What's socially acceptable in the US that would be horrifying in the UK? - Ask Reddit

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  • Опубліковано 22 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 9 тис.

  • @evan
    @evan  3 роки тому +1630

    Imma make a community video based on this one so comment away!

    • @jwec9867
      @jwec9867 3 роки тому +13

      Not everyone is a butter monster. I only know one and we shame them every time they add butter for no reason.

    • @joshglynn7811
      @joshglynn7811 3 роки тому +25

      I don't understand how americans say they'll 'write you' instead of saying they'll 'write TO you'. It doesn't make sense

    • @tals.8960
      @tals.8960 3 роки тому +7

      @@joshglynn7811 Do you say "I'll call you" ? It's like that :)
      What's always gotten me is how Brits say things like "I will do" or "I have done", when in the States we say "I will" or "I have." Just shortening it a diff way I suppose. But it just sounds odd to my ear is all 😅

    • @martynapiwowarczyk4325
      @martynapiwowarczyk4325 3 роки тому +19

      If someone uses butter on a burger bun instead of sauces, then yeah that's weird, but in my mind, you butter the buns because you wanna toast the buns on the pan before making the burger! Do you make your burgers with untoasted buns?? If yes... I feel sad for you. Please toast your buns.

    • @HF-tj8db
      @HF-tj8db 3 роки тому +12

      One thing about the US that I’ll never understand is no uniform at schools. Please tell me how a child is meant to dress themselves appropriately every day. I had such a culture shock when I started sixth form and had to wear my own clothes everyday- it was just a flurry of once-used clothes being thrown across my room trying to find something new to wear.

  • @ampersandcastle1091
    @ampersandcastle1091 3 роки тому +11705

    If a waiter ever takes my credit card out of my sight, I would assume I was being robbed lol

    • @Lee-bv7tj
      @Lee-bv7tj 3 роки тому +276

      Right!

    • @ohawwgeez3112
      @ohawwgeez3112 3 роки тому +418

      Yes, I’m American and this was always bizarre to me.

    • @gerardacronin334
      @gerardacronin334 3 роки тому +413

      It’s a security issue. The US financial institutions held back on implementing chip and pin technology as long as possible to save money. They reckoned that the cost of reimbursing customers who had their credit cards hacked was acceptable. Here in Canada we have been using the point of sale terminals with chip and pin for many years. I do not let my credit card out of my sight. I got hacked twice in years past, once in the US and once in Brazil.

    • @pghrpg4065
      @pghrpg4065 3 роки тому +25

      @@gerardacronin334 Every time I'm in Canada, I comment on this to the servers.

    • @LiqdPT
      @LiqdPT 3 роки тому +40

      @@gerardacronin334 us still doesn't have chip and pin. We have chip and signature. So the terminals will never happen.

  • @jessemusker
    @jessemusker 3 роки тому +1871

    the religion thing I find so weird because we literally don't have separation of church and state in the uk, technically every school is Christian unless stated other wise AND YET we don't include religion in our politics ever

    • @audreyodonnell166
      @audreyodonnell166 3 роки тому +66

      In America we don’t always say it’s religious in politics but if you agree with a b and c your a Christian and it can get very polarized

    • @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
      @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 3 роки тому +25

      We can be a little theocratic oftentimes

    • @rachelcookie321
      @rachelcookie321 3 роки тому +48

      How is every school Christian? I went to a state school and religion was never a part of that. My cousin went to a Christian school though and they did like religious studies and worship and stuff.

    • @jessemusker
      @jessemusker 3 роки тому +132

      @@rachelcookie321 unless you went to a specifically atheist school it was technically religious. Only technically though, like in theory every school should have prayer time but it's not enforced at all. I think every school is supposed to have RE in some form though up until like yr 9. This is my point though, despite technically England being a Christian country it's effectively secular which is the opposite of america

    • @rachelcookie321
      @rachelcookie321 3 роки тому +10

      @@jessemusker I’m wondering what makes the schools Christian though?

  • @redthroatedloon
    @redthroatedloon 2 роки тому +505

    When my (British) parents were living in the states, they knew someone named Randy Balls. They thought it was hilarious, and even funnier that no one else thought anything of it.

    • @dodgechance4564
      @dodgechance4564 3 місяці тому +5

      perfect

    • @kumoric
      @kumoric 2 місяці тому +9

      god forbid they move to the UK 😅

    • @kellineil
      @kellineil 2 місяці тому +5

      was he really spunky?

    • @timoakley277
      @timoakley277 Місяць тому +5

      Not to mention the NASCAR driver Dick Trickle....😂

  • @ZoeBateman
    @ZoeBateman 2 роки тому +505

    With the train one shouting "hold the door"
    YES. You're absolutely supposed to wait for another train. Don't screw other people over by making them wait just because YOU were late

    • @katbryce
      @katbryce 2 роки тому +72

      And it is not just the people on that train, it is the people on every train on the line for the rest of the day.

    • @esmeraldagreengate4354
      @esmeraldagreengate4354 2 роки тому +6

      In Australia we have specific words for train drivers that leave the station when they can see you running for the train.

    • @OnlyGrafting
      @OnlyGrafting 2 роки тому +18

      @@esmeraldagreengate4354 legends

    • @emberthecatgirl8796
      @emberthecatgirl8796 2 роки тому +49

      If it’s an actual train, like, suburban rail that goes twice an hour, then yeah, fine.
      But the tube? It’s literally 3-5 minutes wait in most cases, for god’s sake!

    • @Evie0h
      @Evie0h 2 роки тому +6

      @@emberthecatgirl8796 that makes a lot of sense for that, that’s fair. Over here you miss the stop and boom, your late for whatever it was by at least 15-30 min if your lucky

  • @darriendastar3941
    @darriendastar3941 3 роки тому +2957

    A friend of mine worked in a primary school. All the kids called him 'Miss' because he was the only male teacher and they thought 'Miss' is what you called teachers. After the first six months, he gave up trying to correct them.

    • @taboodorito
      @taboodorito 3 роки тому +266

      Never heard of people calling primary teachers miss or sir, it was only in secondary. In primary you address them with mr, miss, mrs (insert name).

    • @doedelzz
      @doedelzz 3 роки тому +155

      That is so cute haha ☺️

    • @darriendastar3941
      @darriendastar3941 3 роки тому +78

      @@taboodorito I think it probably varies from school to school.

    • @honorcollins6962
      @honorcollins6962 3 роки тому +35

      That’s so cute

    • @andybaker2456
      @andybaker2456 3 роки тому +53

      That's hilarious! 😆
      All through my school years (primary included), teachers were miss or sir. We did have a couple of teachers at my secondary school who wanted to feel like they were one of the lads and allowed us to use their first names, although I don't think any of us were really comfortable with that. Even now, my school has a Facebook group of which a handful of our teachers are members, and many of us struggle to respond to their comments using their first names, even though we're all now grown adults with families and proper lives of our own!
      The only difference for me between primary and secondary school was when we referred to teachers amongst ourselves. In primary we'd refer to them as Mr/Mrs/Miss Whoever, but in secondary school we only ever used their surnames.

  • @alexbenjamin9372
    @alexbenjamin9372 3 роки тому +3333

    As a brit being called Sir in the US makes me feel incredibly important and fancy, it’s almost unnecessarily polite

    • @chelseasmith5169
      @chelseasmith5169 3 роки тому +145

      When I was working retail and got called ma'am instead of miss I knew there was no going back 😭

    • @surpriseitscaz
      @surpriseitscaz 3 роки тому +46

      @@chelseasmith5169 Yep, I always hate getting called ma'am or madam! It's like, you don't need to call me anything, so please don't remind me how ancient I am. I like when I go home to Glasgow and I might get called 'hen' or 'doll', which are un age-related.

    • @a8552bc
      @a8552bc 3 роки тому +1

      Yeah

    • @chelseasmith5169
      @chelseasmith5169 3 роки тому +12

      @jojofromtx Canada. Men get called Sir, it's generic or there's no identifier typically. There's been a transition I noticed in my son's school as well though. All female teachers are Madam not Miss, Ms and Madam now

    • @chelseasmith5169
      @chelseasmith5169 3 роки тому +8

      @@surpriseitscaz yes! My gran was from Edinburgh. I miss being called pet and sweet all the time. If people were to try that here there would be a massive uproar against terms of endearment

  • @crazyminegamer2339
    @crazyminegamer2339 2 роки тому +777

    Watching this as an Australian was kinda funny. I swear, we’re the secret love child of these two countries.

    • @annikaotto6117
      @annikaotto6117 2 роки тому +8

      😂

    • @RealSubtle
      @RealSubtle 2 роки тому +51

      I can't believe he brought up the drop bears. Thankfully our secret hoop snakes haven't been revealed.

    • @jefftitterington7600
      @jefftitterington7600 2 роки тому +16

      Same with Canada. (Have you SEEN our snow snakes??)

    • @kevinfletcher1999
      @kevinfletcher1999 2 роки тому

      Hmmm….. The British sent their criminals to Australia and their religious nutters to America. Australia got the better deal.

    • @FemtoTheFox
      @FemtoTheFox 2 роки тому +3

      actually true mate

  • @alexarcano
    @alexarcano 2 роки тому +274

    I've always used the word Dinky to mean something small, I even named my cat Dinky, many, many years ago. So I looked it up.
    Dinky:
    attractively small and neat.
    "a dinky little restaurant"

    • @robpaige2376
      @robpaige2376 Рік тому +37

      Not forgetting that mainstay of British toy companies, Dinky Toys, whose entire product line is of cars etc made at a vastly reduced scale.

    • @HelenOfOz
      @HelenOfOz Рік тому +16

      Sth Australian - I always thought dinky is small and cute, or a valued small toy

    • @fuzzbox3912
      @fuzzbox3912 6 місяців тому +7

      yep dinky is small and cute

    • @Roadent1241
      @Roadent1241 2 місяці тому +3

      My friend affectionately calls me Dinky. I'm a 4ft8 dwarf, they're like 5ft10, it makes sense XD

    • @timtheconjurer
      @timtheconjurer Місяць тому +3

      Dinky has always meant small, to me.

  • @SirBradiator
    @SirBradiator 3 роки тому +5233

    The waiter taking your card is not about convenience its about security. When the waiter takes your card away out of your sight you don't know if they are swiping the details from it. That's why in the UK they bring the payment terminal to the table.

    • @krzlcve
      @krzlcve 3 роки тому +193

      i've never heard of a waiter risking their job and livelihood to snoop on one customers card 😭

    • @SirBradiator
      @SirBradiator 3 роки тому +711

      @@krzlcve it wouldn't be worth it for one customers card, but if they did it to every customer they serve it could be lucrative. It can and does happen. That's why I would never let my card out my sight.

    • @fionagilbert2247
      @fionagilbert2247 3 роки тому +269

      Yeah I agree, I would worry my card was being cloned if it was ever out if my sight.

    • @WhichDoctor1
      @WhichDoctor1 3 роки тому +304

      Yes exactly. There was a lot of stuff in the news a couple decades or so back when people started getting their cards cloned. It was drummed into me as a teenager, never give your card to anyone, they give the machine to you. Sometimes in smaller companies with old machines you have to put the card in the machine and then they take it back to input the charge, and even when the card is in the machine and never leaves my sight that still makes me uncomfortable. The idea of some random person just walking off with my card to another room would stress me out soo much. They could be doing anything with it.

    • @chrislyne377
      @chrislyne377 3 роки тому +150

      @@krzlcve It does happen. There are cloing machines where they swipe your card to copy its details. Even without one of these machines they could just take photos of the front and back of your card and hey presto, online credit card theft. I was always taught to never ever let my card out of my sight.

  • @johnking6624
    @johnking6624 2 роки тому +74

    In the UK we call an eraser a rubber. A friend of mine was doing pencil sketches and went into the hotel reception and asked if they had a rubber. He nearly got thrown out! The receptionist didn't like being asked if she had got a condom.

    • @Bramfly
      @Bramfly 2 місяці тому +9

      Also weird nothing wrong with protection

    • @sarahprosecco
      @sarahprosecco 27 днів тому +4

      I got kicked out of a class secondary school for asking the guy in front of me for a rubber 🙄 more so the teachers mindset than mine. Nobody was even sniggering let alone myself 😅
      But being offended for asking for a condom is also ridiculous 😂

    • @drewdabbs418
      @drewdabbs418 15 днів тому +2

      I mean it's quite inappropriate depending on the setting. Obviously excluding a genuine mistake.

  • @cecilialeitet2794
    @cecilialeitet2794 2 роки тому +122

    Im from Scandinavia and Im with the brits on the whole ”butter on bread” thing. First thing that goes on the bread when making a sandwich is butter.

    • @EleonorS
      @EleonorS 2 роки тому +5

      Obviously!

    • @stephenderry9488
      @stephenderry9488 2 роки тому +14

      We Brits are absolutely fastidious about the rule that bread MUST be buttered. The surprising thing is how flexible we are about the definition of butter, to the extent that a product that explicitly states in its name that it is (unbelievably) NOT butter, nevertheless counts as butter.

    • @missharry5727
      @missharry5727 2 місяці тому +7

      Bread for sandwiches needs butter. I don't want mayo in a sandwich, it needs lubrication. A cheese and tomato sandwich is too dry without butter.

    • @Roadent1241
      @Roadent1241 2 місяці тому

      ​@@missharry5727Exactly! I've tried doing a Marmite sandwich without butter. Could not spread it and it was super gloopy.

    • @fruitynyanko7316
      @fruitynyanko7316 Місяць тому +1

      @@Roadent1241 you made me crave marmite toast. I have eaten the marmite toast.

  • @EasterWitch
    @EasterWitch 3 роки тому +1820

    I am a Scandinavian who lived in England for a year, and I thought shop clerks and servers were way too nice. I had no idea if they were being genuine, doing their job or if they were flirting with me... If they are even friendlier in America I don't think I could handle it!

    • @usezasedn
      @usezasedn 3 роки тому +98

      Same! It took me ages to get used to the level of service in the uk. British people get really defensive when this is brought up though lol

    • @WhichDoctor1
      @WhichDoctor1 3 роки тому +227

      As a brit who spent a year in Sweden it was remarkable how often the cashiers barely even acknowledged my existence 🤣

    • @tina.InTheSkyWithDiamonds
      @tina.InTheSkyWithDiamonds 3 роки тому +148

      Same! I'm German. Had a huge culture shock in the UK... And I never knew if they were really interested in how my day was or not 😂

    • @jaymercer4692
      @jaymercer4692 3 роки тому +49

      A lot of these things brought up like the lack of sugar in things and the way we supposedly walk everywhere we’re things I thought were problems about our country. We have way too much sugar jam packed foods and we use our cars a lot, I suppose both of those things are things our country is trying to push to go towards the better but I never thought anywhere could consider us to be successful in this. I guess it’s more of a statement on the obesity crisis and lack of concern for the environment in the US than anything.

    • @AlienValkyrie
      @AlienValkyrie 3 роки тому +4

      Based on this as well as your channel name, I presume you're Finnish?

  • @RubyMadigan
    @RubyMadigan 3 роки тому +6564

    You know what's weirder than calling random people sir? When I see American kids calling their parents Sir and Ma'am. It's weird. They're your parents!

    • @usezasedn
      @usezasedn 3 роки тому +1239

      So weird! It gives me abuse vibes

    • @harding0010
      @harding0010 3 роки тому +155

      Its called manners.

    • @hiitsevelyn341
      @hiitsevelyn341 3 роки тому +867

      thats weird. i live in america and i've never called my parents sir/ma'am. those kids must have really strict parents, because no one here that i know has ever called their parents sir/ma'am.

    • @coastalbeaches7181
      @coastalbeaches7181 3 роки тому +222

      (I'm from America) When I was in school I heard people say that to teachers a lot. Never seriously heard someone say sir/ma'am to their parents.
      (Okay but when they call the teachers that it's usually not super serious)

    • @hannahbloom
      @hannahbloom 3 роки тому +417

      Most people don’t do that. At least nowadays. I think it’s more common in the Deep South as a form of respect or whatever but I prefer mom and dad as do my friends.

  • @MaMastoast
    @MaMastoast 2 роки тому +187

    During my visit to the US, I was consistently uncomfortable with how in-your-face people working in customer service would be.. It's was very weird not being allowed to just enter a store and do my thing without someone basically following me trying to push stuff on me.

    • @stephenderry9488
      @stephenderry9488 2 роки тому +3

      If you complain about them to the owners, you can probably get them fired for being too overbearing. Because that's how jobs work in the US. You need to be psychic.

    • @MaMastoast
      @MaMastoast 2 роки тому +13

      @@stephenderry9488 i just uncomfortably left the establishment

    • @user-ed7et3pb4o
      @user-ed7et3pb4o 2 роки тому +25

      @@stephenderry9488 but it’s not their fault they have to act like that. My gripe is with the company, not the workers.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому +9

      @@stephenderry9488 Sadly in many cases they don't get paid a lot, so they basically have to be convincing staff member.
      Reminds me of when Walmart failed here. All this false friendliness just doesn't sit right with us.

    • @PleaseApplaud
      @PleaseApplaud 28 днів тому +3

      When I was on honeymoon in the US, a waiter *sat down with us at dinner*, like fully slid into the booth and had a several minutes chat (that we were clearly weirded out by) before even trying to take the order. There were way too many personal questions and nowhere near enough personal space.
      I was actually barstaff/waitstaff at the time so it wasn't about being snobby about waiters. I just don't want complete strangers to be so overly personal and chummy. I know tips depend partly on making people feel like they really *matter* to you, but it feels incredibly weird to a Brit.

  • @Brookspirit
    @Brookspirit 2 роки тому +122

    The "Miss" thing is probably a leftover from when most female teachers were unmarried. Female nurses and teachers were expected to leave the job when they got married.

    • @andrewmcilwraith1997
      @andrewmcilwraith1997 2 роки тому +4

      He didn't say what they call them in the USA. Ma'am?

    • @keeganharris186
      @keeganharris186 2 роки тому +7

      @@andrewmcilwraith1997 miss if they are unmarried or misses if they are married

    • @mapwiz-sf5yt
      @mapwiz-sf5yt 2 місяці тому +3

      ​@@andrewmcilwraith1997"Miss" or "Mrs." with the last name. Or for nuns, "Sister " with the first name she took with her vows.

    • @_BreathOfFreshAir_
      @_BreathOfFreshAir_ 26 днів тому +2

      In Norway we dont have any formal greeting for teachers, we all call them by their first name, male of female.

  • @Henoik
    @Henoik 3 роки тому +1449

    American cashiers: "OMG HI HOW ARE YOU TODAY?"
    British cashiers: "hiuarright"
    Norwegian Cashiers: *not a word... Maybe they'll ask if you want the receipt if you're unlucky, but otherwise not a word*

    • @Navajonkee
      @Navajonkee 3 роки тому +91

      I'm not against a good conversation, but I'm perfectly fine with the "Good day.... tree fiddy please... card or cash? ... goodbye" routine.

    • @Henoik
      @Henoik 3 роки тому +60

      @@Navajonkee Yeah, over here you're unlucky (or lucky, depending on how you look at it) if the cashier even tells you the amount.. They usually ask if you want a bag, but that's it. It's custom to say goodbye tho, but that's initiated by the customer, not the cashier.

    • @lupo3555
      @lupo3555 3 роки тому +35

      Smiles in introvert.

    • @robinwaal-borrebaek6442
      @robinwaal-borrebaek6442 3 роки тому +4

      Well, we say hi. And goodbye

    • @DNPinthePP
      @DNPinthePP 3 роки тому +6

      The fuck? I’ve lived in 4 states and in most of them the cashiers give zero fucks. There are some larger chains that have surveys on the receipts and there’s Chick-fil-a where they act super courteous but for the most part they don’t give a fuck, including walmart

  • @amberkelly3187
    @amberkelly3187 3 роки тому +860

    “Wouldn’t that be nice in a fictitious world where I actually want you at my house.” Is so exactly how I feel about company, I feel seen.

    • @EvanSawyer4
      @EvanSawyer4 3 роки тому +23

      I know right? All this time I thought I was introverted when I was actually just British the whole time (sans the nationality and accent... and ethnicity...).

    • @ShelbyGTMustang60
      @ShelbyGTMustang60 3 роки тому +22

      A family friend and I have been saying "you should come over sometime" to each other for about the past decade and we still haven't been to each other's houses 😂🤦‍♀️

    • @dusansekulic7532
      @dusansekulic7532 3 роки тому +1

      Nice pfp

    • @Haslerka1251
      @Haslerka1251 3 роки тому +4

      Works the same for me, and I'm Czech. I need prep to clean up the house for a visitor, and make snacks - i don't keep my home in a perpetual state of readiness for people, and it sounds very stressful to always be expecting guests without prior notice.

  • @SqueamishNerd
    @SqueamishNerd 2 роки тому +109

    The "How much sugar is added to US food vs UK food" makes me a bit scared. I have a friend who studied in the UK for a while, and she told us that everything in the UK tasted so damn sweet, she told us that UK yogurt tasted like dessert, UK cereals tasted like dessert, and so on. And if that's the case when comparing UK to Sweden, and US is worse than the UK, then I don't want to know how bad it is in the US.

    • @nyester100
      @nyester100 2 роки тому +17

      I was thinking this- I’m from the uk and always think stuff like cereal (ESPECIALLY something like cheerios) here has way too much sugar in

    • @charliefen
      @charliefen 2 роки тому +9

      I know we use a lot more natural sugars than other countries, it is why a lot of the US prefer our chocolate to their own, as theirs can taste artificial (especially once you have tried both), so maybe that’s why? We do still have sugary things, but nowhere near as much as the US, especially with the sugar tax here! We are much stricter on what you can and can’t put in foods too.

    • @fredbloggs7131
      @fredbloggs7131 2 роки тому +14

      Have a look at how much sugar is an American can of soda. As much in a can as you would get in a 2L bottle in the UK.

    • @clairemcfadyen6815
      @clairemcfadyen6815 2 роки тому

      @@fredbloggs7131 What ?? There's 8 teaspoons of sugar in a calm ok coke in the UK..... So you're telling me that there's over 30 teaspoons of sugar in a can of coke in the USA? 😮

    • @catkin567
      @catkin567 Рік тому +7

      I'm wondering what kind of yogurt your friend had. Plain yogurts are not sweetened but fruit and other flavoured yogurts are sweetemed, because they are a dessert, lol

  • @eh-i1841
    @eh-i1841 2 роки тому +81

    Over here,in England,my local Sansbury’s appeared to be trying out a new approach,to customer/tillperson interactions.They started,actually asking people,going through the till,’what are you doing,for the rest of the day?’,or ‘any plans for the weekend?’.I have never seen so many angry faces,as people activated their bank cards,or heard so much gnashing of teeth.They soon stopped it.

    • @lkrnpk
      @lkrnpk 2 місяці тому +7

      I recall in early 90s after the Soviet era ended here in Latvia one small shop owner apparently had found some US customer service book and started to put on a fake smile and greet everyone “hello, how are you, thank you for the purchase, come again”. We all found that very strange as we were used to customer service actually being hostile… as in Soviet era they were the people who had access to all the goods so had a lot of power and there was no mechanism to really sack a rude person in customer service as Soviet Union prided itself in 100% employment and rudeness was not an offense for which to let people go

    • @Roadent1241
      @Roadent1241 2 місяці тому +2

      Shame, I'd like conversation with normal people, I have so little of it I never get any practice and then people don't talk to me because I don't know how to converse which-!

    • @veroniquejeangille8248
      @veroniquejeangille8248 Місяць тому +5

      I would flee and not come back, lol

    • @SR-zp4je
      @SR-zp4je 28 днів тому +2

      Ah that’s a bit sad. But figures for England (south presumably?) We’re a bit more chatty over here in Wales, and my goodness do you notice the difference in friendliness levels if you so much as pop over the Bristol.

    • @ElizabethAnneHoward-Illston
      @ElizabethAnneHoward-Illston 28 днів тому +1

      ​@SR-zp4je the thing is,we do like to chat with the people on the till,but not that forced,corporate stuff.

  • @e.458
    @e.458 3 роки тому +2514

    It's even more convenient when the waiter brings the card reader to your table, like it's done in most countries!

    • @shanethomas1202
      @shanethomas1202 3 роки тому +198

      I'm starting to think wireless card readers aren't a thing in the usa, like they only have the older reader attached to the register kind??

    • @dylangolden30
      @dylangolden30 3 роки тому +92

      @@shanethomas1202 It's a thing, but handhelds are not commonly used. I'm in the business if selling them. Hell, it's difficult enough to get a restaurant owner to upgrade from hand-writing tickets to a POS system, let alone getting them to shell out extra for handheld devices.

    • @tohruchan6093
      @tohruchan6093 3 роки тому +57

      Aaa... most of the time, the system is wired in place. These places don't even pay their wait staff minimum wage, so paying extra for newer wireless or handheld devices would hurt the profit margin, so most places prefer buying outdated older stuff to stay cheap.

    • @jendubay3782
      @jendubay3782 3 роки тому +13

      Many chain restaurants are moving to having a little screen to summon a waiter, order more food, and pay through the screen. So it’s happening, albeit slowly.

    • @vickiannmalenga
      @vickiannmalenga 3 роки тому +58

      Wait...isn't this how everyone does it? I mean I live in Botswana 🇧🇼 and its been that way for years lol they aren't allowed to take your card away!

  • @TimmyTantrum
    @TimmyTantrum 3 роки тому +1312

    "You know how in England when you finish your dish, you put your silverware a certain way--I don't know what it is..." Ah, the reason your citizenship application was rejected becomes clearer.

    • @forforkssake30
      @forforkssake30 3 роки тому +90

      Hahaha i thought the same thing. Error 404 proper etiquette not found

    • @lilso8411
      @lilso8411 2 роки тому +34

      yeah, if you’re done you have to put the cutlery together side by side in a straight line

    • @beth12svist
      @beth12svist 2 роки тому +37

      Same thing in Czechia.
      Convenient both ways because that way it's easier for the staff to grab off the plate, and they won't attempt to take away your food if you get busy talking with friends but still intend to finish your meal later.

    • @martinshepherd8041
      @martinshepherd8041 2 роки тому +59

      We don't call it Silverware unless you are having dinner with Upper Class Knobs.... To the average Brit it's just called Cutlery

    • @X.R.808
      @X.R.808 2 роки тому

      Social Credit 😂

  • @willangel2745
    @willangel2745 2 роки тому +174

    the most you will ever get in a British cinema is the occasional laugh at a joke, nothing more

    • @stephenderry9488
      @stephenderry9488 2 роки тому +22

      Followed by an expanding ripple of shushes, which ironically are more annoying than the original disturbance. See also Wimbledon, second serve.

    • @user-zp4ge3yp2o
      @user-zp4ge3yp2o Рік тому +2

      I once had someone stand up and shout "Extreme takedown!", it was a nearly empty screen though.

  • @bigboredthing
    @bigboredthing 2 роки тому +280

    The UK is one of the only places I've been where it's feasible to not have a driver's license. I'm unable to drive for medical reasons, so living in the suburbs in the UK and being able to get regular public transport is a lifeline. I don't know how non-drivers manage without it.

    • @OnlyGrafting
      @OnlyGrafting 2 роки тому +15

      Genuinely, it's not too expensive and the busses run everywhere. Even rural you can expect one every half hour.

    • @emberthecatgirl8796
      @emberthecatgirl8796 2 роки тому +30

      It’s like that in most of European towns and cities, and even with a lot of villages starting to get funds allocated for public transport.

    • @Evie0h
      @Evie0h 2 роки тому +5

      Non drivers (I guess me, just graduated and haven’t got my license yet for eyesight and meds reasons) around me have to rely on the people who do drive and have time. Public transport is awful, and walking is a nightmare, even here in the state capitol area here in CA (plus it’s way to dangerously hot in the summer anyway. Literally a risk to be outdoors some days)

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому +1

      @@Evie0h Time to improve transport then.

    • @zigzaglychee7324
      @zigzaglychee7324 Рік тому +2

      It's barely feasible and depends where you live. Birmingham and London you don't need to drive, public transport in these places is okay. However, I've had to turn down a job interview before when I was in my first year of uni because I had no way to get to the job location (which they unhelpfully didn't disclose til after inviting me for interview). The location was in some random place outside of Birmingham and by public transport would've taken nearly 2 hours and required multiple train and bus changes plus a 20 minute walk, not something that I could easily do for work every single day. By car it would have taken 30 mins. I had another experience recently where my train got cancelled and the replacement bus services were incredibly poor. I had to walk 40 minutes home because the bus services running didn't take me any closer than that. I'd love to be able to rely on public transport, but it doesn't seem feasible anymore. I'm preparing to get a driving license.

  • @SteltekOne
    @SteltekOne 3 роки тому +2408

    The "there's no rush" at restaurants is actually the opposite of what I've experienced: In the US, everybody tries to get you out the door as quickly as possible, because you're costing them money. (They can't earn tips off the next customer if you're still there.) In Europe, staff aren't dependent on customers' tips, so you can sit there all evening and they won't bother you unless you flag them down whenever you are ready to pay and leave.

    • @nicholasyong7051
      @nicholasyong7051 3 роки тому +198

      hahhh the perks of actually sustainable minimum wage and service tax

    • @k-leb4671
      @k-leb4671 3 роки тому +60

      What if the restaurant's busy? I've certainly felt pressured to leave in due time at a restaurant in Australia or England, and as an employee I've felt pressured by managers to herd customers out so that more can sit. It's not about the tips in that case - it's about the business itself having more opportunity to sit more customers and receive more money.

    • @tinydancer7426
      @tinydancer7426 3 роки тому +15

      I'd love to know which restaurant that was and where. When I was frequenting sit down restaurants (pre covid), my modis operandi was to tell the waiter/waitress to bring me my bill immediately so I can pay it ....... that way when I have finished eating, I can leave. They wouldn't do it because ....... if I had an open tab they figured I could order more food ...... no I do not want another appetizer to nibble on while waiting for my entree, no I do not want another beverage, no I do not want dessert (I would have ordered it at the git go) ...... just bring me my damn bill while I am waiting for my food so I can get up and leave when I have finished eating. It was always so damned annoying and frustrating to sit there trying to wave down the waiter to pay the bill ....... and time was ticking and I had other things I wanted to get to .......LIKE A MOVIE!

    • @jelletinny
      @jelletinny 2 роки тому +12

      @@k-leb4671 I think this is the exact experience the original comment is talking about… I frequently eat out, and every waiter knows that you get better tips if you don’t pester your customers; you’d only do so if your manager directed you to, due to people waiting for tables

    • @kaiatherton
      @kaiatherton 2 роки тому +43

      I am a brit, living in the usa. Soooo many times the wait staff will ask us what we want to eat before they have even given us the menu.. or about 30 seconds after.. then all the courses come out at once. and you all but kicked out the second you pay.. ok that's a slight exaggeration for the norm, but it has happened.. What I think is also weird is that when you go to someones house for the first time they always want to give me a tour of their house.. so awkward..

  • @saradaemiir9990
    @saradaemiir9990 3 роки тому +565

    I live in Scotland and we LOVE good customer service, we just hate being hounded and given a routine.
    They have to actually be nice and helpful, not cheesy and pushy.
    Worked with a few Americans and they ham it up waaaay too much, it seems fake and upselly.

    • @coralovesnature
      @coralovesnature 3 роки тому +88

      As an American, that’s because it often is fake and upselly, lol. If you aren’t extra, over-the-top nice, people will assume you are rude or don’t like them.

    • @Akane1313
      @Akane1313 3 роки тому +58

      @@coralovesnature Absolutely! At my job, it’s common for a customer to be upset and even write a bad review if we don’t greet them when they walk in the store. Once I said hello to a lady when she walked in and she didn’t notice but then had the nerve to complain at the checkout counter that no one greeted her when she came in.

    • @joshuawright4198
      @joshuawright4198 3 роки тому +4

      @@Akane1313 Prople complain about that how that's not their job

    • @psychomanatee3459
      @psychomanatee3459 3 роки тому +21

      @@coralovesnature yessss, we do it as a survival technique against the Karens

    • @jessicac8090
      @jessicac8090 3 роки тому +21

      That’s cause it is fake and the only reason they do it is cause the manager/owner hounded them to in order to get paid. But I prefer it over the pissed off mcdonalds worker that grunts whenever I ask for a straw cause they forgot to give it to me in the first place and then gets even more annoyed because they are even there. Or the grocery worker that slowly scans items because they can’t be bothered to be more efficient and then give attitude because the chip reader is being stupid and- OH GOD I HATE GOING OUTSIDE

  • @rosiefay7283
    @rosiefay7283 2 роки тому +34

    7:19 It's not that we expect politicians to not be religious, it's politicians mentioning religion and making a thing of it in political speeches.

  • @DodgeThatAttack
    @DodgeThatAttack 2 роки тому +39

    I love how he describes someone stealing your credit card as something completely normal

  • @moonlightingjam
    @moonlightingjam 3 роки тому +2086

    I'm French but based on this video, the UK sounds like a friendly neighbour while the US is an alien from outer space.

    • @emiliagrace5043
      @emiliagrace5043 3 роки тому +148

      I mean the UK and France, we are neighbours 😂 (yes America, neighbours, not neighbors)

    • @aminyamumsminge
      @aminyamumsminge 3 роки тому +109

      Trust me,most of the uk is just Europe's florida

    • @HaohmaruHL
      @HaohmaruHL 3 роки тому +33

      That's basically everyone's perspective who's outside the us

    • @caileyrookids
      @caileyrookids 3 роки тому +9

      @@HaohmaruHL And the perspective of many people from the US, I think.

    • @amyhatch3761
      @amyhatch3761 3 роки тому +68

      As a Brit, going to the USA makes me feel European 😂

  • @lydiacc
    @lydiacc 3 роки тому +1247

    As a brit, I would definitely say dinky as something very small and cute, in a positive way. Don’t think I’d ever associate it negatively unless it was seen as patronising somehow.

    • @faerie5926
      @faerie5926 3 роки тому +36

      Same- that's the only way I've ever heard it used, but its weird because I'm from the US. The whole negative meaning is news to me tbh-

    • @srijulakhotha7247
      @srijulakhotha7247 3 роки тому +23

      I'm Aussie, Lydia, and it means exactly the same here - small and cute. I have never heard of it meaning worthless.

    • @Kingdom_Of_Dreams
      @Kingdom_Of_Dreams 3 роки тому +10

      I use it as an endearing term for old run down things that are still running strong, like an old lemon car. I find lemon cars kinda fun. Not cute necessarily, but endearing in some way, like I appreciate that they are kept in good enough shape to run.

    • @ruthwhittemore7255
      @ruthwhittemore7255 3 роки тому +22

      Huh! I've always heard it used in a kind of derogatory way in the US

    • @sjs9698
      @sjs9698 3 роки тому +1

      yup. small & cute.

  • @FoggyPigeon
    @FoggyPigeon 27 днів тому +14

    "Hiuarrright" is the perfect level of customer interaction 😂. I don't want to become friends, I don't want to talk about your weekend plans, I just want to buy my stuff and get out of there.

  • @Jkeb19
    @Jkeb19 2 роки тому +30

    The customer service thing is why I always hate going into shops like JD sports. The staff give you about a second to look around before they come over and ask if you're looking for anything, I'm perfectly capable of looking around by myself thanks.

  • @lordshadow3822
    @lordshadow3822 3 роки тому +674

    The reason why credit/debit card being taken away is shocking is due to the fact you can clone cards. You should never lose sight of your card.

    • @noahluppe
      @noahluppe 3 роки тому +55

      And that's why everybody else uses chip & pin. Or its RFID / NFC counterpart. In germany i never encountered a magnet stripe transaction.

    • @gazerockerzavii
      @gazerockerzavii 3 роки тому +34

      Or they could just simply take the card details on a piece of paper, take a photo of it etc.
      I used to work in a hotel restaurant in the uk (i am not from here) and when i took away a card on my first shift, my manager was mortified...

    • @ellieellison1569
      @ellieellison1569 3 роки тому +48

      Yeah it's to do with card cloning. When I worked in restaurants it was standard practice that you didn't even touch the customer's card, let alone take it out of their eyeline - present them with the card machine, they do their thing, they take their card back, you hand them the receipt, no opportunity to clone anything.

    • @leokupperman7320
      @leokupperman7320 3 роки тому +7

      The credit card company is on the hook if your card is cloned though, not you.

    • @ApequH
      @ApequH 3 роки тому +16

      Yes! I'm not from the UK but it's shocking to me too! I'm not giving my card to a stranger

  • @laneymoyers9393
    @laneymoyers9393 3 роки тому +481

    “Wouldn’t that be nice in a fictitious world where I actually wanted you at my house” disarmed and killed me

  • @miaschu8175
    @miaschu8175 2 роки тому +70

    I'm surprised that venerating the flag isn't on there. I'm a teacher and I was concerned that flags really were going to be introduced into British classrooms (as recently suggested). I abhor indoctrination.

    • @siranoush6999
      @siranoush6999 2 роки тому +21

      Well, that's because Johnson basically wants to be a US president in the UK. Also yes, I find that so weird too! Especially the way Americans all have to put their hand on their chest! Always makes me giggle! Also the way many Americans seem to be very sensitive to any perceived disrespect to any given physical US flag - if I saw a UK flag being burned, my first concern would be for the amount of CO2 the fire's putting into the atmosphere.

    • @rosiefay7283
      @rosiefay7283 2 роки тому +8

      We do respect flags. A civic building such as a town hall might well have a flag flying -- or perhaps even more. But the government doesn't force us to fly the nation's flag everywhere. This isn't Nazi Germany or North Korea.

    • @andrewmcilwraith1997
      @andrewmcilwraith1997 2 роки тому +8

      Yes - this is one way where America is like Russia. It seems like Ruritania to me, i.e. (they'll hate that!) that you don't have confidence in your country, so you have to reinforce it all the time. Russia and USA are so similar. They should get a room!

    • @DadgeCity
      @DadgeCity Рік тому +1

      There's still plenty of indoctrination in UK classrooms, it's just more subtle.

  • @charlotteinnocent8752
    @charlotteinnocent8752 2 роки тому +46

    Nope I realize this is a year late but Evan, after having moved from America to the UK, I went home for a visit and my family TRIED TO MAKE ME TEA IN A MICROWAVE. I blushed at the barbarity, but this has indeed happened. And if it happened to me, I feel sadly sure it has happened to others.

    • @veroniquejeangille8248
      @veroniquejeangille8248 Місяць тому +2

      They do it all the time in Belgium: heating a cup of water in the microwave then adding a bag of tea. My friends and family are now used to me refusing that and wanting the water boiled either in a kettle or in a pan then poured over the tea. But they think I'm just being fussy... They don't believe me when I say it tastes awful the other way^^

  • @identifymenot
    @identifymenot 3 роки тому +1212

    One major difference I noticed when living wit Americans was swearing.
    Americans did swear, but they were horrified at how often the brits would just insert a swear world unnecessarily.

    • @Elizabeth-rq1vi
      @Elizabeth-rq1vi 3 роки тому +58

      I would say that North Americans swear just because they have zero imagination.

    • @Navajonkee
      @Navajonkee 3 роки тому +148

      @@Elizabeth-rq1vi And Brits swear because they have way too much of it.

    • @phoenixcaladrius3538
      @phoenixcaladrius3538 3 роки тому +159

      I have always admired the sheer size of the British swear word vocabulary. Wish we had more bad words here. It gets awfully repetitive.

    • @Steve_Coates
      @Steve_Coates 3 роки тому +87

      @@phoenixcaladrius3538 Arabic and Spanish are the best languages I've ever come across for imaginative cursing, Arabic probably wins as as well as offering a huge range of curses it sounds agressive to Europeans where Spanish cursing sounds lyrical.

    • @Notmyname1593
      @Notmyname1593 3 роки тому +10

      @@Steve_Coates Could they even hold a candle to russian, I wonder.

  • @JasperCasper24
    @JasperCasper24 3 роки тому +884

    I genuinely feel bad for the blind in the US, and others who cannot drive like myself, because it sounds like you’d be completely stranded if you don’t live in a city

    • @heroslippy6666
      @heroslippy6666 3 роки тому +129

      Yeah the whole needing a car thing is a massive headache. Buses in suburban areas do not cover much area, and sidewalks can be worse kept than streets.

    • @hikaru9624
      @hikaru9624 3 роки тому +48

      Speaking as someone who lives in the fairly remote highland countryside I can semi confirm this. I was stuck during winter this year and later had no car for over a month (it was at the garage for repairs and mot). It was a headache to rely on others! I can’t get over how helpful my neighbours were but still, it felt like I was a bother. And I still hate myself for actually needing to order food from Tesco instead of actually driving to their shop.
      I guess I’m just stubborn that way but I prefer to be able to drive to where I need.

    • @helenl3193
      @helenl3193 3 роки тому +43

      Also US money is harder too - all their bills are the same size, whereas British pound notes vary depending on the denominations. A small detail but a very helpful one! :)

    • @Stettafire
      @Stettafire 3 роки тому +45

      @@helenl3193 Our new notes also have braille now too

    • @withinsanityy
      @withinsanityy 3 роки тому +34

      @@Stettafire That's awesome. The US is very resistant to change like that, even if it's obviously good for inclusion

  • @wojtekpolska1013
    @wojtekpolska1013 Рік тому +18

    10:30 probably because in the UK the tube comes pretty often, and on time. public transport in the US sucks ass, so missing a bus/tram/train could cost u like an hour

    • @Vi-yu6sz
      @Vi-yu6sz 26 днів тому

      in north london, which is not actually the entire island

  • @reneearwen
    @reneearwen 2 роки тому +85

    As an Aussie, I always use the "watch out for the drop bears" line on foreigners. It's part of our culture to screw with travellers, just an unspoken rule!

    • @Ouchiness
      @Ouchiness 2 роки тому +4

      As an American I am terrified of drop bears & will never stop being afraid of them

    • @dodgyyeti532
      @dodgyyeti532 2 роки тому +1

      I've lost count of how many non-Australians I have informed about drop bears. :)
      My daughter has educated some people too

    • @stephenderry9488
      @stephenderry9488 2 роки тому

      I would be surprised and delighted if a koala fell out of a tree my arms. Although in fairness I'd probably split my sides laughing if it missed.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Рік тому +1

      I wouldn't even mind. But then, I'm in on the joke. I would just respond that I want to know if they have some in a zoo nearby.
      Or I just ask about the emu war and if drop bears would be a solution.

    • @pollyparrot8759
      @pollyparrot8759 Рік тому +5

      As a Scot I enjoy telling tourists about the haggis hunting ... with embellishments of course.

  • @SophieStillHasLegs
    @SophieStillHasLegs 3 роки тому +1249

    Just adding to the pool of British people - I have never thought dinky to mean worthless or of low value! I use it all the time to mean small and cute

    • @Redrally
      @Redrally 3 роки тому +16

      Same

    • @Spookmi
      @Spookmi 3 роки тому +10

      Yup

    • @lordshadow3822
      @lordshadow3822 3 роки тому +7

      Same

    • @hsnrb9959
      @hsnrb9959 3 роки тому +13

      Depends on the context e.g I have heard a British UA-camr review a cosmetic product and say that it was a bit 'dinky' for the high price, meaning it wasn't worth the money

    • @Adder_8448
      @Adder_8448 3 роки тому +1

      Yesss

  • @CB-jh1pt
    @CB-jh1pt 3 роки тому +840

    Yes I would use the word “dinky” as ‘cute and small’, and never knew it could mean ‘cheap’.

    • @reaganharder1480
      @reaganharder1480 3 роки тому +55

      Yeah, I'm Canadian, which is culturally pretty close to America, and around here Dinky is somewhat insulting. Not like a swear word, but to call something dinky... it typically implies that it's either too small to do the task well, or it's small and also low quality.

    • @CB-jh1pt
      @CB-jh1pt 3 роки тому +43

      @@reaganharder1480 I had no idea! It’s more of an endearing thing to say about something that’s small and cute. Usually synonyms with ‘precious’.

    • @reaganharder1480
      @reaganharder1480 3 роки тому +8

      @@CB-jh1pt in some cases it can be somewhat endearing, but in the way that something stupid would be adored.

    • @CB-jh1pt
      @CB-jh1pt 3 роки тому +8

      @@reaganharder1480 haha I know what you mean, but still can’t believe it’d be insulting! It’s a word I’d use rarely, but I’ll hopefully remember not to use it to offend people from your end of the world!!

    • @reaganharder1480
      @reaganharder1480 3 роки тому +10

      @@CB-jh1pt and if you do, most people are pretty understanding of "where I come from..." so a quick explanation oughtta smooth it over.

  • @hesterclapp9717
    @hesterclapp9717 2 роки тому +19

    10:45
    1) You don't hold up everyone else on the train
    2) You don't cause unnecessary component stress on the doors
    3) There'll be another one in 3 minutes

    • @greason
      @greason Місяць тому +5

      4) no one will say anything, but they are mad at you for holding them up.

  • @jellysharkbat
    @jellysharkbat 2 роки тому +21

    As someone who works in customer service, I really wish we had the British approach to customer service! At least then I'd be able to sit down... You guys have NO IDEA how great that privilege is.

  • @Ametisti
    @Ametisti 2 роки тому +824

    As a Brit, I have no issue with iced tea itself. I do however have an issue with it being referred to as simply 'tea', or mentioning tea, and someone assuming somehow it must be iced.

    • @vio_lin
      @vio_lin 2 роки тому +30

      In the south part of the states, ice tea is called sweet tea, and hot tea is called tea or by the name of tea. Example: 'Would you like sweet tea or green tea?'
      At least half of us also have kettles.

    • @thornprick2645
      @thornprick2645 2 роки тому +8

      I've never experienced it being called tea by itself.

    • @ellax325
      @ellax325 2 роки тому +20

      There's always a prefix. It's never just tea. It could be sweet tea or iced tea. It's never just "tea". We recognize that there is a difference between the two.

    • @lammellealoof7110
      @lammellealoof7110 2 роки тому +9

      As a Brit: this.

    • @stephenb5jones476
      @stephenb5jones476 2 роки тому +4

      In the south, I once made the mistake of asking the waitress if they had sweet tea. In the west we put the sugar in ourselves.

  • @MadCupcake38
    @MadCupcake38 3 роки тому +382

    Dinky in the UK means something small, cute, teeny in size. In Scotland we'd maybe say wee like "I only take a wee bit of milk in my tea"

    • @raesnothome
      @raesnothome 3 роки тому +4

      "I only take a dinky bit of milk in my tea"
      I didn't see the issue before but, I can see why this guy thought it was strange now to use the word dinky

    • @hellothereh3539
      @hellothereh3539 3 роки тому +7

      I’m from England and I have never heard someone say dinky, in my tea obsessed house people just say a bit of milk or if it’s my dad doing his dad act of being posh he will say “oh yes dear put a splash of milk in”

    • @Pouchey2
      @Pouchey2 3 роки тому +5

      I would personally never use dinky in reference to an amount of something but I often use it in reference to small size (like a model of something)

    • @AYoutubeAccountName
      @AYoutubeAccountName 3 роки тому +1

      I always thought it came from dinky toys. Kinda like a predecessor to hot wheels. I've used it

    • @Pouchey2
      @Pouchey2 3 роки тому

      @@AUA-camAccountName I did wonder if that's where it came from. That's the first thing that comes to my mind when I hear the word dinky.

  • @user-up5rv4zk3e
    @user-up5rv4zk3e 5 місяців тому +5

    I was on a flight where everyone cheered when the plane landed. It was Turkish Airlines (to England), the lights kept going off, the plane creaked and jerked and we were all glad to be alive still.

  • @odysseusofegypt
    @odysseusofegypt 2 роки тому +12

    My mum is American but I'm a very socially awkward Brit so, during shopping trips, my mum will be smiling and laughing while chatting to the cashier and meanwhile, both the cashier and I are standing there like *h e l p m e*

    • @b.benjamineriksson6030
      @b.benjamineriksson6030 Рік тому +2

      We will send helo from Scandinavia to deal with the situation, don't worry! A nod and a thank you is enough.

  • @samking7682
    @samking7682 3 роки тому +1047

    From this video, and as a Brit, I completely understand why your British citizenship test was rejected.

    • @serinadelmar6012
      @serinadelmar6012 3 роки тому +9

      😂

    • @Leooel9
      @Leooel9 3 роки тому +92

      The Tories should use this as 'they can't assimilate' rhetoric instead scapegoating Muslims.

    • @marquessman
      @marquessman 3 роки тому

      HAHAHA

    • @DrCartof
      @DrCartof 3 роки тому +2

      @@serinadelmar6012 you misplaced your brain.
      Got em

    • @serinadelmar6012
      @serinadelmar6012 3 роки тому +1

      Dragoş err okay thanks for that kind soul, I mean fuck wit.

  • @SophiaR4180
    @SophiaR4180 3 роки тому +597

    My husband gets mad when I refer to my cats as "sir." Mostly just "hello, sir." and now my toddler says it, too In her little voice "hi, sir" ^.^

  • @katehobbs2008
    @katehobbs2008 2 роки тому +15

    I worked for one of the world’s biggest companies, the US managing director’s name was Dick Holder. We got a helluva laugh out of that in the goldfields of Western Australia when he visited the site.

    • @danh6720
      @danh6720 26 днів тому

      That’s a wild name in the US too.

  • @abbieth3gamer
    @abbieth3gamer 2 роки тому +89

    The peace sign thing actually has an interesting history here in the Uk, so when you do it the wrong way round, it’s seen as swearing because like, ages ago when we used to fight with bows and arrows, archers used to do the wrong way peace symbol, effectively telling the people they were at war with that they still have their fingers, because when archers were caught, they would have their fingers chopped off so they couldn’t string the bow and arrow, you are welcome for this history lesson

    • @greendogg83
      @greendogg83 2 роки тому

      This is a myth, never happened, the British v which basically means "get fucked" sadly does not go back far enough for this origin story to stand up to any scrutiny, although it is a cool story nonetheless. Sorry abs, not trying to be a cunt

    • @matthewmarsh9760
      @matthewmarsh9760 2 роки тому

      Thank you

    • @hypsyzygy506
      @hypsyzygy506 2 роки тому +2

      The 'V Sign', colloquially used as 'giving the Vees', is the 'Fu** Off' version, popularised during WW2 by Winston Churchill (some people say he used the palm-forward 'peace' version but the photo I've seen is fairly obviously the back-of-the-hand-forward version). It fitted with the V-for-Victory theme, which also included the opening of Beethoven's 5th Symphony (Morse code for V is ..._ ) as the call sign of London radio broadcast to occupied Europe. The roman number 5 also happens to be V .

    • @thomashassall96
      @thomashassall96 2 роки тому +6

      Another fun fact - hangover came from old English landlords hanging a line out the back of the pub for customers too drunk to walk home... they'd pay a small fee to sleep hanging over the line and woke up "hungover"!! 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

    • @skilletborne
      @skilletborne 2 роки тому +7

      Fun fact! That's an urban legend - plausible, but most likely bunkum.
      The legend is that it was either done before, or after the British victory at the battle of Agincourt to goad the French but there are literally no documents that support it. None.
      The first recorded use of it was in 1901 and it's always been considered vulgar which suggests a sexual meaning, not the anti-french thing.

  • @lillyevans5824
    @lillyevans5824 3 роки тому +903

    As an Australian person it’s fun seeing all the stuff we borrowed from both of you

    • @74angelwing
      @74angelwing 3 роки тому +11

      Ψ

    • @difeth_
      @difeth_ 3 роки тому +19

      Yo I’m an Aussie too and it’s so weird lmaoo

    • @sammyanthajane
      @sammyanthajane 3 роки тому +22

      Same with kiwis 🤣

    • @eddieboy8619
      @eddieboy8619 3 роки тому +34

      Same I but also we're a LOT more British than American so I kinda side with the Brits on things

    • @salmayoussif6869
      @salmayoussif6869 3 роки тому +19

      Yeah, as an Egyptian it’s interesting seeing how both the US and the UK have affected Egypt. Especially being Egyptian American, it’s fun seeing how much of each country I can relate to.

  • @lenerdhuhn
    @lenerdhuhn 3 роки тому +993

    As a German: anything more than a curt hello from a cashier makes me wildly uncomfortable. 😂

    • @andmicbro1
      @andmicbro1 2 роки тому +44

      One time at Walmart the cashier made it a point to comment on the items I was buying and even read the birthday card I was buying. It was a wildly uncomfortable experience even as an American.

    • @cantstopbeatnov9512
      @cantstopbeatnov9512 2 роки тому +12

      As an American I understand how it would seem ‘over the top’ or ‘fake’ by the level of friendliness in American customer service or just small talk in general. However, the truth is, 95% of the time (I don’t mean literally 95% just that it’s almost always the case) they are being genuine (except the ‘hi, how’re you?’…yeah, that’s often insincere 😀). Hollywood and TV in general hasn’t done Americans any favors in how we are portrayed, but we as Americans genuinely want to help others out and treat others well, for the most part it is in our nature. If I see an old lady struggling to reach something at the supermarket I’ll offer to get it for her. If a stranger drops things, I’ll help them pick them up, and so on. And while I understand people from other countries may have the view, ‘I’ve been to LA or New York and it wasn’t like that’, America is huge and most of America is NOTHING like LA or New York.

    • @ochenc1071
      @ochenc1071 2 роки тому +2

      Lol you would hate to come to my work.

    • @philadelphiawhovian5641
      @philadelphiawhovian5641 2 роки тому +1

      @@cantstopbeatnov9512 precisely! too much of America is judged by a few locations in it.

    • @na3044
      @na3044 2 роки тому +13

      "Hamse ne paybackkaade?"
      "Wollnse Treuepunkte?"

  • @enjoyslearningandtravel7957
    @enjoyslearningandtravel7957 2 роки тому +23

    Actually, I find it nicer when the waiters don’t bother you early for the bill because when I go out to restaurant I’m trying to talk and eat leisurely with my friends or relatives. In America they bother you and seem to rush you but in England and Europe they leave you alone to eat your meal and talk to your friends and relatives, you do have to flag them down sometimes but I’d rather have that than being rushed because my purpose of going out is a leisurely meal.

    • @azwepay
      @azwepay 2 роки тому

      As a middle aged American that admittedly has not done any world travelling, I have to say world meal times are very odd to me. I took my wife out for a birthday dinner and had as lavish a meal as ever for 2 and we were not there 90 minutes start to finish. The longest I have ever sat at a dinner with a group is maybe 2 hours. That felt like the end of the world. What are all of you guys doing at dinner for hours and hours? I don't want to take that kind of time to eat...it always baffles me. Eating leisurely is about 45 minutes to an hour for dinner
      I can't see where my meals would take longer unless the server ignored me or purposely slowed the food down. Once I have had a salad I expect the main course in about 10 minutes more...much more time passes and I start to think there is a problem. Once I have finished my meal, I pay and leave. Uncultured I guess, I will blame being 2 generations removed from US Farmers. Dinner is 5pm, done by 7pm, bed by 10 kind of timing I grew up with

    • @Bramfly
      @Bramfly 2 місяці тому +1

      That also because eating is seen as fuel to be able to work those jobs, instead of culinary enjoyment and socializing.

  • @laurieo1933
    @laurieo1933 2 роки тому +12

    Yes, dinky means cute! Meeting somebody's small child for the first time, 100% OK to call them dinky imo

  • @Dutchandfrench
    @Dutchandfrench 3 роки тому +852

    People in America were mindblown when my parents said that they let me walk to elementary school on my own. They couldn't fathom a child being able to get to school without an adult driving them.

    • @lordshadow3822
      @lordshadow3822 3 роки тому +80

      Fun fact when I was about 9/10 I used to walk to school on my own here in the UK which was the norm. This was before mobile phones and what not... I can't imagine letting my kid do that now without a phone.

    • @TheDolphace
      @TheDolphace 3 роки тому +155

      I tried to tell Americans this and they accused my parents of neglect...
      Like, no

    • @flappetyflippers
      @flappetyflippers 3 роки тому +54

      I would walk with my parents until year 6 for safety reasons but yes exactly!

    • @charlotterogan5590
      @charlotterogan5590 3 роки тому +36

      I used to walk to school on my own from the age of about 7. But it was the 90's!

    • @marisadaniela6
      @marisadaniela6 3 роки тому +16

      For real? We always walked to school in Michigan. In kindy, your parent usually walks you for a bit until you get the hang of it.

  • @dominadors4795
    @dominadors4795 3 роки тому +512

    Hi Evan. I am a teacher ( History and English). The " Miss" thing actually comes from History. Female teachers were required to be unmarried and therefore were always called "Miss". It stuck, and now Miss is used in almost evety school unless the student is using their full name. Sometimes schools try to switch it to " Ma'am", but when our headteacher tried that it made lot's of us feel uncomfortable and it was switched back 😆🤣 Being called Miss keeps you young.

    • @lordshadow3822
      @lordshadow3822 3 роки тому +19

      If we called our teacher Miss instead of her actual title of Mrs in school, they would make a point to correct us. I didn't think calling every female teacher Miss was a thing. Now I know.

    • @dominadors4795
      @dominadors4795 3 роки тому +38

      @@lordshadow3822 mostly in Secondary schools. Every school I have worked at I have been called Miss. Some teachers correct the kids but honestly its sometimes better to just respond to Miss than watch a teen trying to remember your full name when you are the sixth teacher they have seen that day and they honestly don't care. I got shit to do 😆

    • @janetgraham-russell4476
      @janetgraham-russell4476 3 роки тому +11

      Excuse me, missus, doesn't sound respectful enough. I dont know why.

    • @lordshadow3822
      @lordshadow3822 3 роки тому +1

      @@dominadors4795 haha fair enough

    • @robertgronewold3326
      @robertgronewold3326 3 роки тому +5

      I was always taught to say 'Mizz'. The 'z' sound sort of implied between married and unmarried. But actually, a lot of my female teachers would specify their marital status and we addressed them accordingly.

  • @rosiefay7283
    @rosiefay7283 2 роки тому +7

    4:41 Yeah, driving three hours just to meet with some friends and have lunch at some fast food eatery. That's not what we do in Britain.

  • @kp12_art
    @kp12_art 2 роки тому +10

    The only non silent cinema experience I had was when I went to see Yesterday & EVERYONE was singing along & (SPOILERS) gasped when John Lennon appeared on screen (SPOILERS OVER) & it felt like being at the theatre rather than the cinema. It was really nice. It wasn’t annoyingly loud, it felt like a bonding experience. No one was yelling or anything, we literally just all enjoyed the movie as one 🤷‍♀️
    I really loved it. Can’t imagine every movie being more extreme than that though, that sounds uncomfortable. Yesterday may have just been an exception because it was about The Beatles & everyone already liked it before watching it? 😂

  • @coffeemug1012
    @coffeemug1012 3 роки тому +674

    today i learned: Americans can eat bread without butter
    today i also learned: im scared of americians

    • @KingKayro87
      @KingKayro87 3 роки тому +44

      Today I learned: Brits can eat sandwiches with bread on them no matter what else is on them
      I also learned: I am disgusted

    • @rechaljones2447
      @rechaljones2447 3 роки тому +20

      If it is a piece of bread then we put it in the toaster and eat it with butter. Ya know toast. If it’s a sandwich we eat it with mayonnaise like normal people. Who in the world eats sandwhiches with butter and not mayonnaise that’s just so weird to me. Americans don’t just eat bread plain without butter. That would be really weird too. We just don’t use butter as the “sauce” for every type of food. No one here eats bread plain without butter. We just use mayonnaise for sandwiches. And catchup for burgers.

    • @KingKayro87
      @KingKayro87 3 роки тому +8

      @@rechaljones2447 I don't like mayonnaise either, but I do tend to spread Peanut Butter and Marshmallow Fluff on my breads and eat like that (like a PBJ but I don't like jelly either). Either that or I just eat the bread with ham and cheese, most likely provolone. I don't put sauce of any kind, and I especially don't put butter on my sandwiches.

    • @rechaljones2447
      @rechaljones2447 3 роки тому +4

      @@KingKayro87 marshmallow fluff is the best! But I don’t get how you can eat a sandwich with just bread and cheese and ham just because it’s really dry like that and kind of hard to eat, but if you don’t like mayonnaise then I don’t know what an alternative could be so keep on eating those dry sandwhiches cause at least you’re not eating them with butter😉

    • @nightfox380
      @nightfox380 3 роки тому +13

      @@rechaljones2447 sounds like you just need to buy better bread

  • @hushRD
    @hushRD 3 роки тому +137

    “You can make yourself at home” means “you can sit on the settee if you like”

    • @ApequH
      @ApequH 3 роки тому +4

      When I say our equivalent of "make yourself at home" you can go ahead and get yourself a drink (you should still ask before going into the fridge)

    • @serenityinside1
      @serenityinside1 2 місяці тому

      @@ApequH😯… too informal !

  • @bladedsilver2923
    @bladedsilver2923 2 роки тому +6

    I’m a Brit and this happens in Britain. I was in a pound land the other day and this lady just started ‘helping’ me at the self checkout. Nothing was going wrong I had a whole 2 items. Don’t. Don’t do that. I can swipe stuff perfectly fine. I just wanted a chocolate bar and Pepsi for my train ride home. I don’t want to make awkward conversation with you. I know how a self checkout works 😂

  • @tamasmarcuis4455
    @tamasmarcuis4455 2 роки тому +5

    I was in a cinema in Scotland watching the movie "Centurion". It's about the Roman army. The tribes people slaughter a legion of Roman soldiers and the rest of the movie is about a group of survivors running away. These Roman survivors were meant o be be very brave and heroic. The Scottish audience were cheering and stamping the floor as the Roman legion was slaughtered and booed any of the tribes people getting killed. Of course the tribes people were their ancestors and the Romans the vicious invaders.

  • @waifyandrogyne
    @waifyandrogyne 3 роки тому +522

    The purpose of butter on a sandwich is to create a barrier between the bread and the filling to prevent oils and juices from soaking into the bread and making it soggy

    • @barrys1694
      @barrys1694 3 роки тому +37

      Also he might be surprised to learn that restaurant and burger chains butter the bread before toasting. I don't know of anywhere in the US or EU than doesn't do this. I know the US burger chains use a roller to get the butter on the bread so you might not notice if you were looking for someone with a knife buttering bread lol

    • @flappetyflippers
      @flappetyflippers 3 роки тому +15

      Plus if the filling is warm you get lovely melted butter!

    • @robertgronewold3326
      @robertgronewold3326 3 роки тому +2

      Then eat it quicker. lol

    • @KBinturong
      @KBinturong 3 роки тому +5

      That’s the point of putting pesto or ketchup, that the bread soak the sauce so that it’s not that dry and tasty

    • @flappetyflippers
      @flappetyflippers 3 роки тому +7

      @@KBinturong No. No. No. No. No. No. Not ketchup. Pesto is fine I guess... But no.

  • @elladerport2389
    @elladerport2389 3 роки тому +471

    Dinky has always been small and cute for me. As a Brit, I would definitely say that dinky is used to describe something like a charm or a mini piano (dont ask).

    • @cantstopbeatnov9512
      @cantstopbeatnov9512 2 роки тому +11

      In America ‘dinky’ is DEFINITELY derogatory no matter which way you use it…doesn’t matter if you’re saying it’s small or of low quality, either way it’s almost always an insult.

    • @simonpowell2559
      @simonpowell2559 2 роки тому +16

      Not sure if it's just a coincidence but when I was a kid, in England, you would get miniature cars from a company called Dinky. Dinky cars..."Dinky" was used for anything small.

    • @siranoush6999
      @siranoush6999 2 роки тому +11

      Yeah, we have a small cat (2.5kg), who we refer to as our 'dinky little girl'. It's actually quite a term of endearment. Contrast this with the American use of the term 'quaint', which is negatively aspected and means small, archaic, and backwards in BE, but appears to be positively aspected in AE, at least the way all the tourists around Plymouth and Bristol use it.

    • @Floey19
      @Floey19 2 роки тому

      A small little dog - awh dinky dog 🐶

    • @celestialgirl7538
      @celestialgirl7538 2 роки тому +4

      Brit here and everyone calls my 6 month old daughter who is on the smaller side a little dink because she’s tiny in comparison to babies her age, definitely means small and/or cute here

  • @lordylou1
    @lordylou1 Рік тому +7

    Yeah, the Christmas thing (or any decoration to celebrate seasons). I'm British and a few years ago lived opposite the entrance to a cul-de-sac whose residents went all out with Christmas decorations outside. Not only did the decorations mock my bah humbug attitude to Christmas in their jollity, but the lights flashed all night - even through my firming closed curtains, and the hoards of people ooing and ahhing at them every time night tell was excruciating.

  • @lavendervvitch99
    @lavendervvitch99 2 роки тому +3

    “No on actually makes tea in the microwave”
    Me, with my mug of water halfway through the microwave door: 😳

  • @jakemarsh6427
    @jakemarsh6427 3 роки тому +320

    As a brit, never before have I been so offended by something I 100% agree with

    • @Plethorality
      @Plethorality 3 роки тому

      hahahaha!!!

    • @jayne_kira
      @jayne_kira 3 роки тому +9

      nice james acaster reference

    • @Lizzo13
      @Lizzo13 3 роки тому

      As an American who has lived in the UK for 4 1/2 years, say your prayers! Say your prayers! Say your prayers, and make them loud, so we can hear!

  • @matenaka146
    @matenaka146 3 роки тому +745

    We have knighted peoples in the UK, maybe thats why "sir" isnt used as much generally. It's like calling someone who isnt the queen "your majesty"
    Just to say. It does happen and English kids call their teachers sir. I just don't see it as often as I see Americans use it. I work with Americans and they call me sir and I feel very uncomfortable about it. Their UK counterparts normally just insult me as a greeting and I feel much more at ease

    • @Kingdom_Of_Dreams
      @Kingdom_Of_Dreams 3 роки тому +26

      You can't compare knights to royalty, but I can see what you mean.

    • @pollyparrot8759
      @pollyparrot8759 3 роки тому +38

      That's a good point, I never thought of it like that.

    • @brittlekneesmgee3674
      @brittlekneesmgee3674 3 роки тому +43

      Fun fact that's illegal in the US we actually have a rule in the constitution stating that you aren't allowed to have titles of nobility including being knighted

    • @sjs9698
      @sjs9698 3 роки тому +8

      @@Kingdom_Of_Dreams you kinda can: that fact is it's a term with a specific status attatched which you don't have. sure, one's hereditary & one's not but...
      you'd not call anyone 'your majesty' or 'my lord' without it coming off as a bit odd, perhaps a joke perhaps sarcastic. sir is the same. y'all are a knight. or not. & ofc almost everyone is not.

    • @MartijnPennings
      @MartijnPennings 3 роки тому +5

      I'm genuinely a bit confused. What do British people use instead of Sir when speaking to a man?

  • @DouglasParkinson
    @DouglasParkinson Рік тому +3

    The way Americans pay for things. You see the prices without tax, which is calculated at the checkout; how the hell are you supposed to be able to work out how much you're spending with any kind of precision?!
    And paying in restaurants. Tips are expected to float the employees' earnings. That's disgusting and should not be a loophole in minimum wage. A gratuity is supposed to be a sign of satisfied service, not an expected tax to save the workers.

  • @loismae73
    @loismae73 Місяць тому +2

    6:38 there's a brand of donuts called
    “Dinky donuts” in northern Ireland that are just food vans that sell bags of small sugary donuts
    So yes, dinky is used as a term for small or tiny

  • @RobotsWithKnivesCartoons
    @RobotsWithKnivesCartoons 3 роки тому +306

    I was sitting in a bar in Viatnam talking to a Britsh guy, I'm Amarican and I was talking about how I was trying to get a new apartment and he was so horrified when he found out landloards could leagly require credit reports and bank bank balances and proof of income, he was just like, "You want a place to live, you just pay rent and a deposit and you got a place to live" and I was sad.

    • @Sentariana
      @Sentariana 3 роки тому +20

      If you are ever declared bankrupt then I think you might need those things. But, otherwise, all you need to do is pay your deposit and your rent and you have yourself a home!

    • @RobotsWithKnivesCartoons
      @RobotsWithKnivesCartoons 3 роки тому +19

      @@Sentariana yeah, I wish it was that easy, getting a place to live here in the USA is bullshit.

    • @mrlurious949
      @mrlurious949 3 роки тому +4

      @@RobotsWithKnivesCartoons Really? In Hawaii is way different!!

    • @godlysum0453
      @godlysum0453 3 роки тому +12

      Not dissing the comment at all but the amount of spelling mistakes

    • @mrlurious949
      @mrlurious949 3 роки тому +9

      @@godlysum0453 Did you by any chance add a “full-stop”.

  • @glrreid96
    @glrreid96 3 роки тому +472

    I think there's a difference between "good" customer service and fake customer service. I think in the UK we feel that if you're being nice you want something and it must be fake.
    Also I personally feel more awkward if someone is super attentive in a shop, especially if I'm only looking without planning to buy. I don't want to be spoken to!

    • @hannahk1306
      @hannahk1306 3 роки тому +77

      Definitely if a shop assistant is overattentive I feel like they're trying to pressure me into buying (which just makes me leave without buying anything)

    • @claiirity
      @claiirity 3 роки тому +46

      customer service in lush gets me every time like just leave me alone just wanna look at some bath bombs

    • @flappetyflippers
      @flappetyflippers 3 роки тому +28

      I hate the: "do you want a bag, do you have a loyalty card, can I offer you this, oh let me help you out" like no just let me buy my damn teabags and leave

    • @turtlescanfly7
      @turtlescanfly7 3 роки тому +16

      In the US it’s pretty standard that someone might greet you when you walk into a smaller shop and they usually ask if there’s anything they can help you find. When I don’t want to be bothered I just say something like “no thanks I’m just browsing” and they leave you alone.
      It is RARE that an employee will be overly attentive and follow you around the store. It’s happened to me maybe once in my life and I totally agree it’s soooo uncomfortable. Like even in Lush this has never happened to me

    • @Iron_Stigmata
      @Iron_Stigmata 3 роки тому +10

      As a person now working in retail I hate doing it to people. When we get told to interact with customers over the headset I cringe into myself and want to disappear. I'm very socially anxious, and knowing it's likely the exact opposite of what both of us would want in that situation is just painful to me 😭.

  • @teologen
    @teologen 2 місяці тому +1

    How is waiting for a waiter to go to the back more convenient than just paying at the table?

  • @daniwalmsley611
    @daniwalmsley611 Місяць тому +2

    0:58 nope. in the US its a two step process, get the bill, waiter leaves, then pay the bill. Whereas in the uk we pay in one go. Bring the bill and the card resder, pay it and go
    It's not more convenient
    I think the reason it feels slower in the UK is that your asking for the bill when you're wanting to leave, where ae in the US you know theres the whole take the card away thing. So you close out before you've finished your drinks/desserts
    Tip, ask for the bill when your tables being cleared or when you place your last drinks order. Then you're not sat waiting

  • @johnromero6315
    @johnromero6315 3 роки тому +565

    As an American, I agree with the Brits on customer service. My preferred CS experience is that the clerk leaves me alone until I'm ready to check out, and then rings me up with zero small talk. I wanna get in, get my stuff, and get out.

    • @kjpcgaming9296
      @kjpcgaming9296 2 роки тому +10

      Shop at walmart = they're incredibly rude LOL. The problem isn't the CSR it's the company. I worked for years as a CSR and if you didn't greet every customer that came in you'd get in trouble. The companies have this weird false ideal in their heads that people want to be bothered. SO NOT TRUE lol.

    • @isabellefleszar5851
      @isabellefleszar5851 2 роки тому +22

      If a clerk follows me, I’m like “do they think I’m stealing? Did I steal something without realizing it?”

    • @conorhallahan9625
      @conorhallahan9625 2 роки тому +25

      unfortunately retail can actually get fired for not being discustingly over polite. while working as just a warehouse worker i was rated on how outgoing and polite i was with customers its a shame we focus so much on it.

    • @yaboi-km2qn
      @yaboi-km2qn 2 роки тому +4

      and that's all i want to do as a cashier. people read my name tag and act like we've been friends for years.

    • @enjoyslearningandtravel7957
      @enjoyslearningandtravel7957 2 роки тому +4

      @@isabellefleszar5851 agreed. I was in a chocolate shop and I won’t say which name and it was a very small one and the whole time the clerk followed me making some more small talk, well you sure I can’t help you find something? I keep wondering did they tell her to follow the customers in case they steal the chocolates. I felt very uncomfortable and I wasn’t encouraging her to talk to me so I walked out without buying anything. Not the kind that steals, ever but I don’t like being followed. Put in a camera or some thing but don’t follow me.

  • @seb8696
    @seb8696 3 роки тому +469

    Maybe this was just my experience but “Sir” was only used to address teachers in secondary / high school. In primary school we would just address the teachers with Mr / Miss / Mrs followed by their surname

    • @MrSpruce
      @MrSpruce 3 роки тому +6

      Yup, that was my experience too.

    • @catrinnowaczek9692
      @catrinnowaczek9692 3 роки тому +8

      We would call my yr 11 math teacher Grav (short version of his name) but all the other teachers would be sir/miss even married

    • @lucie4185
      @lucie4185 3 роки тому +1

      I guess it depends on the school and the teacher.

    • @catrinnowaczek9692
      @catrinnowaczek9692 3 роки тому +1

      @@lucie4185 we’d call a lot of the office staff by their first name

    • @AlwaysLaura1
      @AlwaysLaura1 3 роки тому +2

      I think it depends on the school, in my high school we used used their surnames eg. Mr Anderson, Miss/Mrs Wilson. Some teachers would let you use their first names but generally that was when you were in you final years (S5, S6) and had been studying the subject for a long a few years.

  • @redmondthealien7840
    @redmondthealien7840 21 день тому +1

    7:54 Fun Fact: The two finger middle finger is actually the original version, it dates back to the hunder years war, where french knights would cut those two fingers from the hands of English Longbowmen, and said English Longbowmen would often parade the fact they still had their's infront of captured enemies.

  • @klimtkahlo
    @klimtkahlo 5 місяців тому +2

    I am sorry! I am European and lived and worked in the USA for many years. Many many people make tea in the microwave in the USA. They warm water in the microwave for instant coffee, instant hot chocolate and tea. Microwave water tastes disgusting!

  • @joshdove
    @joshdove 3 роки тому +1246

    the kettle thing bothers me so much cause i always grew up with a kettle, am i the only american who did?

    • @withinsanityy
      @withinsanityy 3 роки тому +28

      I didn't grow up with one.. it was the microwave for me until after college

    • @adamsbja
      @adamsbja 3 роки тому +61

      I have one as well, an old metal stovetop one that I got for college 20 years ago. I thought electric kettles were only for fancy temperature-specific timed brew and only recently found out that cheap ones just have an on/off switch.

    • @evan
      @evan  3 роки тому +84

      just u :x

    • @Ryan78336
      @Ryan78336 3 роки тому +88

      A kettle is a must. You move into a new house with nothing? You have to get a kettle first. Tea fixes everything.

    • @sarahs3988
      @sarahs3988 3 роки тому +26

      Nope, I own one, we owned one growing up. But we are tea people.

  • @DeKat-84
    @DeKat-84 3 роки тому +384

    As a British person, who on earth puts butter on a burger?! Never heard of this and it sounds gross.

    • @marydavis5234
      @marydavis5234 3 роки тому +79

      the butter is on the grilled buns not the burger, it keeps the bun from getting soggy, most fast food places in the US puts a little butter on the buns before they put it on the grill

    • @birdofnyx376
      @birdofnyx376 3 роки тому +19

      @@marydavis5234 it also makes the bread toast faster

    • @ESUSAMEX
      @ESUSAMEX 3 роки тому +4

      As a New Yorker who now lives in Florida, I have never seen someone butter the buns before eating the hamburger. That´s disgusting. The same for putting butter on sandwiches. Butter goes on bagels and rolls only!

    • @EtherealEmpr3ss
      @EtherealEmpr3ss 3 роки тому +6

      @@ESUSAMEX Lol I used to work at Wendy’s we’d butter the buns, toast em, and put the burger or chicken sandwich together.

    • @ESUSAMEX
      @ESUSAMEX 3 роки тому +3

      @@EtherealEmpr3ss I know people butter the buns to toast them, but I was talking about putting butter on a hamburger after cooking it and then eating it.

  • @NotThisAnonymous
    @NotThisAnonymous Місяць тому +2

    6:46 as a British person I have never heard dinky being used to mean anything other than small and cute

  • @pinguswingu
    @pinguswingu 2 роки тому +3

    12:47 nonononononono I am from the UK and live here, ive never heard of anybody doing that. People normally put ketchup, mayo, or nothing

  • @JUMALATION1
    @JUMALATION1 3 роки тому +294

    The "sir" thing at around 9:15 is very interesting. I'm not from the US or the UK but from Finland, and I have a friend in Tennessee, USA. We were on a video call once when I still lived with my parents, and my dad entered my room, and I asked my friend if he wanted to say hi to my dad, half joking. My friend got super serious all of a sudden and very politely asked "how are you sir" when my dad got in frame. My dad really appreciated the gesture but still chuckles about this because this is not a thing in Finland at all :D

    • @ESUSAMEX
      @ESUSAMEX 3 роки тому +38

      People older than you are always called ma´am and sir. It is considered very rude to not use those terms the first time you meet them. This especially true in the south, and Tennessee is in the heart of the south.

    • @derPetunientopf
      @derPetunientopf 3 роки тому +14

      As a german the 'Sir' thing also weirds me out. Maybe its because GB is closer but it feels to me like this is something for Royals or the military. Sure we have 'Sie/Ihnen' too but i think thats much less formal than 'Sir'.

    • @elieli2893
      @elieli2893 3 роки тому +14

      @@ESUSAMEX Haha yeah Finnish social politeness is not really about that :'D If they're a parent of your friend or something, you just greet them with "hello" and probably behave politely in front of them. If it's your teacher at school, you usually call them "teacher", "teach", or by their first name, even. Usually not the last name, that's for military, and kids using their friends' surnames as a type of nickname :D Using the equivalents of mr./mrs./ms. (herra/rouva/neiti) sounds old-timey and feels out of place unless used in very specific situations. With old people you don't know, as well as prominent figures like officials or the president, you might use the plural form of "you" to address them to be polite. That also happens in customer service, sometimes, the waiter/clerk addressing you that way. But it does make me feel a bit old :'D Hell, when I would write an email to a professor at uni, I would try to emit all personal pronouns referring to them as well as possible, because "you" as a singular sounded too familiar, but "you" as a plural sounded overly polite xD But yeah I think a lot of politeness in Finnish culture comes from implied considerateness towards the other person :D

    • @emjayay
      @emjayay 3 роки тому +7

      @@ESUSAMEX Yes, it's a Southern thing in the US. I grew up in upstate NY and I've never called anyone "sir" in my entire life, including in customer service positions. In British police procedural shows they always call their superior, even just the head person of their duo "sir" or " "ma'am". In the US today they would just typically call everyone at work by their first name, even the head of the business or organization.

    • @skasteve6528
      @skasteve6528 3 роки тому +7

      Moi! Off topic but my three year old boy is at päiväkoti (Finnish daycare). The idea was to get him to learn some Finnish. The daycare workers are now complaining that his Finnish is limited, whilst all the Finnish kids, are now speaking in English because of him. I am so proud of him.

  • @askalemuralia
    @askalemuralia 3 роки тому +287

    The culture shock that came with people not actually meaning their invites - have scarred me for life :(

    • @Sentariana
      @Sentariana 3 роки тому +52

      It's not that we don't mean it, we do! We just want you to ask us if it's OK to come around first, as we might be out or busy or find sudden changes stressful or not be in a good place mentally. You never know what is going on with someone! It's rude to turn up on someone's doorstep without warning, but polite to ask in advance.

    • @askalemuralia
      @askalemuralia 3 роки тому +34

      @@Sentariana I don't think anyone ever turns up without prior notice, especially in London where one must plan at least 6 weeks ahead. No, I meant that when you talk/see that person the next time AND you mention, that hey so you invited me last time, when should we hang out then? You're given the British look of: WHATTT is wrong with you?! XD followed by a topic change and awkwardness of next levels.

    • @raesnothome
      @raesnothome 3 роки тому +36

      @@askalemuralia see, you're doing it wrong. as an English person, here's the right way:
      wait for them to ask you, knowing fully that they're waiting for you to ask them, but neither of you are asking each other because it'll end up with that exact situation of both of you backtracking. wait a few months. wait a year. wait a few years. forget about it and move on to find a new friend, who says 'hey, come round sometime!' repeat.

    • @Artbug
      @Artbug 3 роки тому +8

      Believe me, it scares us here too 😢😢😢😢 why do we do this to ourselves??

    • @tb5563
      @tb5563 3 роки тому +2

      @@askalemuralia I would wait for them them to invite you next time this is how it works in the uk x

  • @kelly6504
    @kelly6504 4 місяці тому +3

    Amazes me how the word "damn" is proper frowned upon in USA, also it annoys the hell out of me being called maam. And the amount of times I've walked out of places due to micro customer service.... If I want bloody help I'll bloody well ask you myself

  • @PlatformLocation
    @PlatformLocation 2 роки тому +10

    Lol spunk is literally the word we use for “spunk” 😂 that’s why! And waiting for your server to come to you, then get your bill, then go back to their station to swipe, then come back to you to sign is WAAAY more time then just coming over with a card machine and taking payment. This goes along with why are cheques still used in the US?? Move on to automatic payments, bank transfers on bank mobile apps (no need for 3rd parties like Zelle, cash app etc!! Over here we just transfer money from bank to bank on our phones within seconds why can’t you do that here??) touch pay etc it’s so frustrating like we are living in the past 😂

  • @Dylanm94
    @Dylanm94 3 роки тому +510

    "I didn't even know there's sugar in Cheerios" that's the most American thing I've ever heard. If you eat a bowl of Cheerios in Europe, and you're not a kid, they may try to help you to the hospital.

    • @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
      @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 3 роки тому +36

      oh by god it is, lol. There's sugar in literally everything here (as it increases profits and there is nothing stopping large corporations from doing so)

    • @Attackontrashcan
      @Attackontrashcan 3 роки тому +27

      @@wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 and sugar is more addictive than drugs but is perfectly legal to put in food

    • @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410
      @wilhelmseleorningcniht9410 3 роки тому +2

      @@Attackontrashcan exactly

    • @mrlurious949
      @mrlurious949 3 роки тому +8

      Yeah but I don’t understand how people can eat cheerio’s everyday, I’m American yeah I have unhealthy cheerio’s but I don’t eat it everyday/hour’s it make’s my inside feel unhealthy disgusting etc. But the difference is that the U.S. has different options and variety, we can go to McDonald’s to Wendy’s what’s the difference well different ingredients but they are the same in everything.

    • @justcogitating
      @justcogitating 3 роки тому +6

      American Cheerios (the plain Cheerios, not the special flavors) have only one gram of sugar per bowl.

  • @knightofni1192
    @knightofni1192 3 роки тому +276

    Let me just say as a British person that being able to call your teacher Sir or Miss is damn useful.
    You dont have to remember anyone's name or marital status its actually damn convenient

    • @christopherwatts134
      @christopherwatts134 3 роки тому +11

      Ikr, I'm in college and now I have to remember teachers names and it's a pain

    • @rayh.8456
      @rayh.8456 3 роки тому +3

      American, I remember calling my teacher ma'am once to get her attention because I forgot her name in like the first week, and she was so offended... never understood why that was such a faux pas.

    • @Roslyngal
      @Roslyngal 3 роки тому +3

      In Australia it’s normally Miss + surname, Mr + surname. Everytime. Whether in person or in third person. So no advantage memory-wise! It was so fun being in a Swiss high school for a while, where everyone was on a first-name basis, even the principal and Board members.

    • @Sentariana
      @Sentariana 3 роки тому +3

      @@rayh.8456 Might be because you implied she was an old woman? I have seen other commenters saying ma'am can be taken that way.

    • @Rebecca-vd4ww
      @Rebecca-vd4ww 3 роки тому +4

      Ugh yeah! Like why do some people expect us to remember dozens of random adults’ marital statuses. That’s so weird. I love being able to use Miss and Sir for everyone lmao

  • @RG-Zeldaplayer
    @RG-Zeldaplayer 25 днів тому +1

    It's actually illegal to own a katana in the UK - unless it is antique. There was a string of criminal cases in the early 2000s where katanas were becoming fashionable weapons in criminal gangs, along with so called "zombie knives." - As a result they were banned although it hasn't done much to reduce knife crime.

  • @randomcow505
    @randomcow505 Рік тому +1

    The other reason you dont hold the doors on trains, and trams in the UK is that it it will often fuck the vehicle or fuck your hand
    Ive tried multiple times to hold the doors open for people here, and they close with a painfull amount of force, you gotta put your whole body in there
    if you do hold it open, it will often set off an alarm and stop the vehicle from moving

  • @AdventureHusky
    @AdventureHusky 3 роки тому +624

    God, I have got to go to the UK sometime, I appreciate their introverted way of life. Sounds like utter paradise to not be stalked in stores by overly friendly employees you don't wanna converse with.

    • @auberginemanproductions1608
      @auberginemanproductions1608 3 роки тому +62

      Introverts and cynics, that's us to a tee

    • @DanDanDoe
      @DanDanDoe 3 роки тому +81

      You’ll love the world outside the US in general. I hear so many people who visit the US, but also Americans, say they really dislike the US superficial fake friendliness. Many Americans think Dutch service sucks, like in restaurants you need to get the attention of the staff if you want to get another drink. Sometimes the waiter comes by and asks if everything’s alright, but generally only when everyone has stopped eating their meal/plates are empty. From what I’ve heard, in the US waiters just continuously come by to ask if everything’s alright and if you want something else to drink etc. So, many Americans think our lack of service is bad service, but Dutch people think American waiters are annoying for interrupting comversations every few minutes. Also, we don’t do “Hi, how are you?” unless we actually genuinely want to know how you are feeling.

    • @huskytail
      @huskytail 2 роки тому +1

      @@DanDanDoe and now put into perspective the fact that many people around the world find it difficult to cope with the fake smiles and greetings in Western Europe. While Western Europeans find those people surly 😁.

    • @cajunseasoning1846
      @cajunseasoning1846 2 роки тому +14

      @@huskytail Western Europe ≠ US
      The Uk and Scandinavian countries are part of Western Europe.

    • @huskytail
      @huskytail 2 роки тому +1

      @@cajunseasoning1846 I am talking exactly about Western Europe. From Northern France through Germany and the Netherlands to Scandinavia.

  • @denisef4131
    @denisef4131 3 роки тому +359

    American cashier's be like "OMG HI HOW R U TODAY?!"
    British cashier's be like "hiuarright"
    German cashier's be like "........ just give me that God damn money"
    Honestly, I was surprised, how friendly the british cashiers have been in comparison.

    • @gregorarmstrong2478
      @gregorarmstrong2478 3 роки тому +26

      I think i prefer the german way from my experience.

    • @georgmichelitsch7970
      @georgmichelitsch7970 3 роки тому +14

      @@gregorarmstrong2478 Entirely agree. The whole over-the-top "service" in the US is too much for me, I always found it very awkward.

    • @KBinturong
      @KBinturong 3 роки тому +11

      French here, British cashier are super friendly to me. And in a nice way. Calling you honey sometimes. It felt like I was part of a big family haha

    • @MG-gu7fu
      @MG-gu7fu 3 роки тому +6

      Right?? They will nod at you and frown when you're not out fast enough haha

    • @violetskies14
      @violetskies14 3 роки тому +13

      As a disabled person I prefer the German. Here in England they ask if I need help sooooo many times and being English I don't want to be rude but I mainly just want to be left alone. In Germany I don't have that problem and if I actually did need help I just went and found someone to ask.

  • @ailbedraper3327
    @ailbedraper3327 Рік тому +2

    Small clarification on the 'sir' and 'miss' thing: when calling the teacher you always say 'miss' but we would call them 'miss'/'mrs' depending on marital status before their surname

  • @justandy333
    @justandy333 11 місяців тому +2

    Yea, In the UK Dinky just refers to the size. It's got nothing to do with it value.

  • @Binidj
    @Binidj 3 роки тому +91

    "Dinky" means small and cute and is never derogatory (unless used sarcastically), and yes "randy" is still part of the lexicon.

  • @grasshopper1292
    @grasshopper1292 3 роки тому +573

    As a brit, yeah dinky just means small and cute. Really is almost always a compliment. Would never have known it was a bad thing in America

    • @ironbacon
      @ironbacon 3 роки тому +16

      It isn't necessary bad but it generally implies insignificance

    • @dianemiles2720
      @dianemiles2720 3 роки тому +24

      As someone from Missouri, I would be insulted if someone called my things dinky. It means cheap and off-brand or even broken here. It means it will break easy. But I call my dogs spunky all the time.

    • @harmonicaveronica
      @harmonicaveronica 3 роки тому +11

      Here it's more small and low quality and is kind of insulting. Either "cute little" or "teeny" (sometimes "teeny tiny") are a lot closer in meaning - "what a cute little puppy!" or "look at those teeny flowers!"

    • @grasshopper1292
      @grasshopper1292 3 роки тому +8

      @@dianemiles2720 lol that immediately makes me think your dog humps everything 😅 So funny how these all mean different things 🤣

    • @grasshopper1292
      @grasshopper1292 3 роки тому +10

      @@harmonicaveronica interesting, see teeny flowers sounds insulting to me. Dinky could be insulting here if you're describing something that shouldn't be small and cute, but cute and small sound more insulting than dinky to my British ears. Like a dinky house makes me think of a small, starter home that's really cosy. If I called it cute or small, it sounds like I hate it but am trying to be polite 🤣🤣

  • @iscmiscm
    @iscmiscm 2 місяці тому +1

    The reason most Americans do NOT have electric kettles, is that they take too long to boil due to the 120 volt supply.
    OK there is the convenience thing, as they have auto shut off, but in the US a stove top kettle is just much faster, especially with an induction hob.
    In Europe electric kettles can be up to 3 or even 3 1/2 kW.
    1,800 watts is the max in the US unless using a special T socket and I am not sure if kettles that can use this even exist.

  • @shiftyfly2569
    @shiftyfly2569 27 днів тому +2

    we do use 'mr/miss/mrs [name]' in the uk too, just sometimes we can't be bothered to remember/say their name when sir or miss will do
    also i have made detours to look at christmas lights but it was never the sole purpose of a trip