iwanthomas8090 Especially the Stockport Coliseum and Baths.

    • @KatieCakes1994
      @KatieCakes1994 4 года назад

      Wow how did you think of this?

    • @johnp139
      @johnp139 4 года назад +5

      So do British say “I went to the US”, because the US is a huge place with loads of different states and regions.

  • @jamesblackwell2067
    @jamesblackwell2067 3 года назад +14

    someone once said "thats so british" to me once and i just said "well, im english....(so wtf did you expect 😂😂 )"

  • @Pippinking
    @Pippinking 3 года назад +47

    The reason that “quaint” grates on is that it feels condescending

    • @TheVaughan5
      @TheVaughan5 3 года назад

      Agreed but I think as they point out it seems to have a different connotation in the U.S. Personally I hate it but I think I can be more tolerant now - lol

    • @Lily-Bravo
      @Lily-Bravo 3 года назад

      I'm coming a bit late to the party, but I went to live in Australia for several years and when I came back, via land and sea, and arrived at Harwich and then went by train to Liverpool St Station, I suddenly "got" the "quaintness" of here. I saw the place with new eyes and that was the word, the one I that used to annoy me, that sprang into my mind.

    • @buddyrevell4124
      @buddyrevell4124 3 года назад

      It's all context though isnt it? Like if a wealthy person comes into your humble abode smirking and saying "oh how quaint" that seems condescending but an American saying a little victorian coffee shop is quaint isnt at all.

    • @TheVaughan5
      @TheVaughan5 3 года назад

      @@Lily-Bravo Interestingly I never got that feeling when I moved from Australia to the U.K. My first impression was wow it's cold here (late December kkkk) but so green and the architecture (not all of it of course some is deplorable) is amazing!

    • @Lily-Bravo
      @Lily-Bravo 3 года назад

      @@TheVaughan5 Hi! I might not have got that feeling of "quaintness" had I landed at Heathrow though. I think arriving by sea had been part of the experience. We arrived in late October and were expecting cold and leafless trees but it was sunny and everything was still green. Soooo green. Then a train ride in the dark and arrival in the middle of the tall white London houses. telephone and phone boxes was when the word "quaint" came to me. I now live in a village in the Cotswolds in a conservation area, and all by visitors from Australia and the US rave about the quaintness, but to me it's just normal now.

  • @russellblinman2560
    @russellblinman2560 4 года назад +168

    "Is Eton a school" is like asking if Harvard or Yale are universities. Eton is THE school, Princes William and Harry went there.

    • @alangknowles
      @alangknowles 4 года назад +11

      And it's a PUBLIC school. Translate to US private school.

    • @m1nc3m3at
      @m1nc3m3at 4 года назад +5

      Wait? Are Harvard and Yale Universities?

    • @Edward_Hodges
      @Edward_Hodges 4 года назад +2

      Mr bean was born there as well apparently.

    • @TheBloodsuger150
      @TheBloodsuger150 4 года назад +9

      The school, for cunts that is

    • @TombstoneHeart
      @TombstoneHeart 4 года назад +9

      I can kill two birds with the one stone here. I'm an Aussie and even I have heard of Eton, so there! However, when Prince Charles spent six months at Timbertop, an external campus of Geelong Grammar school in Victoria, he was often greeted by other boys as a "Pommy Bastard". He has also remarked many times that his time at Timbertop was the best experience of his entire education, so I guess he got the joke.

  • @livingangrycheese2668
    @livingangrycheese2668 4 года назад +94

    A few comments:
    1. "Quaint", at least in my experience, is used mostly sarcastically in the UK. It's interesting to me that it's seen so positively in the USA.
    2. I've never heard of it being a faux pas to complain about the taps - it's just not common to complain about here because it's the standard. I think in the UK, though we are famous for complaining, the person you moan to should usually be able to relate to your complaint, such as complaining about the weather or bad service etc, (unless you're bitching about somebody to a friend or something like that) otherwise you're just being whiny. If it's not serious and it's your own problem, you don't need to complain to other people about it.
    3. There is actually a lot of immigration to the UK, and a lot of foreign cultural influence, especially in London. I don't actually know where the cultural differences in relation to volume come from though. (e.g. there's a lot of french and danish influence on the english language due to their past influence on England)
    4. I think the issue with saying "omg I love your accent" isn't that you can't comment that you like someone's accent, it's clearly a compliment, it's just the way you say that. British people are generally far more reserved than Americans, and being really over the top can be perceived as sarcasm. Think "Wow, I really like your accent. Where's it from?" compared to "Wow! I love your accent! Where's it from?". The first way is just seen as more genuine and less annoying.
    5. Eton is a very posh, rich and frequently hated upon secondary boarding school in the UK. A lot of our politicians went there.
    6. Edinburgh is actually strangely often pronounced with the r before the u Edin-bruh essentially (at least here in London, I don't think the Scots got mad at me for saying it that way when I visited). Glasgow is pronounced Glas-go (as in the word go), though you wouldn't be able to understand a thing they said anyway if you actually went there, so how they say their city name is the least of my worries if I were to visit. I equally do not think it is reasonable to expect tourists to pronounce city names correctly, I could only get Swinomish completely right of yours.
    7. (I am from London) There is no obligation to visit the rest of the UK as a tourist, you go where you please, but you most certainly shouldn't assume the rest of the UK is like London. It's not it's own country, but the reason people might say so is that the culture is very different. Firstly there's the distinction of rural vs urban or large city vs smaller city when compared to the rest of the UK, but also London is far more diverse. There is far less traditional English culture in London but rather a unique blend of cultures from various backgrounds mixed with an overarching unique "London culture". I'm quite happy for the rest of the UK to make it clear that they exist too lol, it's not like they're saying we aren't a part of it.
    8. Just a small comment on the diagram, it is basically entirely correct but there are a few issues with it. "British Islands" could technically be used, but it will rarely be said, and Northern Ireland is not it's own island, while calling the island of Ireland British is sure to greatly offend most Irish people. There are also many British possessions such as the Falklands not included in that list. Also be very careful when talking about Ireland (the island). Calling the country of Ireland "The Irish republic" or "The Republic of Ireland" will probably not offend anyone, but when you're talking about northern ireland there generally isn't an easy way to avoid offending everyone. There's been a lot of terrorism and fighting there over whether Northern Ireland should be part of the UK or the Republic of Ireland so just be conscious of what you say and call them. And for god's sake NEVER ask for "an Irish car bomb". I know that's a drink you guys have, but it's like us having a drink called the "World Trade Center plane crash" and asking for it in New York. Don't.
    9. I don't know who doesn't know that the USA used to be a British colony. I definitely learnt that it happened but not in great detail. We call it the American War of Independence, we don't call it the American Revolutionary War. The war of independence isn't generally seen as that big of a deal here. I personally find the memes about us being salty about losing America quite funny, even if they are untrue (and don't forget we actually won the last war against you, what you call the war of 1812, to us it was just a minor theatre of the napoleonic wars, which is even more hilarious to me) - just to note I think nationalism and even patriotism (generally viewed quite differently in the UK) are ridiculous, I am merely one upping the USA because it's funny, I do not intend to make anyone actually angry.
    10. I know talking to strangers is FAR more common outside of London in the UK. Old people also talk more to strangers in London.
    11. Patience is a big part of British culture. You see it in the queuing. Also a lot of British people relate to people who work serving other people and cut them some slack for having to deal with annoying customers, so I think that's why we have a different culture when it comes to shop assistants too.

    • @flobeatrix6014
      @flobeatrix6014 4 года назад +20

      Awesome comment! and to add about the war, I think Americans tend to forget that our history stretches out longer than theirs. We have fourght many wars and have had alliences which changed our countries. Their war is just one against many and not 'country changing' like it was to them. Our history lessons focus on the kings and queens, invaders, war, disease and discovery. These factors all interlink and have had an effect on other situations. Henry VIII and his split from the church had an incredible butterfly effect. Our history within the roman empire and how that impacted a rise in modernisation and medicine. Our language changes with William 1st. All these things shaped our country way more then losing the independance war. It just isnt as important to the shaping of our culture then it is to them and theirs :D

    • @BeneficialCuts
      @BeneficialCuts 4 года назад +5

      @@flobeatrix6014 Exactly, the War of Independence was important, but not more so than any of the other wars Britain has fought over the last 1000 years or so.

    • @katstephenson8493
      @katstephenson8493 4 года назад +1

      Great comments from you guys.

    • @susandeans7214
      @susandeans7214 4 года назад +1

      I agree with everything except the Glasgow thing. As a Glaswegian it’s just a bit rude to say that it doesn’t matter how we pronounce our city because you wouldn’t understand what we say anyway. Also, as someone who has travelled throughout the UK, the rest of Europe and several, places in the US I have never had a single issue with anyone misunderstanding me. I don’t mean to be rude btw I just don’t think that’s a very fair comment to make.

    • @susandeans7214
      @susandeans7214 4 года назад

      Ian Salisbury yeah I agree the same thing would probably be said about scouse and Georgie accents. I don’t think it’s a fair comment to say about any accent like that. I’m sure it’s not his intention at all but it came off as a very ignorant thing to say is all.

  • @steffiparsons
    @steffiparsons 3 года назад +10

    I like it when Americans say they like my accent! In the US, I got an Uber and my driver said he liked my accent, and I said I liked his accent, and the entire journey was just talking about how much we loved each other's accents!

  • @neilcaress9036
    @neilcaress9036 4 года назад +20

    In reality the war of Independence was fought by British on both sides assisted by different native nations, French and etc.

  • @virtualatheist
    @virtualatheist 4 года назад +216

    To the US, the War of Independence is a cornerstone of your society and history. To Brits, the War of Independence was a minor sideshow in England's geopoliticking.

    • @mikesaunders4775
      @mikesaunders4775 4 года назад +45

      True ,the loss of India and Ireland were a bigger deal.

    • @mrmessy7334
      @mrmessy7334 4 года назад +26

      @Joe Soap No, more of a s**tshow 😂

    • @andrewmildinhall8210
      @andrewmildinhall8210 4 года назад +45

      Most British people have no interest. In the war of independence and couldn't care less about it

    • @Trebor74
      @Trebor74 4 года назад +15

      @Razorback73 they also forget that the American war of independence costs France so much money that it led to the French Revolution.

    • @Harldin
      @Harldin 4 года назад +12

      The Americans won the War of Independence because Britain only ever committed a fraction of its full Military capabilities due to the fact that they were in a Cold War with France, could have defeated the Colonials and come home to find the UK in French hands.

  • @DIGZDIGZDIGZ
    @DIGZDIGZDIGZ 4 года назад +86

    Just a few comments:
    1) "I love your accent" isn't a bad thing to me, but when americans say "I love the British accent", that's when it becomes annoying. Like which British accent? Scouse? Brummie?
    2) London is different from the rest of the UK as it has a lot more emigration and diversity, people tend to be ruder and always in a rush (as people who live in the centre tend to be there solely for work). Also the city is a hell of a lot more packed in so it's always cramped.
    3) we don't learn about American independence in history, we learn more about history that is more important to us. Like Henry the 8th, Mary Queen of Scots, battle of Hastings, Napoleonic wars, the world wars (though I bet we learn this one differently to the US - all we hear from Americans is that they basically single handedly saved everyone in the wars - even though they arrived late)etc...

    • @charliepye9085
      @charliepye9085 4 года назад +5

      Yea Americans only realy helped in ww2 was because the japanese bombed them.

    • @uglyducklingswan
      @uglyducklingswan 4 года назад

      Sorry but I say this because British accents are sexy.

    • @DIGZDIGZDIGZ
      @DIGZDIGZDIGZ 4 года назад +4

      @@uglyducklingswan which British accent though? There's many 😂

    • @uglyducklingswan
      @uglyducklingswan 4 года назад +2

      Hmmm your right. But I have to say not sure. I heard many different English accents and UK accents I love. I think it depends on the individual also. I heard Northern and southern and Midlands. I like them all.

    • @rizzcs6018
      @rizzcs6018 4 года назад +5

      Pretty sure its not Scouse.

  • @TheMarrification
    @TheMarrification 4 года назад +37

    London is a big international city where the world goes to do business and stuff. Native British culture tends to live outside of it. As a rule of thumb, the further you go from London, the friendlier and more accommodating the people are; and also, the more strangers will chat to you... even on public transport.

    • @thomas_hobbs1453
      @thomas_hobbs1453 3 года назад +2

      London is multicultural, that's why many Brits feel and think and say that it's not England/Britain. It's not the original London anymore when there were hardly any immigrants and people of color in the city.

    • @noblestsavage1742
      @noblestsavage1742 3 года назад +1

      @@thomas_hobbs1453 it’s London so it would be people of colour😂

    • @philroberts7238
      @philroberts7238 3 года назад +3

      @@thomas_hobbs1453
      London has been multicultural throughout its history, from the time of the Romans right up to the present day. In fact, it has been estimated that in any particular decade the number of immigrants has usually been greater than the number of actual native-born Londoners. Many of those immigrants, probably most of them, have been from within the British Isles, but there have always been strong connections to all parts of the known world and London's population has always reflected that. Some newcomers have arrived in waves, others in dribs and drabs, but London is and always has been in a continuous state of self-renewal. For the most part, that has been its strength, despite the best efforts of those of a more xenophobic persuasion to hold back the tides of change. It is fascinating that, despite all this constant turnover of population, London continues to remain essentially itself. I'm sure that Dr Johnson would still recognise it as the same exciting city it always was and would approve of its continuing vitality. (Whether Dr Sam would approve of his namesake Boris is, of course, a matter of idle historical speculation!)

    • @alanmawson9601
      @alanmawson9601 3 года назад

      @@philroberts7238 Bollocks, yes there has always been immigrants in London but never like now, just watch some old newsreel footage over the decades, the VAST majority of Londoners where white British!

    • @philroberts7238
      @philroberts7238 3 года назад +1

      @@alanmawson9601
      Yes, there were less black faces then than there are today. So what? (Evidently you have some sort of problem with that. My only problem is that YOU have a problem when things would be much better for all of us if you didn't.)

  • @mihran79
    @mihran79 3 года назад +4

    I worked in hotels/restaurants for few years and we had a lot of Americans! So the commons things I noticed were: 1) the double room, seriously this one was really a pain!! Almost every week there was a complaint from someone saying they were expecting 2 double beds, in the UK is one bed. 2) following from the previous issue the bed sizes (but this happened to many visitors from all over the world) but the Americans usually said "why is not like in America?! 3) the newspaper IS chargeable, so many times we were told to remove the charge because in America is free in hotels so the rule must apply in UK too. 4) Phone calls from the room to the US are chargeable!! I was shocked to hear how Americans complained at the reception desk saying "local" charges were supposed to be free, so they forgot they were in a different country! 5) Expecting to have dollars all the time at the reception desk handy for change, I mean seriously?? You are in a different country!! 6) This one is slightly different, I'm Italian and they were sometimes correcting me the pronunciation for Italian words, apparently few Americans don't like to hear the "real" pronunciation. 7) again talking about language, I often heard Americans correcting a British word with an American one in a way that sounded a bit rude, assuming that was the correct word that everyone is supposed to say, mostly with lift vs elevator, trolley vs cart.

  • @jca111
    @jca111 4 года назад +154

    You forgot the mentioning of Bad Teeth. Americans do this all the time.
    Yes some people have bad teeth in the UK, but they do everywhere. We actually as a nation have some of the healthiest teeth in the world.
    They are just not "corrected" to be perfectly white and straight like some nations.

    • @colinmarsh5808
      @colinmarsh5808 4 года назад +14

      Americans NOW have worse teeth than Brits do -A study came out last year which shot that in the foot

    • @Otacatapetl
      @Otacatapetl 4 года назад +9

      @munchkin42 Well, plastic teeth don't take much maintenance.

    • @alexwright4930
      @alexwright4930 4 года назад +4

      If you're on a low enough income NHS dentistry in England is free, so no idea where this thing about teeth came from.

    • @Otacatapetl
      @Otacatapetl 4 года назад +6

      @@alexwright4930 It came from America. The Americans are obsessed with having perfect teeth, which is something we don't share with them. It's just not that important to us.

    • @jca111
      @jca111 4 года назад +5

      @@Otacatapetl I agree. In my 20s I knocked my front tooth. It's still in, but has gone slightly grey. The dentist recommended that I leave it as is structurally sound, but whitening it would involve a veneer or crown. Both would remove healthy tooth for cosmetics reasons, and typically last 10 years. I'm 50 now with a slightly grey, but very healthy tooth.

  • @lewiskingmodelmaking9514
    @lewiskingmodelmaking9514 4 года назад +70

    Scottish guy here. Its "Edin - bruh" and "Glaz- Go"

    • @wetcardie66
      @wetcardie66 3 года назад +1

      or "glesca" mind you i was there for some time but never met anyone caled "jimmy"

    • @corriehingston6744
      @corriehingston6744 3 года назад +1

      I heard a Harvard lecturer on RUclips and he pronounced Edinburgh like "Edin-burrow"

    • @chrishamlet3470
      @chrishamlet3470 3 года назад

      Eddin burrow lol

    • @pete975
      @pete975 3 года назад

      @@corriehingston6744 yeah that accurately describes how a posh upper class Scottish person would say it or my granny when she is on the phone. It can be found on television too.

    • @MikeRox83
      @MikeRox83 3 года назад

      Everyone knows it's "Eedin berg". XD

  • @craighobbs3708
    @craighobbs3708 4 года назад +14

    The UK has LOTS of immigration from Europe! Apart from that, a very accurate video!

  • @xenu-dark-tony
    @xenu-dark-tony 3 года назад +7

    I can do a passable New York accent, so when an American in America tells me they like my English accent, I go into the NY accent and tell them we actually talk like that normally, and that we only do the English accent for Harry Potter tourists.

    • @SonyaLCH
      @SonyaLCH 3 года назад

      Brits tend to think that all Americans sound like they are from Texas, California, or New York.

  • @elizabethirvine4326
    @elizabethirvine4326 4 года назад +105

    The way they pronounced Edinburgh and Glasgow DESTROYED ME.

    • @Submarine_2010
      @Submarine_2010 4 года назад +2

      Even if I didn’t know how to say Glasgow it’s kind of easy

    • @Submarine_2010
      @Submarine_2010 4 года назад +15

      GLAZ-GO

    • @tianapower1242
      @tianapower1242 4 года назад +1

      It's easy for the British but the rest of the world they don't know

    • @leondubz4206
      @leondubz4206 4 года назад +4

      Big Panda 22 im english and i could say all the American place names and can pronounce Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch i think they could if they did little to no research

    • @tianapower1242
      @tianapower1242 3 года назад

      @@leondubz4206 I've been there lol

  • @gnomad42
    @gnomad42 4 года назад +114

    When you are in their part of the world, they don't have an accent - You do.

    • @valeriedavidson2785
      @valeriedavidson2785 4 года назад +9

      Absolutely correct. There is no such thing as a British Accent. You only have an accent when you are away from the native country whose language it is.

    • @anonymes2884
      @anonymes2884 4 года назад +7

      Huh, interesting. This is the first time I think i've ever heard someone from the UK (presumably but please correct me if i'm wrong) claim this, previously it's been exclusively Americans i've seen propagating the baffling fallacy of "I don't have an accent, you do". Plainly _everyone_ has "an accent", regardless of where they happen to be. If i'm in my native Scotland I have a Scottish accent, even if it's the local "default" accent. And in England (where I live) ? Yep, I have a Scottish accent. In Timbuktu ? You're hopefully ahead of me... still a Scottish accent. The idea that anyone only has "an accent" when outside of their native country is totally bizarre to me - your accent is about _how_ you say things, not _where_ you say them.

    • @valeriedavidson2785
      @valeriedavidson2785 4 года назад +2

      @@anonymes2884 You are referring to REGIONAL accents. Everyone does NOT have an accent (I am English). If you are speaking with the correct Oxford dictionary pronunciation you do not have an accent. An Accent is a deviation from the norm.

    • @anonymes2884
      @anonymes2884 4 года назад +2

      ​@@valeriedavidson2785 [ETA: Umm, OK this one got away from me a bit - feel free to, like, skip half the sentences or something :)]. No, i'm referring to _any_ accent. Even e.g. a "posh accent" has a set of defined properties which are either true or not true of an individual's way of speaking, regardless of whether they happen to be in an East End pub or the dining halls of Eton at the time. Are people likely to _comment_ on it if it's "the norm" ? No i'd say not, since almost by definition "the norm" tends to be unremarked upon. _That_ accent still has _those_ properties though. Having "an accent" in this context is absolutely NOT solely defined as "deviation from the norm", either in dictionaries, common usage or by linguists. E.g. (from the OED):
      "accent, n.
      ...
      7.
      a. A way of pronouncing a language that is distinctive to a country, area, social class, or individual."
      (the next sub-definition is maybe closer to what you claim:
      "b. Without possessive or defining word or words: a regional or foreign accent.
      Not in technical use." BUT that's still only one possible meaning)
      Are there more _distinctions_ apparent in accents the more "local" you are ? Of course. In _that_ sense I agree that there's no such thing as *a* "British accent" nor *a* "Scottish", "English", "Welsh", "Northern Irish", "French", "American", "Australian", "posh", "working class", "country" (and so on) accent either for that matter - it's _mostly_ people from outside the UK that talk about "a British accent" because to Brits that's a massive generalisation, it misses all the useful extra information we get (or at least _think_ we get) about someone based on their specific accent. Those broad categories are still more or less meaningful though (i.e. we still often recognise accents as from those broad groups - by their shared properties - when we hear them).
      And dictionaries (even the OED :) are descriptive, not proscriptive. There is, in other words, no such thing as "the correct Oxford dictionary pronunciation" except among people who've already _arbitrarily_ decided that Received Pronunciation - an accent of English used by a small minority of UK English speakers, mostly in the south-east of England and which was itself _arbitrarily_ chosen by the Oxford University Press for the OED pronunciation standard, largely based on geographical/historical accident and not a little class/region bias - is somehow _the_ "One True Way" to speak the language.

    • @valeriedavidson2785
      @valeriedavidson2785 4 года назад +1

      @@anonymes2884 You are obviously stuck in your opinions and are being pedantic. To quote my late mother-"If you are speaking correctly, nobody should know where you come from."

  • @beatricemavroleon7218
    @beatricemavroleon7218 3 года назад +7

    I am more or less British (I’ve spent most of my life in London), and I am also shocked that lots of British people don’t seem to know that the US was once a British colony. I once met someone who went to Oxford and Eton (the very expensive school you mentioned) and didn’t know this, which I thought was bizarre. To me it’s obvious that the whole of the American continent was colonised by Europeans, but maybe that’s because I spent many years living in South America.

    • @etherealhawk
      @etherealhawk 2 года назад +1

      People who have some world knowledge of course know this. However, undereducated people or people who have their heads in one particular academic subject alone, well - you can see why they don't.

  • @miski8553
    @miski8553 4 года назад +15

    London is like a melting point of the whole world. It’s like how New York is different to South Carolina.

    • @etherealhawk
      @etherealhawk 2 года назад +1

      London is weird compared to elsewhere in the UK.

  • @lucieellis3149
    @lucieellis3149 4 года назад +54

    I don’t have an issue with people saying they like my accent, I have an issue with people saying that I don’t sound British because I have a yorkshire accent

    • @saxx9088
      @saxx9088 4 года назад +3

      Lucie Ellis Yorkshire is objectively one of the most British accents as we try to pronounce literally nothing

    • @rachelmcnaughton9051
      @rachelmcnaughton9051 4 года назад +1

      Yeah as someone from Scotland i understand this

    • @rareads
      @rareads 4 года назад +1

      Well that's understandable, up north is a different country

    • @kirstieoxley3254
      @kirstieoxley3254 4 года назад +2

      rareads I had an American asking if I was a German!! No love, I’m Yorkshire !!

    • @andyrob35
      @andyrob35 3 года назад +1

      Pretty much across the board, a regional UK accent in the US is perceived as Australian!

  • @reubencole2830
    @reubencole2830 4 года назад +95

    Hmm with the whole “omg I love your accent” thing, it feels like you’ve interpreted it as rude. I wouldn’t say it’s rude, just annoying. Like, it’s the kind of thing that, while it’s nice to hear, is very annoying if you hear it from every single American you meet.

    • @reubencole2830
      @reubencole2830 4 года назад

      @ryn mcray aw wow I have a real soft spot for the Edinburgh accent, it's so soft and beautiful compared to a... Glasweigian?? accent! 😂

    • @AnnaBellaChannel
      @AnnaBellaChannel 4 года назад

      In the UK Accents are linked to the British Social class system so bring it up can make people anxious.

    • @brummieinbristol522
      @brummieinbristol522 4 года назад +2

      "omg, I love your accent!" is often followed by something condescending such as how cute or quaint it is. that is why we react badly to it. English as a language is an English creation and being told that we are not speaking it "correctly" is annoying to say the least. the differences in vocabulary don't help as US tourists sometimes use words that mean something very different here, an example being fanny which is unspeakably rude in the UK X

    • @AnnaBellaChannel
      @AnnaBellaChannel 4 года назад

      @@brummieinbristol522 It is not a fanny pack but a bum bag! Oh, the shame! lols

    • @tacocatt6808
      @tacocatt6808 4 года назад +2

      Reuben Cole yes Glaswegian is how you say it (if that’s why you put the question marks lol).

  • @royw-g3120
    @royw-g3120 3 года назад +7

    Having a solid Estuary English accent, many Americans seem to think I am Australian, we do not all sound like Hugh Grant or the Queen.

  • @darkstarnh
    @darkstarnh 3 года назад +8

    Here in Wales if you want to hear a room full of people go silent just say something like 'it's lovely here in England'.

  • @lil5079
    @lil5079 4 года назад +164

    To Brits the whole independence thing ties in with Americans swearing an oath and to me makes America seem like some weird cult lmao. Brits never learn about the American war of independence in any detail at all and really aren’t bothered by any of it 😂 similar to Americans getting hung up on “saving” us in WWII which isn’t quite the full story.

    • @FordForTheWin
      @FordForTheWin 4 года назад +12

      Yes because many brits are aware that the Americans left it till the very last moment to help us. Only when we were forced to destroy the French fleet under American instructions did you guys come thankfully!

    • @tamsinmccormick
      @tamsinmccormick 4 года назад +4

      @@FordForTheWin It was the bad idea of Japan to attack Hawaii that caused the Americans to become involved if that had not happened then WW2 would have turned out differently. However it was American Money that financed the war before they became active.

    • @FordForTheWin
      @FordForTheWin 4 года назад +11

      @@tamsinmccormick we borrowed so much to keep our island and we payed it all back. I never understood why other countries war debts were written off! Germany for example utter madness.

    • @ianbrades9579
      @ianbrades9579 4 года назад +3

      I took history for gcse and about a fifth of the overall content was American history.

    • @martinreddy3823
      @martinreddy3823 4 года назад +1

      @@FordForTheWin The American financial and material contribution after 1940 was written off. How could Britain "pay it off?" With Marshall Aid?

  • @gracehouston1057
    @gracehouston1057 4 года назад +162

    Also, I pronounce Edinburgh as “Ed-in-bruh” and Glasgow as “Glaz-go” but I’m from Leeds which is like West Yorkshire U.K. :)

    • @Thurgosh_OG
      @Thurgosh_OG 4 года назад +14

      As a Scot, I pronounce them Ed-in-burrah and Glass-go.

    • @AbsolutelyFabregas95
      @AbsolutelyFabregas95 4 года назад +5

      And I'm from cardiff ... we all speak Welsh

    • @A2pattingPod042
      @A2pattingPod042 4 года назад +1

      I say Edinburgh and Glasgow in the same way as you

    • @Stephen0Stevie0
      @Stephen0Stevie0 4 года назад

      yep i agree. since i live equidistant to both places haha . 40 min train to glasgow and 40 min train to Edinburgh . Although currently i reside in china hahaha

    • @blah4655
      @blah4655 4 года назад +4

      Same I pronounce Edinburgh as Ed-in-bruh. And Glasgow as Glaz-Go
      Btw I'm from Bradford (West Yorkshire , UK)

  • @wiggliestone8456
    @wiggliestone8456 4 года назад +7

    I really don’t mind people mentioning my accent, it’s quite charming to think I’m nice to listen to.

  • @akeel_1701
    @akeel_1701 4 года назад +3

    at 17.35, that reminds me of the time I met a tourist from the US, I was thinking maybe texas or Arizona, judging by his accent. We were on a train from Paisley to Glasgow (I was heading home after work) He says: "Gee I really love Scotland, it's my favourite part of England." I winced inwardly as he regaled us of what was so great about America. The train came into the platform and I got up to the doors to be the first one to get off. As the train doors opened up I said: "Enjoy the rest of your vacation and have a safe trip back to Canada!" I think he turned purple LOL

  • @octaviuswhelkstall4661
    @octaviuswhelkstall4661 4 года назад +133

    The UK has had mass immigration for a thousand years. Just remind me, how old is America?
    Why would you think we hadn't had much? Where do you get your information?

    • @flobeatrix6014
      @flobeatrix6014 4 года назад +15

      literally one of our first history lessons in school is 'we got a french king, say hes english and let him change our language' xD

    • @jamiebaldwin5323
      @jamiebaldwin5323 4 года назад +2

      Erm, mass immigration was started by Blair... Pre Blair our population was stagnating and it only started to rise due to Blair's mass immigration.

    • @tenixtoye
      @tenixtoye 4 года назад +7

      jamie baldwin so Anglo Saxons, the Norse, the french ?

    • @jamiebaldwin5323
      @jamiebaldwin5323 4 года назад +2

      ​@@tenixtoye that's like saying the Viking and Roman invasion was mass immigration...

    • @AnnabelSmyth
      @AnnabelSmyth 4 года назад +10

      @@jamiebaldwin5323 So it was. Totally changed the population of these islands.

  • @paultaylor701
    @paultaylor701 4 года назад +48

    Glaz-go and Ed-in-bruh plus ‘cester’ means a Roman city. 2000 years old, cool eh?

  • @cat3rgrl917
    @cat3rgrl917 4 года назад +7

    i think the loudness comes from large spaces and competing with other noise in the U.S. i do not think people realize how loud they are. accents Hmm not sure no one every has complimented me on mine, i am asked frequently where i am from tho

  • @tiger3249
    @tiger3249 4 года назад +3

    I love how self aware you are. Its also helped me as ive met an american friend online and we discuss our differences and share these vids

  • @amyconway1631
    @amyconway1631 4 года назад +67

    Quaint isn’t offensive or anything- it’s just irritating and condescending to have everything referred to as quaint

    • @saxx9088
      @saxx9088 4 года назад +13

      Amy Conway it’s like a rich person coming in and calling everything cosy

    • @amyconway1631
      @amyconway1631 4 года назад +2

      Nathan Tolladay, yep

    • @jeremynv89523
      @jeremynv89523 3 года назад

      Nathan Tolladay cosy and quaint have very positive meanings here in the States. It’s almost the nicest compliment one can give.

    • @emilyduke4255
      @emilyduke4255 3 года назад +2

      @@jeremynv89523 it really depends on the way it’s said here. Context and tone of voice matter.

    • @SairyFairy
      @SairyFairy 3 года назад

      It's true! It's not that quaint is seen as a bad thing in the UK, it's just patronising to be told that something is likeable because it's seen as 'exceptionally' something, when to us its just normal and reasonable for things to be that way. Its more of an irritation towards the person using the term than the term itself. It's like 'othering'

  • @jamesbowert2526
    @jamesbowert2526 4 года назад +41

    When we say "London is not England" we don't mean it literally, just as a way of expressing what you said about London not representing all of England and the two words being interchangeable. In many ways however, London is so different to the rest of the country you could also take that phrase as a sort of metaphor

  • @laurencemajor4837
    @laurencemajor4837 3 года назад +2

    May I say about Americans being loud abroad. Yes have experienced this here in UK and mainland Europe. But in fairness to you that has been a minority. Have met loads Americans and going to sound wrong, are aware of their surroundings and so adapted their voices to match. Love USA and Americans. And when you come here please don't think you can't be yourself. Laurence x

  • @EASYTIGER10
    @EASYTIGER10 4 года назад +3

    i remember visiting Neuschwanstein castle in Germany. We were on the bus and I suddenly heard this roar from behind, someone looking at a brochure: "IS THAT NEW-SHWANN-STOYN?? IT'S LIKE DISNEY CASTLE!"

  • @slightlyconfused876
    @slightlyconfused876 4 года назад +51

    When I was living in Germany an American girl at a party said that she thought I sounded like Prince Charles. The thought of Charlie speaking with a Birmingham accent had everyone in hysterics. Personally anyone saying my accent is nice is OK in my book. Makes a change from the insults I get from the British. Quaint to a Brit means traditional looking. Perfectly OK to use it without giving offence. I always find it odd that Americans always seem to ask how much you earn really early in the first conversation you have with them. A definite no no.

    • @charlieallison1966
      @charlieallison1966 4 года назад +3

      I get what you mean with the accent I certainly won’t be offended if someone says they like my accent, however, mine is definitely not well known to Americans so it’s quite amusing to see them try to figure out where I’m from... was once asked if I was Australian by an American family 😂 my accent is Devonian

    • @katstephenson8493
      @katstephenson8493 4 года назад +1

      Slightly confused.. Hilarious! 😅

    • @danielleporter1829
      @danielleporter1829 4 года назад +2

      I'm American and if someone asks about how much someone makes outright , it is such a no-no.Most will dance around asking by stating how much they make in a non Bragging kind of way, some will avoid and some will brag about how much they make and will ask how much another person makes just to be able to say they make more.

    • @martinreddy3823
      @martinreddy3823 4 года назад +1

      Asking about earnings is a definite no-no among Americans, too.

  • @impossiblenamechoice
    @impossiblenamechoice 4 года назад +35

    19:45 this is a great example of how London is fundamentally different to the rest of the UK. I’m a northerner by birth now living in Wales but I spent a few years living in London. The north is really chatty wherever you go, you get the same vibe in Wales, Birmingham, Glasgow, Edinburgh etc etc. London is the odd one out (not the other way around).
    I was on a late night train heading south out of town and a couple got on (they’d obviously had a good night) and the girl was chatting to everyone- her bf made excuses to the carriage by saying she was a northerner. I said I was a northerner, then someone over the way said they were from Leeds, and then someone else piped up and the northerners held the carriage all the way home. London transport etiquette is definitely NOT the norm (thank god).

    • @richardleaman4139
      @richardleaman4139 4 года назад +7

      I was going to make the same comment... it's different in the north.

    • @hannahdyson7129
      @hannahdyson7129 2 года назад

      @@richardleaman4139 I am a Northerner. Their version of " friendly " is far friendlier than ours .

    • @etherealhawk
      @etherealhawk 2 года назад +1

      Londoners tend to think that they're the rule and everywhere else is the exception. Actually, they're pretty alien to the more friendly, community-based vibe you get in the rest of the UK I think

    • @etherealhawk
      @etherealhawk 2 года назад

      Especially from people who come from places outside of major cities

  • @smiah7898
    @smiah7898 3 года назад +3

    I'm from south of England and love when anyone tells me they like my accent! Because Ive lived down south all my life and it's so normal to me, I like that someone it isn't 'normal' to, likes it :-)

  • @noairsnograces8640
    @noairsnograces8640 3 года назад +1

    Taps. Many older English homes have two cold water supplies. One is very purified and comes out of the cold tap - and can be drunk straight from the tap. The other is less pure, and the boiler/heater in the home sterilises it with heat and then puts it out of the hot tap. If you mixed the two you would cause the purified water to possibly be contaminated.

  • @grahamross6397
    @grahamross6397 4 года назад +47

    Saying or writing "pissed" when you mean "pissed off".
    Pissed means rat-arsed, not angry.
    Rat-arsed means inebriated.

    • @Mohegan13
      @Mohegan13 4 года назад +1

      It's regional and often sentence structure based. No one oop ere in North uses "off" generally.

    • @robharry4453
      @robharry4453 4 года назад +3

      Well pissed is used for both angry and when drunk in the Uk 😅

    • @katstephenson8493
      @katstephenson8493 4 года назад

      @@Mohegan13 When someone asks me what's wrong (if I'm looking fed up/down) instead of going into detail I just say "I'm fine, just feeling a bit pissed off that's all".. And other people I know also use the same expression..Maybe it's a Sheffield thing! 😉

    • @jenhopetoo
      @jenhopetoo 4 года назад +1

      I love that expression "rat arsed".

    • @AnnaBellaChannel
      @AnnaBellaChannel 4 года назад

      Pissed means both drunk and angry.

  • @stevesilk51
    @stevesilk51 4 года назад +59

    Commenting on accents not rude, it's just become a cliche now. We constantly hear it.

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +2

      That makes sense. Think about it this way, if an American comments on your accent, it just means they think you're attractive and they like you 😄

    • @christinafoote9655
      @christinafoote9655 4 года назад +3

      @@WanderingRavens As a Brit who lived in the USA for 16 years, the only question that ever bothered me was, specifically, "where is your accent from?", as if I'd picked it up in a store somewhere! My go-to answer was always, "same place as the rest of me"... ;)

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +1

      @@christinafoote9655 That is a really strange way to ask someone about their accent. Great come back though :D

    • @corrigenda70
      @corrigenda70 4 года назад +5

      @@WanderingRavens Remember that when you are in the UK it is your accent that is different not theirs!

    • @magsgreenslade3132
      @magsgreenslade3132 4 года назад

      When me and my husband visited Wisconsin over 25 years ago I was asked if I was Australian... then again, at the time I was living in London and the locals at the pub where I had a part-time job I was asked the same thing. I'm from Staffordshire!!

  • @hufflepuffchef5013
    @hufflepuffchef5013 3 года назад +5

    The literal meaning of quaint is the same in both countries but in the UK it is used/or at least thought to be used by the higher class when describing anything about anyone of lesser means but in a way as not to sound overtly rude. So because of that most people take the word quaint as what we would call a backhanded complement (something that sounds good at first but has another meaning e.g. you look good for your age.).

    • @Coral_Forever
      @Coral_Forever 3 года назад

      Yes I see your point. In the U.S. class difference is not loaded into the interpretation in this word... we really do mean it as a compliment... a place that is interesting, with an appealing design that charms, perhaps with a whiff of history or artistic, aesthetic beauty that seems genuine... would be a "quaint" setting... ideal for a special occasion or a meaningful experience.... not prefab, cookie-cutter or drab. Just realized we often describe aspects of New England as quaint... historic, charming towns... with unique, older or in some way charming design & architecture and a feeling of genuine beauty. It is meant as a compliment. Not just in that part of the U.S. but it is practically a collocation... "quaint, New England town" 😆 a compliment.

    • @jrd33
      @jrd33 3 года назад +1

      @@Coral_Forever Calling something quaint is fine if the other person thinks it is quaint too. But if I get out my (five years old) mobile phone and someone says "Ooh, how quaint!" I know they don't mean it as a compliment.

  • @stephenwest9757
    @stephenwest9757 3 года назад

    I'm from England and have single mixer Lever taps in the bathroom as well as the Kitchen. I dislike having separate taps. But I think many newer taps are mixer types but some people, possibly older ones do still go for the traditional separate ones despite it being almost impossible to get the temperature you want.

  • @stevesilk51
    @stevesilk51 4 года назад +55

    Honestly, nobody I know spends one second pondering the war of independence . It's of no importance to us really and that's not because we "lost". My understanding of the situation, and I certainly could be wrong, is that the British thought it wasn't worth the trouble at that time and withdrew.

    • @omegadeep1
      @omegadeep1 4 года назад +17

      We were fighting the French at the time....

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +2

      I will say, that's definitely not the version we heard in school, but I don't know enough about the situation to actually make a claim either way. I need to read some books on the subject!

    • @neilbuckley1613
      @neilbuckley1613 4 года назад +17

      @@omegadeep1 And the Spanish and the Dutch plus there was a hostile armed neutrality of Russia, Sweden, Denmark and Prussia. America started to get low in priorities when Britain itself was threatened with invasion.

    • @georgebritten6666
      @georgebritten6666 4 года назад +17

      Kind of, the defeat at the battle of Yorktown meant that Britain would need to send significant reinforcements to keep the war going. This combined with the fact that even after the war a significant British force would need to remain in America incase of a resurgence, as well as potentially harsh measures to stop dissidence, meant it financially and politically better to sue for peace.
      Britain then deliberately made very favourable concessions to the Colonists during peace talks so that a trade relationship between the 2 countries could form. This was key for Britain as it meant the US were less likely to reinvigorate the French economy, which had been crippled by past wars as well as the American revolutionary war.
      For the British it made little difference in the grand scheme of things, the colonies were an income source as well as a way to compete with other European powers. Britain replaced America with other colonial opportunities building a much larger empire and remained as one of Europe's leading powers. It didn't change much for Britain, whereas it changed a lot for America.
      It's not really taught in schools because it's not as relevant as other events/periods in British history. Things we tend to focus on are the world wars, the war of the roses/Tudor England, the slave trade, the Norman invasion, the Napoleonic wars, the English civil war, the industrial revolution, Roman Britain, the great fire of London, the Guy Fawkes plot, and Colonialism (mainly focusing on parts of Africa and India, although schools don't seem to do that much on colonialism).

    • @ffotograffydd
      @ffotograffydd 4 года назад +10

      We had bigger fish to fry, and the USA only won because of French helped them out. They then thanked France by not paying back their loans and plunging France into a financial crisis, which in turn led to the French Revolution.

  • @mattwestman118
    @mattwestman118 4 года назад +154

    Fun fact: we drive on the left because when we rode horses it made it easier to stab people

    • @gerry54
      @gerry54 4 года назад +1

      Why not the same in France, Mongolia, Italy, etc. etc. etc.?

    • @jonnogriffiths5346
      @jonnogriffiths5346 4 года назад +18

      @@gerry54 We had a problem with highwaymen who would rob people on the road. With most people being right handed it made it easier to defend your self if you rode on the left hand side.

    • @gerry54
      @gerry54 4 года назад +2

      @@jonnogriffiths5346 Nowt to do with highwaymen.
      Plus you didn't actually answer my question... pretty sure those countries would have had highway robbers too.
      Here's the correct answer, though not exactly succinctly put:
      www.worldstandards.eu/cars/driving-on-the-left/

    • @white-dragon4424
      @white-dragon4424 4 года назад +7

      The Romans started us driving on the left hand side because most people are right handed when carrying their weapons. We then carried on the tradition in order to defend ourselves from highwaymen whilst riding horses.

    • @georgebardsley7129
      @georgebardsley7129 4 года назад +3

      Westie Westman
      Ayy the good ole days

  • @Belsfc9999
    @Belsfc9999 4 года назад +4

    I love how Guernsey was on that diagram as that’s where I live and it is almost never included in anything and most people have no idea it exists

    • @jennyhall7240
      @jennyhall7240 3 года назад +1

      haha so true. Filling in dropdown boxes on websites with "hmmm, what option will they give me here" and often incorrectly ticking UK!

    • @helenchelmicka3028
      @helenchelmicka3028 3 года назад

      "I fell off a diving board in Guernsey" lol

  • @yehielyisrael284
    @yehielyisrael284 3 года назад +1

    Eton College is an independent boarding school for boys 13-18, near Windsor in Berkshire founded in 1440 by Henry VI. It is one of the most prestigious; exclusive high class schools in the world.

  • @sage6336
    @sage6336 4 года назад +69

    I think London is to England as New York is to USA

    • @57bananaman
      @57bananaman 4 года назад +6

      @MARK COPLEY … I think you are spot on. I was in a bar in Singapore some 20 years back and got talking to someone from Chicago, I mentioned that I'd been to New York and he told me that New York wasn't "America"!! I'd also been to Los Angeles, apparently that wasn't "America" either. LOL.

    • @TheMaxim10083
      @TheMaxim10083 4 года назад +14

      I am British and here is some insider knowledge. We don't like London that much unless you live in and around London. The further North you go, the greater the hostility is!

    • @thevonya3977
      @thevonya3977 4 года назад +15

      @@TheMaxim10083 As a Brit from Bristol I can concur. I have lived up north, have family from Romford, Oxfordshire and Yorkshire and let me tell you: none of us like going to London. It is an overly crowded tourist trap. I have met Americans that whole-heartedly believe that London is pretty much all there is to see in UK and that everywhere else is just 'quaint villages' (yes, I bloody hate that word. Quaint to us is usually used in a sarcastic sense and literally means 'old fashioned', ie 'out-dated')

    • @TheMaxim10083
      @TheMaxim10083 4 года назад +3

      @@thevonya3977 I have a Tennessee American visit my work place regularly and he was astounded that we were not a fans of London. He also struggled with the fact that within a twenty-five mile radius, we have so many different accents (I'm from Wolverhampton).

    • @JohnSmith-gs3cr
      @JohnSmith-gs3cr 4 года назад

      The Vonya Do you hail from Yorkshire? Your “let me tell you” sounds just like Geoffrey Boycott. Following on for that observation there is the joke. You can always tell a Yorkshireman but, you can’t tell him much. That might also apply to Americans!

  • @Tam19399
    @Tam19399 4 года назад +29

    Regarding the taps, we also invented the plug that goes in the sink.

  • @jamestabbron8124
    @jamestabbron8124 4 года назад +1

    Yeah I never get that, in my house pretty much every tap is one and you can mix it, just a lot of more traditional houses use the two tap thing but it's starting to become a bit dated now.

  • @josephdella-peruta375
    @josephdella-peruta375 4 года назад +2

    The city of Houston, Texas and Houston Street in New York are spelled the same and were named after a set of brothers, yet are pronounced differently.

  • @julietmcneilly6121
    @julietmcneilly6121 4 года назад +26

    I think saying that London isn’t England is because whenever anyone says they’re from England everyone assumes they live in London x

  • @rixsist7048
    @rixsist7048 4 года назад +41

    We Brits love each other’s accents too but for the love of god you don’t TELL the person!

    • @saxx9088
      @saxx9088 4 года назад

      Rix sist there’s a few that people don’t like (looking at you Liverpool) but most of them are fine

    • @antonycharnock2993
      @antonycharnock2993 4 года назад

      @@saxx9088 But dey doo dow dont dey.

    • @nicky6576
      @nicky6576 4 года назад +1

      My Somerset accent gets constantly mocked when I'm outside of the South West. 😂

    • @vkdrk
      @vkdrk 4 года назад

      @@saxx9088 I love Liverpool accent! We had a manager from Liverpool and everyone loved her because of her accent and friendliness

    • @flumpaustin1994
      @flumpaustin1994 3 года назад +1

      Why? I always do. I am English and I never knew it was offensive

  • @paolafattori4357
    @paolafattori4357 4 года назад +1

    I am an Italian teacher of English language and literature in Italy. I find your videos really entertaining and informative, so much so that I'm planning so use some of them in class, to give my students an overview of British and American culture. You said you've been travelling for more than three years around the world but have never, as far as I know, talked about Italy and the Italians. You might have made some fleeting comments here and there... I'd like for you to include some comments in your videos about other European countries, like mine. I believe we are the least nationalist people I've met in my life (and travels). Accents: when I was in the US people kept commenting on my accent, saying that they loved my Italian one sprinkled with British pronunciation of words. By the way, this is the teacher in me and you will forgive my pointing this out, "pronunciation" and "accent" are two very different things. Thank you for your AWESOME (😊) videos. "Inspiring" is the word I would use. Awesome sounds so lazy, like when someone says "tremendous" all the time.

  • @duggtechenterprises
    @duggtechenterprises 4 года назад +4

    I don't want to be that person who answers all the questions, so I'm going to hold back, but I feel like I need to say something about the whole talking to people in London situation. Sorry this has turned into an essay! I grew up in London, have lived here forever, and honestly it's just not true about not talking to anyone. I feel like I'm giving away a big secret but it's all about context and timing. I think that wherever you go in the world there are people who just do not want to talk to strangers and there are people that do. The rest of the UK is no different, even though London is often singled out. In London however, depending which part you are in and what time of day it is, you may come across the people who are not up for a chat as they are trying to get to or from work. As a London commuter myself, this is the time of day where you really just want a little space to yourself and the travel may be the only place and time you get it. so it is nice to just keep quiet and switch off. Though personally I think it is rude if you completely ignore someone, they may be lost and need help. Other times though if you approach someone politely with a question then more than likely they will answer. If it is public transport try to go for a member of staff as you may be in a tourist area and accidentally ask another tourist who may not understand. London is also very multicultural and people just may not speak your language. Again just ask politely there is no harm. Most locals I know are more than happy to help anyone and talk to anyone, in public spaces and on public transport when they are asked politely. A little bit of kindness goes a long way. Some of the best people I've met from other cultures and places are through random chats around town in all different places. Some people do come across as surprised you are talking to them but that's just it, we're are so used to everyone saying that we won't talk to anyone that we feel nobody wants to talk to us. As you can probably tell from this comment I could talk forever to anyone, so I'll stop there as I'm sure I've reached peak annoying comment level.
    ...just lastly, not to give the game away but Londoners are awesome, and built on the back of immigration you don't need to be born here just to be a Londoner; just come and live here and love her, she's an awesome place, and I'm super proud of her :)

    • @philroberts7238
      @philroberts7238 3 года назад +1

      You're spot on, Emma. Thanks for posting.

  • @awhite3747
    @awhite3747 4 года назад +27

    Generally speaking, a 'burgh' (as in Edinburgh) historically refers to the presence of a castle. This has Germanic roots (Burg: castle, Berg: mountain). And yes, there is an old word still used for an official which is Burgher 😁.
    Towns/cities with 'cester', 'chester' or 'caster' in the name also refers to the presence of a castle but is Roman Latin in origin.
    (PS: those castles may have long gone or only bits survived!)

    • @w0033944
      @w0033944 3 года назад +2

      Doesn't "Burgh" usually refer to a fortified enclosure?

    • @mikedakin2016
      @mikedakin2016 3 года назад

      @@w0033944yes, my girlfriend has a fur 'burgh' 😤

  • @braces2
    @braces2 4 года назад +25

    Great video.
    London isn't England in the same way that New York isn't the USA.

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +1

      Thank you!

    • @simonbonella-foster4747
      @simonbonella-foster4747 4 года назад +2

      I've had several American's ( when realising I was English) ask "oh what part of London are you from?". They just seem confused when I say I live 170 miles away, nowhere near London. So it's almost as is they assume all of England is London. Maybe it's just a case of not knowing many other towns or cities? But it would be like every Brit asking you guys which part of New York you are from just because you are American.
      Then they always follow up with "Do you know the Queen?" 🙄

  • @GiveMeBackMyUsernameYouTube
    @GiveMeBackMyUsernameYouTube 3 года назад +2

    Personally I like when people mention my accent. I'm told I'm very well spoken and I appreciate that others seem to find it entertaining or noteworthy even if I don't hear it myself and hate the sound of my own voice as most of us do. That's probably why I get volunteered by my bosses to be the one to do interviews whenever the TV or Radio people are at my place of work.

  • @TheBrowncoatcat
    @TheBrowncoatcat Год назад

    In most British restaurants there is a desk by the door, where you are greeted by a manager who tells you if there is a table free, or if you have to wait. However, in a pub that serves bar foods, you chose a table, which usually has a menu on it. Then have to go to the bar to get a drink, telling the person behind the bar your table number.

  • @charlestaylor9424
    @charlestaylor9424 4 года назад +90

    In British history the US rebellion was a sideshow.- we were dealing with the French

    • @geoffpriestley7001
      @geoffpriestley7001 4 года назад +25

      It wasnt that we lost. i think we ran away it was like leaving your badly behaved kids at the railway station

    • @theunspun7096
      @theunspun7096 4 года назад +6

      We had bigger fish to fry. Or frog

    • @Tam19399
      @Tam19399 4 года назад +2

      And the Dutch and Spanish.

    • @baylessnow
      @baylessnow 4 года назад +12

      @@geoffpriestley7001 As Al Murray says, "They call it a win we call it we call it a lucky foocking escape!"

    • @Georgexb
      @Georgexb 4 года назад +1

      Although we did set fire to the white house before we left, meaning they had to bleach it which is why it’s called the white house.

  • @notnotjase7909
    @notnotjase7909 4 года назад +43

    I'd love to see you guys pronouncing some Welsh town names! (Cymru Am Byth!)
    You thought England and Scotland were tricky! 😂😂

    • @nevillemason6791
      @nevillemason6791 4 года назад +1

      No one English can pronounce even the more straightforward ones correctly so Americans would have no chance. People from Liverpool (about 40% of whom have Welsh ancestry) holiday in North Wales and go to 'Betts-e-co-ed' which is a completely wrong pronunciation. Llanidloes? I've absolutely no idea!

    • @badkitty4922
      @badkitty4922 3 года назад +1

      American here. I live in an area of Pennsylvania where there are cities/towns such as: Bala Cynwyd, Bryn Mawr, Llanerch, and Bryn Athyn, just to name a few. There are PLENTY of Americans, even fellow Pennsylvanians that can't even pronounce those names.

    • @jacobarmour6325
      @jacobarmour6325 3 года назад +1

      dwi'n gwybod fy mod i ychydig yn hwyr ond helo cyd-berson Cymreig dwi'n meddwl y dylen ni goncro Lloegr a gwneud ymerodraeth Cymru. Poggers

    • @treefrog1018
      @treefrog1018 2 года назад

      I am going to visit Llandudno [Edit: Also Penmaenmawr] in 2022. I have been practicing how to pronounce these cities. 😆
      But my mate in Llandudno has told me they don't even say their own Welsh words correctly so...I like to think I will be just fine.

    • @steelpanther9568
      @steelpanther9568 Год назад

      It’s like when your a tourist visiting Wales, but get lost around Anglesey, Whilst trying to pronounce Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch,
      The local train station says,
      Llan-vire-pooll-guin-gill-go-ger-u-queern-drob-ooll-Llandus-illio-gogo-goch,
      Which is still quite a tongue twister for those that have a PHD in English to pronounce,
      But if you say,
      ‘Clan-vire-pulth-gwin-gwith-go-gerry-quin-drobe-eth-clan-tysilio-go-go-gockh,
      You sound more like you have made an effort to sound Welsh,
      🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🤣👍🏼

  • @Jamie_D
    @Jamie_D 3 года назад

    I like it how you used some of your place names to help explain what you meant :)
    I'm not someone who would expect visiting Americans or any other visitors for that matter,to be able to pronounce place names here,but was surprised I only got 1 of yours totally right (some were close)

  • @hjr2000
    @hjr2000 3 года назад +1

    I love striking up conversation with people on the train! If you do it subtly and in a 'graded' way then people can open up, eventually. But I like to be 'out there' a bit hahahaha

  • @qb-h792
    @qb-h792 4 года назад +17

    I think the accent thing is how it is said, like I’ve heard a lot of Americans say “you have an accent” or “they have an accent” and I think it comes across as if they think the American accent is the only accent and that other accents are weird to them.

  • @johnellis6569
    @johnellis6569 4 года назад +14

    I don’ t agree that we don’t like it when people say “we love your accent”. It certainly wouldn’t bother me, in fact I think most people would take it a a compliment.

  • @janebutler8456
    @janebutler8456 3 года назад +1

    You've both mentioned in several videos now that we don't talk to strangers on public transport but in the south West. Like Devon and Cornwall. People are really friendly and will talk to you.

    • @gogogeedus
      @gogogeedus 3 года назад +1

      Good on you Cornwall and Devon!

  • @MrStarfire11
    @MrStarfire11 4 года назад

    also in terms of how service works theres a few different ways. usually if you walk in and there is an area for someone to take you to your seats and give you menus, it's considered extremely rude to just go and seat yourselves. if they seat you it also typically means you'll get full table service. if its generally a pub they might have two areas, one which is more of a restaurant where you'll be seated and waited on, and one which usually looks a little bit more informal and comfortable where you'd order drinks but can still order food from the main menu, but you order and pay at the same time at the bar and they'll bring it over to you but thats it. then there's also this weird mix that happens sometimes in nice cafes where you enter the cafe and seat yourselves, but someone will come over to your table and give you table service. or sometimes an even weirder mix is you enter and seat yourself, but go up to order what you want from the bar, but you dont pay for it then and they provide table service. this is again mainly in those nice cafes.
    it can get a little confusing at times but generally if its a restaurant you'll get table service everytime. if its a bar you just order food and drink and pay and sit down somewhere yourself. and if its a cafe it could be either or a mix of the two. best bet if you're not sure is when you walk in just ask "Hi, shall i wait to be seated?" and they'll let you know how it works. hope this helps!

  • @danielcarr5716
    @danielcarr5716 4 года назад +62

    I feel like this generally comes down to: "don't treat our culture/country as your own personal theme park attraction."
    Also, I feel like it's okay to pronounce 'Alcester' incorrectly, but pronouncing major cities incorrectly (e.g Glasgow) is annoying because it shows you don't really care about out culture. It would be like turning up in the USA and calling New York "The Big Orange" all the time, you'd be like "dude, how do you not know that!"

    • @thomas_hobbs1453
      @thomas_hobbs1453 3 года назад +1

      Come on dude, don't be ridiculous. New York is world famous. It's the financial capital of the world my man. It's the greatest city in the whole entire world. Comparing New York to Glasgow is like comparing Pizza to Haggis. Get it??

    • @brendenjohnston7946
      @brendenjohnston7946 3 года назад +2

      This guy.

    • @mike12jrw1111113
      @mike12jrw1111113 Год назад

      Get over yourself. Everyone does that going to a new country. Including brits.

  • @colinward51
    @colinward51 4 года назад +17

    When we went on Holiday to friends in Utah we had a lot of "Oh I love your accent" it didn't bother us at all

  • @rogerhuggettjr.7675
    @rogerhuggettjr.7675 3 года назад +2

    I enjoy accents and I feel that any time I have a genuine nice thing to say its selfish to keep it to myself. I'm from Minnesota and don't feel I have an accent which makes me appreciate the difference more.

  • @boobic55
    @boobic55 3 года назад +1

    I am a Scot living in England and quite often I am told by strangers when they hear me talk that they like my accent. On my trips to the USA I frequently was told by strangers they loved my accent frequently asking 'are you Scottish'? and once a barmaid asked me that and said if I talked to her she'd keep my glass topped up all night. I love it and see it as a big compliment.
    As for the mispronunciation of Edinburgh and Glasgow then it is 'Edinburruh' and Glas-go although a Glaswegian (me) would actually pronounce it Glez-gie (rhymes with 'me')

  • @andyg3
    @andyg3 4 года назад +26

    i would see quaint as a compliment. but i wouldnt use it for everything.
    an old county village would be quaint. london isnt

  • @ChrisBetton
    @ChrisBetton 4 года назад +38

    "Why is London not England"
    Culturally it is entirely different in London than everywhere else. The accent is nothing like the accents spoken elsewhere in England, it is prioritised beyond belief politically because parliament is there and it has so many constituencies within a small space so it has loads of MPs representing it whereas the rest of the country is no where near as represented, people don't like visiting because it's dirty, the people are far less friendly than everywhere else, and it's extremely expensive. Also, it's just grey, but the rest of England is full of beautiful green plains, hills and lakes! London is so unlike everywhere else in England and is deeply unpleasant by comparison.

    • @Georgexb
      @Georgexb 4 года назад +3

      London isn’t over represented as such, it’s just that the population density is much higher an constituency lines (how many MPs per area) are based on population not area size. Orkney and shetland for example is represented by only one MP.

    • @BobHUK
      @BobHUK 4 года назад +4

      Chris, then there's also the fact that only a small minority of Londoners are actually of English or even British descent. London is a melting pot of cultures from around the world. This is borne out by the fact that over 400 different languages are spoken by children attending schools in London. In the rest of the UK the most number of languages in schools, even in the big cities is much much less than 100, and usually less than 10.
      I don't know of any other city in the world that has so many different cultures all crammed into such a small space. I know that Tokyo is home to over 40 million people and some of the larger cities in South and Middle America have more than 30 million inhabitants, but none of them are so culturally diverse as in London. So it's no wonder that London isn't representative of the rest of the UK. It's a separate country almost, with very little in common with the rest of the country it's the capital city of.

    • @Georgexb
      @Georgexb 4 года назад +3

      Robert Hood That’s not true. Only 37% of London’s population was born outside the UK, and 44% is white british.

  • @whitedesires
    @whitedesires 4 года назад +1

    22:04
    Have you guys ever been to Vienna once and have tried the coffee there?
    I'm from Austria and I don't know if it's good enough for Eric, because I only know the coffee in that area, but I found it tasty when I was in a coffee shop in this city.
    Vienna got lots of coffee shops where you can buy cake and sweet buns or something similar to that as well. I think, there isn't even a word for them in English, especially not for all of them. No kidding, the culture of baked stuff or food in general is insane in Austria and kinda a shock for everyone from abroad.
    Everyone says that Germany is like the craziest place to go if you like bread or meat (which it is for everyone else than Austrians) but personally, I believe, Austria tops that.
    Maybe you can get good coffee (and all kinds of bread) in Austria, but if don't, you still have your coffee grinder (or whatever this thing is...)
    Hopefully, you can understand what I've written, because I'm still learning English and cannot say if I always use the correct grammer... Sorry for that. *nervously laughing*

  • @leahhoare1186
    @leahhoare1186 3 года назад

    The reason we drive on the left side of the road is because that used to be the jousting side, we also drive on the right of the car because in the UK we are predominantly right handed so we can have our strong hand on the wheel at all times and shift gear with our left as the majority of our cars are manual

  • @Silver0Tree
    @Silver0Tree 4 года назад +17

    I NEVER have a problem with visitors pronouncing place names wrong, our place names are mental, they've all been cobbled together and evolved over hundreds of years, even we don't know how to pronounce the name of some little village somewhere on the other side of the country, lol 😄 As a visitor it's fine to just turn round to anyone and ask how to pronounce it, most people will be genuinely happy you asked. The 'not speaking to anyone on public transport' thing is really just London (and even there old ladies will just talk to whoever they want, old ladies are probably the same the world over 😂 ); people seem to get friendlier and more chatty the further out of London you get.

    • @wetcardie66
      @wetcardie66 3 года назад +1

      also cups of tea stert to taste different

    • @Silver0Tree
      @Silver0Tree 3 года назад +1

      @@wetcardie66 Yes, it starts tasting better 😄

  • @freyjarichardson1519
    @freyjarichardson1519 4 года назад +21

    It annoys me when people are like "oh but all of the UK is England" or they say it's just all the same thing. Like it's not. Also the UK and Britain keeps being used interchangeably. Our official name is the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. It's even on the passports like how do some people not get that.

    • @MonkeyButtMovies1
      @MonkeyButtMovies1 4 года назад +6

      "Wales is in England though isn't it?" no it fucking isn't.

    • @valeriedavidson2785
      @valeriedavidson2785 4 года назад +2

      I totally totally agree!!

    • @freyjarichardson1519
      @freyjarichardson1519 4 года назад +2

      @@MonkeyButtMovies1 I'm English so I've never had that but judging by your username I'm guessing you watched Torchwood and if so remember in miracle day when Gwen says she's Welsh and punches the woman (if you haven't ignore me 😂)

    • @caitlinmastropietro8603
      @caitlinmastropietro8603 4 года назад

      I totally get that, but we don’t like learn about it, if that makes sense, like we learn geography and important and overlapping history but beyond the little knowledge we have comes from media. To Americans, it’s like a thing that being ‘British’ is synonymous with being ‘English’. It really confused me when I was younger like if someone would prefer being called British to or by the country they are born in. It’s also a cultural thing that like I could say I’m Pennsylvanian but that’s kinda weird and people generally just say they are ‘American’. We just aren’t really directly exposed to your culture beyond tv shows like doctor who, skins, the Great British bake off, downtown abbey, killing eve, Sherlock, whatever shows up on Netflix or something by Jane Austin or Shakespeare. So, it’s really just isn’t knowledge that we have/also cultural ignorance for not looking up enough information to know the actual difference

    • @dianeleitch9160
      @dianeleitch9160 4 года назад +1

      @@caitlinmastropietro8603 you wouldn't call a Pennsylvanian a Virginian. So why do Americans call people from Scotland, English?

  • @billiegrey5834
    @billiegrey5834 4 года назад +3

    i genuinely enjoy and respect your content, love your energy and outlook. elite people

  • @arlmondgcalcutt6562
    @arlmondgcalcutt6562 10 дней назад

    Taps & piped water supply was available from 18th/19th century onwards & consisted of cold drinking water - domestic water heaters came 19th/20th century- so old houses have seperate taps and domestic boilers added hot water - houses built after WW2 used mixer taps

  • @TwoOnions275
    @TwoOnions275 4 года назад +15

    I had a Swiss mate that used to joke that there were two ways to do something: the Swiss way or the wrong way.

    • @paulwallace4332
      @paulwallace4332 3 года назад

      I like the Swiss knives that can get horses' hooves out of stones.

  • @InsomniaticDND
    @InsomniaticDND 4 года назад +11

    I am from the Midlands in England and I love being complemented on my accent, makes me feel exotic! I also think quaint can be a complement 😊

  • @petere2828
    @petere2828 3 года назад

    I'm a Brit. The reason why UK often has separate hot and cold taps: Cold water comes directly from the city water supply. Hot water comes from a tank in the roof which 'could' have a dead bird in it. The idea is that if the hot and cold are connected, the contamined hot water could flow back into the cold water system and poisen others. So UK has a Law that the hot and cold must be completely separated. But I'm sure it's outdated. Surely modern tap systems can have a valve that prevents this happening. Whether it makes sense today, that is the reason. We also have a law that a shower head over a bath must not be able to drop into the bath. If this happens, a syphoning system could cause dirty bath water to get sucked back into the clean city cold water system. The Bristish remains the country with the most advanced approach to Health and Safety. As a Brit who has visited and lived in many other countries, I know this. That is also the reason why we have the on/off switch on our electrical sockets, why we have a string to switch on the light in the bathroom, and why we don't allow electrical sockets in the bathroom (all so we can't get electrocuted)!

  • @livhayes608
    @livhayes608 4 года назад +1

    Just want to thank you for your videos, they're really interesting and respectful of all cultures. And while I'd actually love it if someone complimented my accent, I doubt they would as I'm a Brummie 😂

  • @WanderingRavens
    @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +16

    Thank you to all the subscribers who suggested faux pas for this video! We appreciate all of you! ❤️️❤️️

  • @EstEsreil
    @EstEsreil 4 года назад +29

    “Do you not learn about the American war independence?” I went to the only school in this country that didn't teach about the French Revolution, let alone the American one. Intead, I was busy learning about witchcraft in the 1500's several times.
    Edit: As a joke, I call the American Revolution "the divorce of the Georges."

    • @paulwallace4332
      @paulwallace4332 3 года назад +3

      Yeah, at least some Presidents were English. And you have the Union Flag on some of your own flags.

    • @trevormillar1576
      @trevormillar1576 2 года назад +1

      Future generations won't learn about Vietnam or Afghanistan because YOU GOT YOUR ASSES KICKED OUT OF BOTH! And you wonder why our schools don't teach about 1776? And another thing WE kicked YOUR asses in 1815 New Orleans didn't t count because Jefferson had already signed the surrender so there!

    • @charleshowie2074
      @charleshowie2074 2 года назад

      @@trevormillar1576 No one is entitled to bragging rights when it comes to the war of 1812.

    • @gillcawthorn7572
      @gillcawthorn7572 2 года назад

      The American War of Independence fades away into the other wars we were fighting at the same time ,against the French (Napolion) ,Spanish ( Peninsula Wars) etc which we won, so a little thing like your war just isn`t considered at all important

    • @charleshowie2074
      @charleshowie2074 2 года назад

      @@gillcawthorn7572 We were not fighting Napoleon in 1775. Please don't make us look like chumps in front of the Americans, old boy...

  • @joshsheff7189
    @joshsheff7189 3 года назад +2

    As Al Murray said, you say we lost the war if independence, we say it was a lucky escape. 😉😂🤣

  • @zennmyst5347
    @zennmyst5347 3 года назад +1

    You called it a rucksack. I so love you! X TY

  • @spadeface8500
    @spadeface8500 4 года назад +57

    As far as i know, I never learnt much about the US war of independence 'cause we've had shit loads more important wars. Like the 7 years war, The wars against Spain, Both world wars, The roman wars, Vikings and the English Civil war. At least, that was my school history experience. The war of American Independence seemed more a footnote than something important.

    • @thevonya3977
      @thevonya3977 4 года назад +10

      Added wars that we normally learn at school: The Napoleonic Wars, The Crusades and of course the Norman Conquests that shaped the early Kingdom

    • @garethalbans
      @garethalbans 4 года назад +5

      To paraphrase Al Murray (lots of hilarious clips on You Tube) 'a bit of a lucky escape'.

    • @TheRagingStorm98
      @TheRagingStorm98 4 года назад +1

      It really was a sideshow the main war. Perhaps we would of went back but then India kind of became the place to be

    • @alexwright4930
      @alexwright4930 4 года назад +4

      I initially learnt about the American War of Independence off American cartoons like Simpsons.
      And picked up more about the American Civil War from cultural osmosis than I've ever learned about the English Civil War.

    • @jeffburnham6611
      @jeffburnham6611 4 года назад +1

      @Spade Face so how does one explain the British fighting in North America, based out of the American Colonies, then suddenly losing all 13 of them? Sounds like a pretty important piece of history and not a side note lol.

  • @thomasacratopulo8114
    @thomasacratopulo8114 4 года назад +38

    Eton is an old boarding school. Many royals and wealthy people send their sons their.

    • @WanderingRavens
      @WanderingRavens  4 года назад +6

      Thank you for answering our question!

    • @franksierow5792
      @franksierow5792 4 года назад +6

      Eton is pronounced 'eaten'.

    • @hannalee5756
      @hannalee5756 4 года назад +3

      And that's old by our standards - 1440!

    • @thomaslowdon5510
      @thomaslowdon5510 4 года назад +5

      Its a very high end education and high success rate but you pay big bucks to attend..then you qualify as a gentleman of the highest order...

    • @willswomble7274
      @willswomble7274 4 года назад +1

      There!

  • @paullangton-rogers2390
    @paullangton-rogers2390 3 года назад

    That's interesting the difference on quaint. It isn't necessarily bad here, it depends on the context and how it's used.