The reason why we called the boot of a vehicle a trunk was, because in the early days they used to have what was known as a steamer trunk which is was used while people were traveling overseas, and it was attached to the back of the vehicle via straps and so that’s where the term in America for the boot being called a trunk comes from
@@jamesjohnston9225 Yes! And the trunk (storage box) could have been made from a tree trunk! And if you visited a zoo, you could have been riding on the trunk of an elephant (apparently this is a thing now?)! So you can put your trunk that was on a trunk in the trunks that were in the trunk, that was made from a trunk, in the trunk! No, I'm NOT having a stroke, thank you very much. 😂
"Trunk" is one that actually has a logical explanation. On early autos, there was often an actual trunk that could be removed to be used as luggage, mounted on, or, near the rear of the car.
We lived on an old farm when I was a kid and there was a no longer used outhouse. Inside was a collection of magazines from the 1920s to 1930s. Some of the ads were for cars, and they did indeed have what I would steamer trunks strapped to the back of the car.
Funny story. King County has a street car/Trolley line and about 10 years ago they added a line to South Lake Union. So if you come to the good ol pacific Northwes you can take a ride on the South Lake Union Trolly and get some merch that proclaims that you did in fact ride the South Lake Union Trolly But they use the acronym.
@@Raggmopp-xl7yf The term has been co-opted by people using it as generic slang for many things with wheels. But the true definition is still based on the small wheel riding overhead wires for streetcars.
A "Berger" contains hamburger or "mince" meat no matter what bread or bun it is served on. A "Sandwich" contains just about anything. Some sandwiches don't even have meat. Love all you guys.
I agree, burger implies beef. You will see pork burgers or veggie burgers, etc, on menus too. I wouldn't consider those sandwiches, since they're still patty shaped
In the words of Dwight Shrute "False!" lol but actually "Burger" implicitly does imply that it comes on a bun. It implies some type of ground meat patty, generally beef but not exclusively, that is served on a bun.
@@francescashanae5305I would still call them sandwiches, but burgers are sandwiches. Chicken can be patty shaped, is it a burger? Or, is it just a chicken sandwich?
@@MrRobd23 they don't call them beef burgers tho.... so why do the rest have to specify what it's made of? And you're right, Dwight eats horse burgers 🤣 ua-cam.com/video/uewOhK-MSjc/v-deo.htmlsi=32_aSDprVFP0Juqp Edit, I guess they do say beef burger in the stores cause there are endless varieties now
Indicator = turn signal = blinker. We call them all three. In the US we dont call candy lollies, because a specific type of candy is a lollipop. We don't call them all chocolate bars, and instead use candy bar, because they don't all contain chocolate. With so many varieties it is easier to just say candy, or even sweets would work well.
Burger is short for Hamburger. Originally from Germany, city of Hamburg. To us Americans, a burger is anything that uses "hamburger" or ground beef as the meat. To us, you can have a burger without the buns, but you cannot have a burger, without ground beef. Everything else is a Sandwich. Hope this helps. Also, Turn signals/indicators/Blinkers English: Trolley American English: Cart or Shopping Cart Southern American English: Buggy
Speak for yourself. Calling ground beef "hamburger" is such a (weird and wrong to me) regional thing that really doesn't exit around where I live. I'm in California and ground beef is called ground beef. Hamburger is the name of a specific type of sandwich that consists of ground beef formed into a round patty which is cooked and served between the top and bottom halves of a bun. Nothing other than that is a hamburger. I have to admit it drives me nuts when people (Midwesterners usually) refer to ground beef as "hamburger." Heck, here we often further specify ground beef into "ground chuck" or "ground sirloin" to differentiate the cut of beef (and its quality and fat to meat ratio) used to make the particular ground beef. Calling ground beef (or any other ground meat like turkey, veal or lamb) "hamburger" just seems wrong and is ridiculously generic and confusing to me. I blame the misnaming of ground beef as hamburger in some parts of America squarely on that famous brand that sells chemical preservatives and cheap pasta in a box as a meal kit known as "Hamburger Helper." It should really just be called "Ground Beef Helper" since no hamburgers are used in its preparation.
I disagree. McDonalds and In-N-Out, both originating in California, have hamburgers on their menus, not Ground Beef burgers. You are getting caught up in the fine nuances of cuisine.
I'm in Canada and it's more about the bun here . We'd say Chicken Burger if it was on a hamburger bun but chicken sandwich if the bun was more like what subway uses and not round.
@@skyhawk_4526 you say speak for yourself, but as a Californian, I haven't met anyone else who would agree with your "beef". "Hamburger meat" = "ground beef" just as commonly on the west coast as most other parts of the country. The fact that it's not labeled that in grocery stores doesn't pigeonhole it.
@@Blueknight1960 I have been to LA, MS, AL, GA, and TX and heard people call it a buggy. The overwhelming majority of Southerners I have been around call it a buggy.
"Burger" is short for hamburger. Hamburger was the name given to chopped steak (beef) prepared in the Hamburg style. It has grown to include other ground meats as they are also prepared in the Hamburg style. Traditionally, however, "Burger" refers to sandwiches containing beef hamburger patties.
@@MGmirkindoesn't have to be on a hamburger bun. The original hamburger sandwich was actually on white bread. Patty melts are also hamburgers and they are typically on rye bread. I didn't want to get too far into the weeds and confuse things even more. Like pointing out the fact that there are chicken sandwiches (fillet) and chicken burgers (ground chicken) both come on a hamburger bun but are not the same thing.
They are called hamburgers because they came from Hamburg germany. Germans migrated to the United States mostly in the 1850s they brought the hamburger with them, then Americans took that hamburger and they put cheese on it and lettuce and tomato and onion and pickle and put it on a bun and created the modern day hamburger on a bun. Burger is short for hamburger so only a hamburger can be a burger.
I'm so glad you're going to visit some different states on your next trip. It seems like every time an English speaking foreigner (to the U.S.) visits here, they only ever go to the Big 4 (New York, Florida, Texas, and California). There is A LOT MORE to see in the U.S. than just those 4 states. Thanks for the video and here's wishing you safe travels!
cookie / biscuit , napkin nappie / diaper, flashlight / torch. I spent a couple of years in New Zealand. Some funny language incidents. Saying "I'm stuffed" is a good one.
I used to work for a gas station/truck stop. I once had somebody paying for gasoline tell me their car was "the one with the bonnet up". It threw me for the three seconds it took for me to look out the window and spot the car with the "hood" up.
Chicken sandwiches with buns in particular in the USA are definitely not referred to as "chicken burger" because chicken burger uses GROUND or MINCED chicken patties which we do have ground or minced chicken burgers the same in ground or minced cow meat patties for burgers. A chicken breast sandwhich like you get at Chick Fil A for example is a Chicken Sandwich because it uses the whole boneless chicken breast. That is the difference!
@@HemlockRidge True I agree. But the point I am making is the difference between what people in the US call a burger vs sandwich.. Burgers have ground or minced meat.. Sandwiches as in chicken sandwich is the whole boneless chicken breast.
Lollipop can be shortened to lollies which is hard candy on a stick. Candy is a general name with many sun categories, like gummies, mints, chocolate bars etc.
I learned that in the south, they call lollipops a sucker. Sounds odd for me to say sucker for a lollipop because to me it means something different. 😂
As an American 🇺🇸 I could have never guessed what togs meant. Here in the Great Midwest, signal light is more common than blinker. The word "trolley" is a form of public transportation using overhead electrical wire. In most cities they have all but disappeared by 1960 and replaced by busses. Although St Louis, Missouri has built a new trolley line in the Delmar loop.
Togs was literally the only example they gave that I had never heard of. Otherwise, I knew both. I'm an American, but my parents were British immigrants. Never in my life have I heard the word "Togs."
I realize this is a different place from New Zealand, but my Australian coworkers were eager to participate in our American Halloween festivities. They were avidly conversing about all the lollies they would get. I piped up and said they could buy *any* type candy, not just lollipops. They explained and we had a good laugh. I’m just happy they did not say get stuffed.🤣🤣🤣
Your family has a really nice way of communicating the differences between our nations. The fact that you have such passion for our country is amazing. Our country is going through a lot and listening to you talk about our country lets us know there is still light that shines from our nation.
To us, the cockpit of a car is _full_ of indicators: speed, engine rpms, gasoline level, engine temperature, lights, high-beams, oil needs changed, tire pressure is low, general trouble indicator, and nowadays, compass direction and internal and external temperatures, as well as heat and air conditioning activity. There are also left and right indicators on the dashboard showing whether you've activated a turn signal, with both indicators lighting up if you activated the hazard control.
@@shallowgal462 Gauges, digital or mechanical, actually gauge something and show a specific level of speed or fuel, etc. While indicators just light up or flash to say look at me, I’m on or I’m broken, or I’m turning!
@@kristophergoordman7225 Gauges are indicators, as are meters. Life is filled with indicators both natural and man made. A defining characteristic of humans as intelligent beings is the use of symbols (symbolic language) to convey information. The leaves changing color are indicators of fall and a reminder that winter is impending.
wow, i googled " togs". If the google info is cortect then " tog" is short for " togeman", refering to clothes. A common American word for male swimwear is "swim shorts", or just " shorts" for short. Which is my point exactly. If " togeman" is full length normal clothes then " togs" would be " shorts" . See same same. Over here swim shorts are also commonly called "trunks". If anyone ever says " bring tour trunks" it means you are welcome to swim. So, now " trunk" is "boot" and "trunks" is " togs". If you are in the deep South and you here the word " droors" or " draws" and the reference does't seem to involve furniture , sketch artistry, or a financial transaction, the person is most likely refering to underwear (eg, boxers, briefs) or sometimes simply "pants"/ trousers. Yall probably can figure "britches". It is shortened from " under-breeches", the old underpants with the toggle/button flaps that supposedly made the process of defecating easier. And , I would not be surprised if Americans have coined the most words for that process than any other country. I don't want ti get into that, but Boo-Boo is not just Yogi the Bear's friend, doo-doo is not usually a request to " do" anything, and going " number two" isn't typicalky refering to your position in line/ queue. If you want more, I am available. YW. The word "togs" is an informal term used in New Zealand to refer to swimming shorts or bathing suits. It's short for the word "togeman", which was 16th century criminal slang for "coat". In the 18th century, "togs" started being used more generally as slang for clothes. The word may have originated from the word "toga", a Roman garment. "Toga" comes from "tegere" meaning to cover.
In the US, the burger refers not to the bun but to the meat, the burger *patty*. So a burger patty on its own is a "burger", and anywhere it's found is called a burger whether it's on bread, on a bun, in a hoagie roll, it's always still a burger.
Hunters and butchers in the U.S. call the ground meat of any animal "hamburger". When a hunter butchers a deer, for example, the ground meat will be wrapped in either paper or plastic and labeled "hamburger", then put into the freezer for storage. It is not called "ground deer"; it is called "hamburger". Even if the hamburger is cooked and put between two slices of sandwich bread it is still hamburger. Simply put, ground meat is hamburger.
Actually, it does refer to the bun too. Go pick up a pack of buns at the store and see what they are called. Doesn't mean you have to put a hamburger in them though.
Lollies in the states are usually hard candy on a stick ‘lolly Pop’. Swimsuits are often called Bathing suits. Not all candy bars are chocolate. Some terms are regional
Also the Los Angeles Dodgers when they were in Brooklyn were called the Brooklyn Trolley Dodgers because you had to dodge trolleys on the way to the ballpark. They eventually dropped trolleys and just became the Dodgers.
Sandwich\burger rules are easy once you know them. A sandwich is two pieces of bread (the type of bread does not matter) with something between them, usually meat. A burger is specifically a ground beef patty between two slices of bread, usually buns but not necessarily. A burger is a sandwich, just called burger from hamburger, which you will also see them called.
Found this on the internet. "Togs" is short for the word "togeman", which was 16th century criminal slang for "coat". In the 18th century, "togs" started being used more generally as slang for clothes. In the UK, the word still just means "clothes", but in Australia and New Zealand, it came to be used in a swimming context."
This makes sense since wasn't Australia originally a penal colony for UK criminals? Also NZ was populated by a lot of people coming from Australia, so the lingo would've followed.
What's funny to me is that I've spent my entire life in the southern US, and I've always used "bathing suit" for swimsuit/togs and "turn signal" for blinker/indicator. And I've caught flak for it from other Americans. Southern American English sometimes feels like a different language!
Well, I’m from Montana, lived I. Ohio, Oregon, Washington,, and now Tennessee, and I say bathing suit, too. So do my friends who are from other states.
A bit of trivia. The reason that the USA uses trunk is that early vehicles used actual "trunks" or containers that were strapped to the back of the vehicle that passengers put their belongings. Vehicles then eventually morphed into having "trunks."
In the US, 'burger' means a patty made of ground meat (mince). So you can have a chicken or turkey burger, but only if they're made of ground chicken or turkey. On the flip side, you can have burgers (like the patty melt I think you were showing in the video) on sliced bread, or for that matter you can have a low-carb burger that has no bread at all, as long as it's made of ground meat.
#9 Windshield vs Windscreen. The front glass of a car is a windshield just like a shield protects someone. A screen allows air to pass but keeps bugs out like on windows of a house. Or a screen can sift flour or dirt. Screens allow something to pass through.
@@scarlettjoehandsome6130 sure, but it's not a lightshield, it's a windshield. I don't care what you call it, I'm not suggesting one is even more correct than the other; what I'm saying is that the point of the comment was it shields you from wind (it does not filter or screen wind). Trying to make the original comment about something it's not is irrelevant.
I call blinkers/indicators "turn signals". At one time, not all cars (or motorcycles) had turn signals and motorists had to know the proper hand signals for signaling a turn. Hence, blinkers/indicators are turn signals.
" frog togs" are rain gear. Traditionally , didnt rain gear have toggles, ie, dowels on a string ( "toggle" is camping jargon for that very thing" ) pushed through loops to secure one side of the article to the other. I wonder if there is correlation.
I was aware of many of the alternate names for the same thing (OK, togs was a new one). Shopping carts are sometimes called wagons, and blinkers are more generically called turn signals. I think most Americans consider burgers to be hamburgers (ground beef), and other fast food items are sandwiches, even if they are served on a hamburger bun. But don't forget that due to its size, different regions of the USA have different words for the same thing too. If you go into a sandwich shop for a long sandwich, it can be anything from a hero, sub, hoagie, po boy, or any one of a bunch of other names. Yes, in some areas, certain sandwich names refer to a specific type of sandwich, and I doubt that many Americans travelling around the country would know all the variations. In a supermarket, non-alcoholic carbonated beverages in some areas are "soda", in others, "pop" - and I think there are a few other words used as well. A liquor store in New England is called a "packie" - just a couple examples. And don't get into the various regional accents.
When I visited Australia and New Zealand the word that jumped out to me, and I heard often, was 'windscreen'. Here in the US we call it a 'windshield'.
Ground meat has fats and sometimes other fillers added and is mostly put through a meat grinder, whereas minced meat is just the meat finely cut or minced without any added ingredients and can be ground up or finely cut with a knife.
In Michigan, and probably most other places, mincemeat would refer to the ingredients of mincemeat pie. It doesn't contain meat at all but is a concoction of various fruits, typically dried and especially raisins , and various spices like cinnamon.
The difference between a burger and a sandwich is the meat inside. A burger is ground beef where any other meat (chicken, fish, etc) makes it a sandwich. The indicater to you is referred to as a blinker or turn signal depending on where you are.
A burger is referring to the hamburger patty, not the bread, although a burger on bread is traditionally called a "patty melt". A sandwich can be made of bread, buns or rolls and could have almost anything as the filling.
It's really simple. If it is a Beef Patty it is a Burger regardless of the bread or bun. If the meat is anything else it is a sandwich regardless of the bread or bun, EXCEPT it is heavily debated among us Americans if a Hamburger counts as a sandwich! You will NEVER Get a straight answer on that one!
You rented a Durango. That rear opening I would call the rear gate. Trunk/boot is on a sedan or coupe. Hatch on a hatchback, gates on SUVs. Another difference would be hood vs bonnet.
Most SUV's don't have gates anymore though, they have a hatch. Older ones like Blazers and station wagons had a tailgate that opened down and window that opened up. Now most just have a hatch.
I'd call it a hatch. Whether on an SUV or a hatchback, it's essentially exactly the same thing. I only call it a gate (as in tailgate) if it's on the rear end of a pickup truck. If it's a sedan or coupe, the space where you put the luggage or cargo that's behind the rear seat is the trunk, whereas the thing that opens and closes to access the trunk is technically called the trunk lid.
A burger is anything with a beef patty (or alternative meat patty). A sandwich is everything else between two pieces of bread. A hot sandwich is typically called a melt.
-Burger=Hamburger -Our blinkers are officially called turn signals - In the Southeast we call your trolleys, buggies! - lollies are lollipops to us - Chocolate bars are candy bars - Togs = swimsuits, bathing suits, trunks and bikinis (we expect our togs to get discolored) - "Zed's dead, baby" Pulp Fiction quote. It's the name of a guy here. What was the last one??? Glad you enjoyed your trip. Come to the southeast USA next time. It's a whole other country, and we're nicer. 😊
A burger is ANY ground meat (or meat substitute) formed into a patty. Not just ground beef, but ground turkey, pork, chicken, salmon, bison, lamb, etc. plus mushrooms, veggies & “beyond.”
@jeffg.6110 yes, but if I decide to get ground shrimp formed into a pattie, cooked, and served on a bun, I'm not calling it a burger. I'm calling it a shrimp burger or shrimp sandwich. If I'm ordering a burger, I expect beef. If I want my burger made of ground turkey, I'm ordering a turkey burger. Bison? Bison burger. See my point? They're all burgers, but they need qualifiers.
By far the BEST UA-cam family period . I love you guys and how beautiful y'all are inside and out....I honestly think your family is simply PERFECT. Best family to ever come over to the US. Keep being amazing and giving us all Great footage. I'm writing from Griffin,Ga 40-45min south of Atlanta
A funny story going the other way: Years ago I was going to England to visit a dear friend and rented a car. I knew to expect driving on the "wrong" side and it being a stick shift (manual transmission), but being groggy after an overnight flight, I was further challenged in trying to understand British English by the clerk having a strong Indian accent. He took me to the car and after I got in he's pointing to the different parts, including saying "There are your indicators." I had absolutely no idea what he meant, as to me (and many Americans), "indicators" refers to the lights on the dash that tell you when something is wrong (low oil, etc.). So my response to him was "my What???" After going back and forth a few times, he finally reached in and touched it and asked "What do you call these?" "OH! Turn signals!" 😀
You distinguish the difference between sandwich and burger by the bread; we distinguish by the type of “meat” inside. If the “meat” is ground (minced) it’s generally a burger. Ground (minced) beef, turkey, chicken, veggies pressed into a patty form are generally called burgers. You can put a burger between two slices of bread and it would still be a burger; a burger bun is called that because it houses a burger. If you put cheese and tomato in a burger bun it’s a sandwich.
If you make it to Florida in your RV come to Crystal River. You can swim with manatees. They are peaceful creatures who graze on sea grass. They are called the cows of the sea and some people think they are what early sailors referred to when they spoke of mermaids.
Hey Guys, Big Fan here. I was lucky enough to spend a month on the North Island during a joint military exercise between the U.S. & New Zealand Armies. They gave us 4 days off and of course we spent that time in Aukland. Fantastic People who showered us w/ their Hospitality. Just an unforgettable time. I was watching WAY too much UA-cam the other day, as usual, and it hit me when I saw it. One of the most Unique to American things that an entire Family can enjoy and be "WoW'ed" at is an indoor Monster Truck event. It's usually not too long, it gets the senses fired up and it's usually relatively inexpensive to see one of these events. I took a girlfriend to see one in Pocatello, Idaho for a first date and we had a Blast ! If this is already on the list and has already been suggested, my apologies. Enjoy that RV experience, I'm from Oregon and I think ur all gonna enjoy that one. If you happen to be near the West Coast in July, find some Rainier Cherries, nothing like them anywhere else and they are Delicious. Named for Washington State's Mt. Rainier, if ur within a few hundred miles, you'll find it. 😊 Thanks for the YT content, it's Fun & Refreshing to see. 👍
Wow thats so awesome! Glad NZ showed you a good time while you were here. So keen to get to a monster truck event if we can. We will def look out for those cherries!! Thanks for the tip!
You really need to come to Michigan known as the mitten state due to its shape (gee do you call them mittens?) Go up north towards the Mackinaw bridge 5 miles long across 2 of the Great Lakes. Go to Mackinaw island where no cars allowed walk or horses bikes and lots of wonderful fudge. Then go further into the upper peninsula of Michigan for some beauty. Stop by and see the Soo Locks can be interesting. Think you would rather enjoy the beauty.
Found this about Togs: Where does the word togs originate? Words for swimwear also developed along with beach culture. Australians use a variety of terms to describe their bathing attire, including 'cossies' (a shortened version of 'costumes') and 'togs', which Gwynn explains is an abbreviation of the 16th-Century word 'togeman', meaning coat.
My father was in medical in WWII in England. He always called the back of a car the boot so that is what I still call it. He pronounced other words with a different accent...such as schedule.
My father was in World War II in England also one of his favorite words that he brought back from England was calling men blokes. He was dating my mother before the war and came back and married her, to make a long story short. In the 1970s he admitted that he left two children in England. Then approximately 10 years ago after he had already died two of my sisters joined ancestry when all the sudden they started getting messages from people all over England and Wales that they match up to us. It was shocking to find out that our father who was stationed in England during World War II was a gigolo😂😂 he was impregnating women all over the UK including a nurse from Wales who was stationed in England during World War II. He probably didn't even know about some of these children since these women were mostly one-night stands. My sisters are really upset about it but I found it kind of funny.
I later researched a lot about it and found out that American soldiers were impregnating women all over England and Europe in World War II, and that there are millions of war children that were left there after the American soldiers came back home.
You might want to join ancestry which is the most common site. There could be half brothers and sisters looking for you to find out who your dad was, you just never know.
A good way to understand the word sandwich is this... Sandwich is like the word automobile (the main category). Then you have car, truck, van, SUV as the secondary category. With Sandwich (the main category) . Then you have Hamburgers & Cheeseburgers (Burgers), Chicken Filet, Fish Fillet, Subs, Tuna Salad, Ham etc... are the secondary Categories.
Yes, just another here confirming as others said, a large travel trunk was always strapped to the rear of them older cars when traveling; and the term stuck. "Put it in the trunk" has from then on meant put it in the back storage compartment.
I’m from the most north eastern corner of the Midwest section of America and it’s here where the majority of immigrants from Germany, Poland, and the Netherlands settled. It was the German immigrants who brought the hamburger to America. Originally it was just a beef patty and pickles between two pieces of toasted white bread. It wasn’t until much later the hamburger bun came around. In my area at least the only thing we considered a burger is the hamburger itself, the rest are just sandwiches regardless of what type of bread they are on. One famous Polish desert you have to try in the Northern Midwest is the paczki (pronounced punch-key). It basically a Polish style donut covered in powdered sugar and filled either with a mixture of fruit and jam or Bavarian cream. In rare instances you might find one filled with chocolate. I feel in that video you watch on favorite desserts in America that definitely should have beat out the buckeye peanut butter balls for the favorite of Ohio. A tip when you do the buckeyes though, after you dip them place them on parchment paper to cool, not wax paper like a lot of places tell you to do, the wax paper adds a weird and undesirable flavor to the finished product.
Burgers vs sandwiches. In the US burgers are determined by the type/style of meat, not the bun. If it is ground meat or a plant based version that is supposed to imitate a ground beef burger Patty, then it’s a burger. Anything else between two slices of bread or in a bun is a sandwich. If it’s not a veggie burger, ground beef burger, or ground meat turned into a burger patty, it’s a sandwich.
That vegan burger is not a burger at all, it's just ground plants with other additives to make it look like hamburger, but it's not a burger. It's more like a booger, you know the crusty thing you pick out your nose?
Some early car models had space on the back of the chassis, behind the cabin, where a literal trunk (surely you know the word in the context of old-fashioned luggage?) could be strapped. Later models had a trunk already bolted on, so you didn't have to supply your own; and then eventually the trunk (and also other components that were originally separate, e.g., the fenders) became integrated into the design of the car's body. The original meaning of "hamburger" was meat (originally any kind of meat, not just beef) that was sold pre-ground. The practice was introduced to the English-speaking world by people who had seen it in Hamburg (in what is now Germany). In America, the meaning was narrowed to ground _beef_ specifically pretty early (late eighteenth or early nineteenth century), and in some contexts it has since been further narrowed to certain quality grades of ground beef. (When reading product labels, ground chuck, for example, officially has a lower fat content than hamburger. I'm not sure where exactly the USDA got the definitions, but there are specific rules for product labeling.) The hamburger sandwich was popularized in the very late nineteenth or very early twentieth century, and hamburger buns were introduced about a decade later. I'm not sure when people started calling the entire sandwich simply "a hamburger", but that usage is probably ancestral to the suffix -burger being applied to patties made from other ground substances (turkey-burger, soy-burger, etc.) that emerged some time in the twentieth century. In the present day, Europeans now use the term "burger" for sandwiches regardless of whether the meat is ground up, but America never got the memo on that innovation, which suggests that it likely happened some time before the widespread adoption of the internet, but presumably after the hamburger sandwich was popularized internationally, which places it pretty squarely in the twentieth century. Etymologically, hamburger buns are named for the hamburger patties that they were made to sandwich, not the other way around. And yes, in America, if you put a hamburger patty between two slices of bread, it's still a hamburger; if you put it between two halves of a bagel, it's a hamburger on a bagel; if you eat the patty by itself, without any bread or bun, it's still a hamburger. And if you cook it loose and put it in spaghetti, it's still hamburger, in the spaghetti. No bun required, and I have to say that putting buns in spaghetti would be a little odd, though I wouldn't be surprised if somebody somewhere has done it as a novelty. And now I'm gonna blow your mind: "mincemeat" doesn't have meat in it, and it never did. The word "mincemeat" is older than the current meaning of the word "meat". Originally (and we're going pretty far back in the history of the English language here), "mete" was a general word for solid food (as opposed to beverages). The word hasn't been used that way anywhere in the world for a long time; but it survived for a while longer in a handful of compound words, e.g., "sweetmeats" (an old-fashioned word for candy), "nutmeat" (which means the edible part of the nut, excluding the shell), and "mincemeat", which is made from minced fruits and nuts, sometimes with spices, and historically, I think it used to also have alcohol in it at least some of the time. But there was never a time in history when "mincemeat" had what we would today call meat (i.e., animal flesh) in it. The meaning of the word "meat" was narrowed to that later, after "mincemeat" was already named. There was also the age-of-sail phrase "meat and drink", which in some cases referred to ship's biscuit (i.e., hardtack) and a beverage. However, mincemeat *is* minced (i.e., cut into small bits), and presumably the British use of "mince" to refer to ground meat, is from that meaning of "mince" as well. Even a person's steps can be "minced", which is when somebody takes a larger number of really really small steps, instead of just taking a couple of big steps. I find it difficult to imagine that you haven't encountered the word "candy" in American TV or movies at some point. There *are* other words for it, but "candy" is overwhelmingly more common in North America than all of its synonyms combined. There are candy bars that don't contain chocolate; I think Payday may be the most famous example of that. The word "togs" is of British origin and originally meant basically the same thing as "clothes". I don't know the extent to which they do or do not still use the term these days. Ask a Brit. In any case, your usage (meaning a swimsuit) is probably a shortening of "swimming togs"; once you'd left off using the word "togs" for other types of clothing, the qualifier "swimming" would have seemed redundant and unnecessary. The name of the letter Z is a case where the American version is the innovation. I think it was changed to more closely match the names of other letters. (Most of the consonants either have names rhyming with B and C and D or J and K, or else they have a short-E vowel followed by the letter, like F, L, M, N, S, X. W is a notable outlier, and Z used to also be an outlier, until we changed it. Britain never got the memo on that change.)
@@BarredCoast0 Yes, that's reasonably typical, although I think most versions also have some nut content, and many versions omit the top crust. My mom's (Ohio farm country) version contained dates and raisins and walnuts and cinnamon and suet, not sure what else, I haven't had it in decades.
I have never heard of the word "trunk" as an old fashioned word for luggage. Maybe it's only an American thing. I'm from NZ. Mincemeat in NZ has always meant actual meat. 'Mince' by itself is always beef by default, but you can get chicken mince, pork mince etc too but theyre always specifiied. What you're referring to woukd be called fruit mince. But many of us are aware of the old meaning from the UK. We have all definitely heard of the word candy, but we almost never call it that. Always lollies, but we don't refer to chocolate as lollies like you do for candy. A "candy bar" here would be called a bar of chocolate. Lollies and chocolates are seen as two separate things, but two different types of sweets.
@@shaungordon9737 The second meaning of "trunk", referring to a semi-portable chest used for luggage, is about twice as old as the American colonies; it was already old and well established when Chaucer used it in the late fourteenth century. It appears to have been originally coined in Old French, possibly in reference to the locked chests used by the Roman Catholic church to collect and transport offering money; but by Chaucer's time it was a general-purpose term for a traveler's chest. Only the automotive application is specific to American English. With that said, the first meaning, referring to the trunk of a tree or of an elephant, is much older yet, going back at least to classical antiquity in Latin.
Just to add to the confusion ... here in the states, a man's swimsuit is often refered to as "trunks." I don't know why we use the plural. Have a great next trip to the US. Hope it's even better than the first.
Swim trunks are also commonly referred to as "swim shorts." Also plural. I'm pretty sure any garment you pull up over your feet and legs is referred to in the plural: Pants, trousers, panties, leggings, stockings, nylons, jeans, tights, shorts, slacks, trunks, undies, britches, etc. All of those words are plural. In languages other than English, the corresponding words are also plural.
In America, burger describes the round meat patty, not the bread. That's why double burger is 2 meat patties, or double cheeseburger, when cheese is added, melted on the meat patty. Though caveat is Vegan burgers are burgers because they resemble meat burgers and are meant to replace them, taste similar, but made out of vegetables. Therefore, buns vs toast vs Texas toast (thicker bread), or just plain square bread is just the bread of the sandwich. As @Deadcntr put it, all burgers are also sandwiches because they are meat between two slices of bread, but all others are just sandwiches; ex: chicken sandwich.
'Togs' is actually derived from a 16th-century word for coat, 'togeman', according to the BBC. It got shortened to 'togs' overtime, and usually referred to any type of clothes. It wasn't until the early 20th century that it came into use to refer to swimming attire.
When we say "burger" we are specifically referring to a ground beef product, not the type of bread used. We may also use the term to indicate other meats/products that are ground up (i.e. turkey burgers, veggie burgers). Here, a burger is a burger, and a sandwich is a sandwich regardless of whether it is in a bun or sandwich bread which is why your Popeye's chicken sandwich was a sandwich, and if I prepared a burger for you at my home and used sandwich bread (very common) it would still be a burger. I love the phrase differences. We consider lollies to be lollipops specifically, and even here togs is an old school word for clothes so older people would be more familiar with swimming togs, gym togs, work togs, etc. Mince is more of an old school term too, but most people get it when they hear it.
In the US, in addition to chicken sandwiches, we also have chicken burgers and chicken patties which, as far as I know, are only available in the freezer isles of grocery stores and supermarkets. • Chicken sandwich - A piece of chicken breast that has either been breaded and fried or just seasoned and grilled. • Chicken burger (at least what I've seen in grocery stores and supermarkets) - Ground chicken that is formed into a hamburger patty shape and grilled. • Chicken patty - Ground chicken that is formed into a hamburger patty shape then breaded and fried.
Burgers in the US refers to anything ground/mince beef/hamburger. Every other type of meat is a sandwich or sub. Indicator is 4 syllables!! Blinker is shorter to say lol Love your videos!
A “boot” was the shelf on the back of a coach (stagecoaches) where luggage was placed. A “trunk” was/is a very large piece of luggage which was placed on the Coach boot.
While in Las Vegas, a lovely Australian couple (with the thickest accent I’ve ever heard) 😄 stopped me and asked “Is zat uh lie-eze luh”? I had to ask them about three times to please repeat the question. Finally, he said, “Is zat uh lie-eze toilet”? 😂 Ohhhhhhhh! (Is that a ladies loo)? 😂 They were so lovely and good natured. We all laughed at our language barriers.
A funny comment. When I was a kid, all sodas were seen as 'Coke'. I ordered a coke as a 7 year old at the bowling alley one day, so the waitress gave me a Coke. She was quite confused when I said, "I wanted the clear kind." I had wanted a Sprite.
That's more of a **regional** thing ["...in a galaxy far, far away..."] than a temporal thing ["...a long time ago..."], I think... Some call all carbonated beverages: "soda," "pop," "a Coke [exemplar-Brand-as-category-name; kind of like all facial tissues are 'a Kleenex']," etc.
A burger place near me was staffed with Spanish Americans Though bilingual, when someone asked what fountain drinks they had, it stumped the whole restaurant.
@@geoffreysmommy When my dad visited my in college (home was western New York State while college was eastern NY), he liked to visit restaurants and order a "pop", just to get the reaction. I would then have to explain that he meant a "soda".
To most Americans, mince meat is not meat, it is a pie we have during the holidays, mince meat is made of apples, apple cider, candied cherries, brown sugar, apricots, dried cherries, cranberries, currants, figs, orange zest, orange juice, golden raisins, raisins, schmaltz, allspice, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, cloves, salt, and rum . . .at least in PA and OH, also, a burger on toast or bread with grilled onions and cheese is called a patty melt. . .
Original mincemeat pies, or minced pies, did contain meat and many recipes still do even though the ones without meat are the more popular ones nowadays.
My mum was born and raised in England and I was born there as well. So the terminology we used was similar to yours so I understand what you were talking about.
I live in Rainier Oregon right next to the Columbia River. In fact there is a bridge that connects Oregon to Washington. Hopefully you get a chance ro check it out.
1. Trunk refers to the actual suitcase built onto the back of cars back in the day. There was no boot, only a literal trunk. 2. A burger is the beef patty. It has nothing to do with the buns/bread. A burger or hamburger is a beef steak patty from Hamburg, Germany. It was a thing before it was put between bread. 3. Mince vs ground beef is just a difference in saying. Both are the same. One most likely originated before the other, but who really cares? 4. Same here as number 3. Just a different use of words. I don’t think there is any history behind this difference except the time at which the English language was split by an ocean. 5. A trolley to the USA is a public person carrying machine. Tracked, like a train and used within cities, such as San Francisco. 6. A lolli or lolly is short for lollipop. A sucker candy, typically round, wound into a spiral, flat, and usually multicolored. 7. Swim suit just makes more sense than tongs. Tongs doesn’t make any sense to anyone outside of New Zealand/Australia. 8. Zed doesn’t really make sense because it’s the only letter you spell out. It doesn’t make any logical sense, from either end. Zed was usually said because it was more identifiable over radio than “zee” that could be mistaken for “Cee””. That was a British norm during WW2. That’s the only thing that I can see making a historical difference. Most of American English is an offshoot of old British English mixed with French spelling and other words from other languages of the early 1700s and beyond. Many of our words that describe the same thing come from an older English language that is no longer spoken in Britain or its former colonies (that split off way after the United States did). Some predate English words. Our use of trunk predates the use of the word boot for example, as the United States was the first country to mass produce the automobile and create the industrial standard terminology.
Is THAT why? I have always wondered WHY ground beef is called HAMburger. Of course, I've also wonder why we call fish and chicken, fish and chicken. But we call cow and pig, beef and pork.....and then the HAM issue.
@@Raggmopp-xl7yf Yea, actually it really is. Are you trying to say it’s not with your chicken/fish statement? Or the capitalization of HAM meaning it was originally made of pig? I don’t really get the point of this reply. You didn’t do a great job at making your point clear. If you are attempting to be flippant, you failed poorly.
@@MlTCH TRYing to say? I thought I said it pretty well. I mean, I got a lot of info from your post. You tryin' to pick a fight outta thin air? Have fun! I won't be participating.
Fun Fact: Not all Americans say trunk! I am from North Carolina specifically I'm a Down Easterner or from the tide water coastal area of NC. We say boot of the car. I have all my life. When I married my husband who is from the middle of North Carolina he made fun of me when I said called it boot! So you will be right at home if you visit the eastern costal area of my beautiful state!
If you want to see small town America, you need to drive the 101 from LA to San Francisco and back down visiting the Sierras… See Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, Carmel, Santa Cruz, San Francisco… then see Napa, Tahoe and Yosemite. You’d have a blast. I know you saw Los Angeles, but California has so much more to offer… Also driving Route 66 across the south of the country to DC is a cool drive. You see something like 8 states, including Vegas, the Grand Canyon, Nashville and Washington DC with all its museums. You could stay a couple nights in each of the places I mentioned, and have an amazing small town American vacation. Anyways, love the videos. Glad you’re coming back to America.
the fact that yall were even interested in turn signals puts you head and shoulders above large portion of American drivers. I think if we had to say " indicator" like yall say it, then it would add a bit of fun, maybe class, and maybe a bit less road rage. Americans staying angry while saying " in dikate uh" might be less likely. I like it.
Burgers are only made from ground chuck meat. All others are sandwiches, even steak. What bread you use is irrelevant. You wouldn't call a tuna sandwich a tuna-dog if you put it on a hog dog bun just as you don't call a chicken sandwich a chicken-burger. It's called a hamburger because it's was from Hamburg Germany.
We have a weird sense of humor here in the USA for example when we have a new guy on the job we ask him to go get the board stretcher or blinker fluid 😁
So many of these terms can have variations across the US (blinker, turn signal, indicator) and also sometimes will vary across generations. I used to call it the glovebox growing up because that's what my grandparents (born before cars were much of a thing) called it. Then glove compartment. I learned to talk in the Chicago area, but lived as a young child in New England so I also picked up a lot of different words there (pop vs. soda). Then moved to Colorado when I was 12 and switched up words and learned new pronunciation ("ant" and uncle" vs "aahnt" and uncle). Also, I grew up watching British TV and still watch a ton of it, so there are so many words I just know (and sometimes use) instead of the American word (windscreen, for instance). I also think that 9 times out of 10 you can figure out what someone means by context. I spent several months in the UK in my late 20s and rarely couldn't figure out what they meant using context clues. I am never lost in your videos, with the exception of when you say "deck," I always hear, um, something else! 🤣
A burger is any kind of ground meat formed into a patty... turkey burger, shrimp burger, chicken burger... the bread is usually a bun, but if the meat is ground, its a burger Most of America uses the word shopping cart (cart) but in some areas they call it a buggy
@@purrfectnails No, people might refer those other meats as burgers, but in reality, ground chicken is a chicken sandwich. Ground turkey, well is just nasty. No such thing as a shrimp burger, you have a seafood sandwich.
So ground turkey formed into a patty and grilled and then put on a bun is a turkey sandwich. And, sliced turkey on a bun is a turkey sandwich. Hmm, I would think just call one a turkey burger to avoid the confusion. 😂
A burger is a ground patty that is grilled without breading. It doesn't matter what type of meat. If you take ground chicken meat and grill it up like a hamburger, it's a chicken burger. If you take that same ground chicken patty and bread it and deep fry it, it's a chicken sandwich. As for using a ground beef patty, you can make a chicken fried hamburger steak sandwich out of a hamburger patty and it's NOT a burger. You can also make a Salisbury Steak sandwich... NOT a burger.
@@seethe42 Congratulations, you're apparently a burger expert. Do you feel really smart and proud that you're an "expert" on burgers?? It's not all that important but you're certainly worked up about it huh?
I had a confusing (and amusing) moment over "hamburger" with a British friend. We were talking about making something for dinner, and I mentioned a quick and delicious (but peculiar) dish my family used to make, which was to brown some ground beef/mince and scramble some eggs into it. I was talking about how we'd need "hamburger" for it, because (at least in my northwestern area of the US) we use that term for ground beef in general (whereas "a hamburger" or "hamburgers" are the sandwiches made with ground beef patties). And she was highly confused, trying to figure out how you'd incorporate a hamburger patty of ground beef into scrambled egg, not at all familiar with the term "hamburger" to simply describe ground beef. After some explanation and a giggle, we got hamburger. But not hamburgers.
Have y’all ever traveled in a camper or RV before?! I’m scared for you as a family!! That sounds like a HUGE undertaking in a small space!! Just remember you love each other!!! And communication is KEY!
I’ve always called the blinker a “turn signal”. I’m from Pennsylvania.
Same in the DMV
I'm also from Pa, but I live in Maryland now and call it a turn signal down here too - the blinkers are the hazzard lights.
parents of new drivers might tell them to check the turn signal fluid when getting gas, as a common sense test.
Yep turn signal in Ky "blinker" sounds Northern or Canadian almost lol
Turn signal in Ohio.
All burgers are sandwiches . But not all sandwiches are burgers.
🤯
And hot dogs are NOT sandwiches.
Burgers are not limited to ground beef, they can be made of ground turkey and ground chicken
Beat me to it.
@@757optim You mean "beet you to it."
The reason why we called the boot of a vehicle a trunk was, because in the early days they used to have what was known as a steamer trunk which is was used while people were traveling overseas, and it was attached to the back of the vehicle via straps and so that’s where the term in America for the boot being called a trunk comes from
Goes farther than that, back to stagecoaches.
To add a little more confusion, we also call swimming shorts (for boys) "trunks". So you can put your trunks in the trunk!
Technically, a large storage box with a hinged lid can also be called a trunk. So you can put your trunks in the trunk in the trunk!
@@swedishshortsnout5610 And once at the beach/pool, you put your "trunk" in the trunks that were in the trunk in the trunk!
@@jamesjohnston9225 Yes! And the trunk (storage box) could have been made from a tree trunk! And if you visited a zoo, you could have been riding on the trunk of an elephant (apparently this is a thing now?)!
So you can put your trunk that was on a trunk in the trunks that were in the trunk, that was made from a trunk, in the trunk!
No, I'm NOT having a stroke, thank you very much. 😂
@@swedishshortsnout5610 yeah, we need to truncate this
You can also puts boots in a boot.
"Trunk" is one that actually has a logical explanation. On early autos, there was often an actual trunk that could be removed to be used as luggage, mounted on, or, near the rear of the car.
And the term stuck after they stopped doing that because people were used to saying it.
Same with “Glove Box” it was a place to store your driving gloves.
@@sawtootheyes523 Unless you didn't have any.
We lived on an old farm when I was a kid and there was a no longer used outhouse. Inside was a collection of magazines from the 1920s to 1930s. Some of the ads were for cars, and they did indeed have what I would steamer trunks strapped to the back of the car.
@@evilproducer01 Cool.
A trolley for us in the U.S is another name for a street car
Funny story. King County has a street car/Trolley line and about 10 years ago they added a line to South Lake Union. So if you come to the good ol pacific Northwes you can take a ride on the South Lake Union Trolly and get some merch that proclaims that you did in fact ride the South Lake Union Trolly But they use the acronym.
The “trolley” refers to the little wheel that rides along the overhead wire. The only true trolleys are streetcars that have the overhead wire.
This is what I was coming to say as well! But have also heard it being called a Trolley as well.
Trolleys are also just about anything that can be pushed with wheels on it. Different designs are used in restaurants, hotels, hospitals, etc.
@@Raggmopp-xl7yf The term has been co-opted by people using it as generic slang for many things with wheels. But the true definition is still based on the small wheel riding overhead wires for streetcars.
Over here a real trolley is a single train car for passengers. A fake trolley is a bus decorated to look like a trolley.
Really old cars like the model T and A literally had a steamer trunk tied to the rear of the vehicle. I guess the word just stuck.
blinker is more commonly called a turn signal too
I've hear it called both, but turn signal is probably more common, around here anyway...
Grew up in Cali and moved to Texas after I left the service and it’s more commonly called blinker. I do hear turn signal but it’s not as common.
I figure "turn signal" is more official, but "blinker" is everyday use.
I feel like blinker is more common for hazards
Never heard hazards called a blinker... flashers maybe@@shmosel_
A "Berger" contains hamburger or "mince" meat no matter what bread or bun it is served on.
A "Sandwich" contains just about anything. Some sandwiches don't even have meat.
Love all you guys.
I agree, burger implies beef. You will see pork burgers or veggie burgers, etc, on menus too. I wouldn't consider those sandwiches, since they're still patty shaped
In the words of Dwight Shrute "False!" lol but actually "Burger" implicitly does imply that it comes on a bun. It implies some type of ground meat patty, generally beef but not exclusively, that is served on a bun.
@@francescashanae5305I would still call them sandwiches, but burgers are sandwiches.
Chicken can be patty shaped, is it a burger? Or, is it just a chicken sandwich?
@@MrRobd23 they don't call them beef burgers tho.... so why do the rest have to specify what it's made of?
And you're right, Dwight eats horse burgers 🤣
ua-cam.com/video/uewOhK-MSjc/v-deo.htmlsi=32_aSDprVFP0Juqp
Edit, I guess they do say beef burger in the stores cause there are endless varieties now
@@francescashanae5305 well to be fair theyd most likely just call the hamburgers and people would correctly assume that meant beef and not ham lol
Indicator = turn signal = blinker.
We call them all three.
In the US we dont call candy lollies, because a specific type of candy is a lollipop.
We don't call them all chocolate bars, and instead use candy bar, because they don't all contain chocolate.
With so many varieties it is easier to just say candy, or even sweets would work well.
Burger is short for Hamburger. Originally from Germany, city of Hamburg. To us Americans, a burger is anything that uses "hamburger" or ground beef as the meat. To us, you can have a burger without the buns, but you cannot have a burger, without ground beef. Everything else is a Sandwich. Hope this helps.
Also, Turn signals/indicators/Blinkers
English: Trolley
American English: Cart or Shopping Cart
Southern American English: Buggy
100 percent correct❤
Speak for yourself. Calling ground beef "hamburger" is such a (weird and wrong to me) regional thing that really doesn't exit around where I live. I'm in California and ground beef is called ground beef. Hamburger is the name of a specific type of sandwich that consists of ground beef formed into a round patty which is cooked and served between the top and bottom halves of a bun. Nothing other than that is a hamburger. I have to admit it drives me nuts when people (Midwesterners usually) refer to ground beef as "hamburger." Heck, here we often further specify ground beef into "ground chuck" or "ground sirloin" to differentiate the cut of beef (and its quality and fat to meat ratio) used to make the particular ground beef. Calling ground beef (or any other ground meat like turkey, veal or lamb) "hamburger" just seems wrong and is ridiculously generic and confusing to me. I blame the misnaming of ground beef as hamburger in some parts of America squarely on that famous brand that sells chemical preservatives and cheap pasta in a box as a meal kit known as "Hamburger Helper." It should really just be called "Ground Beef Helper" since no hamburgers are used in its preparation.
I disagree. McDonalds and In-N-Out, both originating in California, have hamburgers on their menus, not Ground Beef burgers. You are getting caught up in the fine nuances of cuisine.
I'm in Canada and it's more about the bun here . We'd say Chicken Burger if it was on a hamburger bun but chicken sandwich if the bun was more like what subway uses and not round.
@@skyhawk_4526 you say speak for yourself, but as a Californian, I haven't met anyone else who would agree with your "beef". "Hamburger meat" = "ground beef" just as commonly on the west coast as most other parts of the country. The fact that it's not labeled that in grocery stores doesn't pigeonhole it.
In the south they call a shopping cart a buggy. Just to confuse you more. lol. Love watching you guys!
I'm 63 and born and raised in the south, I have never heard it called a buggy. It's always been shopping cart or just cart.
In South Carolina and North Carolina, it was always called a buggy. At least in the areas I grew up in.
North Georgians say buggy as well. I never heard it called a shopping cart until I was probably 30 years old. I'm 48 now.
South Louisiana called shopping cart buggy as well. At least that’s how learn from parents. Lol
@@Blueknight1960 I have been to LA, MS, AL, GA, and TX and heard people call it a buggy. The overwhelming majority of Southerners I have been around call it a buggy.
"Burger" is short for hamburger. Hamburger was the name given to chopped steak (beef) prepared in the Hamburg style. It has grown to include other ground meats as they are also prepared in the Hamburg style. Traditionally, however, "Burger" refers to sandwiches containing beef hamburger patties.
Or some equivalent ground/minced patty-style sandwiches on a burger bun, like: "turkey burger," "veggie burger," etc.
@@MGmirkindoesn't have to be on a hamburger bun. The original hamburger sandwich was actually on white bread. Patty melts are also hamburgers and they are typically on rye bread. I didn't want to get too far into the weeds and confuse things even more. Like pointing out the fact that there are chicken sandwiches (fillet) and chicken burgers (ground chicken) both come on a hamburger bun but are not the same thing.
@@MGmirkin yeah turkey burger was the one that I was thinking of that I’ve heard besides beef.
@@erniejones5008 'Beef wanna bes'
They are called hamburgers because they came from Hamburg germany. Germans migrated to the United States mostly in the 1850s they brought the hamburger with them, then Americans took that hamburger and they put cheese on it and lettuce and tomato and onion and pickle and put it on a bun and created the modern day hamburger on a bun. Burger is short for hamburger so only a hamburger can be a burger.
I'm so glad you're going to visit some different states on your next trip. It seems like every time an English speaking foreigner (to the U.S.) visits here, they only ever go to the Big 4 (New York, Florida, Texas, and California). There is A LOT MORE to see in the U.S. than just those 4 states. Thanks for the video and here's wishing you safe travels!
cookie / biscuit , napkin nappie / diaper, flashlight / torch. I spent a couple of years in New Zealand. Some funny language incidents. Saying "I'm stuffed" is a good one.
OMG I’m picturing the reactions if you ever said "I’m stuffed," in front of new friends or acquaintances.
Just to add a few more (flashlight / torch / moonbeam) (restroom / bathroom / head / toilet/ shitter)
and tomato sauce instead of ketchup
I used to work for a gas station/truck stop. I once had somebody paying for gasoline tell me their car was "the one with the bonnet up".
It threw me for the three seconds it took for me to look out the window and spot the car with the "hood" up.
Chicken sandwiches with buns in particular in the USA are definitely not referred to as "chicken burger" because chicken burger uses GROUND or MINCED chicken patties which we do have ground or minced chicken burgers the same in ground or minced cow meat patties for burgers. A chicken breast sandwhich like you get at Chick Fil A for example is a Chicken Sandwich because it uses the whole boneless chicken breast. That is the difference!
Thanks for saving me some typing. I couldn't have said it better myself.
@@bfulks2001 Thank you!
I HATE ground chicken. It even smells bad. Turkey isn't as bad.
@@HemlockRidge True I agree. But the point I am making is the difference between what people in the US call a burger vs sandwich.. Burgers have ground or minced meat.. Sandwiches as in chicken sandwich is the whole boneless chicken breast.
@@Ameslan1 See my post below.
Lollipop can be shortened to lollies which is hard candy on a stick. Candy is a general name with many sun categories, like gummies, mints, chocolate bars etc.
I learned that in the south, they call lollipops a sucker. Sounds odd for me to say sucker for a lollipop because to me it means something different. 😂
As an American 🇺🇸 I could have never guessed what togs meant. Here in the Great Midwest, signal light is more common than blinker. The word "trolley" is a form of public transportation using overhead electrical wire. In most cities they have all but disappeared by 1960 and replaced by busses. Although St Louis, Missouri has built a new trolley line in the Delmar loop.
Togs was literally the only example they gave that I had never heard of. Otherwise, I knew both. I'm an American, but my parents were British immigrants. Never in my life have I heard the word "Togs."
I realize this is a different place from New Zealand, but my Australian coworkers were eager to participate in our American Halloween festivities. They were avidly conversing about all the lollies they would get.
I piped up and said they could buy *any* type candy, not just lollipops. They explained and we had a good laugh. I’m just happy they did not say get stuffed.🤣🤣🤣
Your family has a really nice way of communicating the differences between our nations. The fact that you have such passion for our country is amazing. Our country is going through a lot and listening to you talk about our country lets us know there is still light that shines from our nation.
To us, the cockpit of a car is _full_ of indicators: speed, engine rpms, gasoline level, engine temperature, lights, high-beams, oil needs changed, tire pressure is low, general trouble indicator, and nowadays, compass direction and internal and external temperatures, as well as heat and air conditioning activity. There are also left and right indicators on the dashboard showing whether you've activated a turn signal, with both indicators lighting up if you activated the hazard control.
The external turn signals on a car are communication devices to indicate (signal) to other drivers of ones intentions, thus they are indicators.
Speed and rpm’s are on gauges. Lights that indicate something are indicators!
@@kristophergoordman7225 Even digital gauges where the numbers light up?
@@shallowgal462
Gauges, digital or mechanical, actually gauge something and show a specific level of speed or fuel, etc. While indicators just light up or flash to say look at me, I’m on or I’m broken, or I’m turning!
@@kristophergoordman7225 Gauges are indicators, as are meters. Life is filled with indicators both natural and man made. A defining characteristic of humans as intelligent beings is the use of symbols (symbolic language) to convey information. The leaves changing color are indicators of fall and a reminder that winter is impending.
wow, i googled " togs". If the google info is cortect then " tog" is short for " togeman", refering to clothes. A common American word for male swimwear is "swim shorts", or just " shorts" for short. Which is my point exactly. If " togeman" is full length normal clothes then " togs" would be " shorts" . See same same. Over here swim shorts are also commonly called "trunks". If anyone ever says " bring tour trunks" it means you are welcome to swim. So, now " trunk" is "boot" and "trunks" is " togs". If you are in the deep South and you here the word " droors" or " draws" and the reference does't seem to involve furniture , sketch artistry, or a financial transaction, the person is most likely refering to underwear (eg, boxers, briefs) or sometimes simply "pants"/ trousers. Yall probably can figure "britches". It is shortened from " under-breeches", the old underpants with the toggle/button flaps that supposedly made the process of defecating easier.
And , I would not be surprised if Americans have coined the most words for that process than any other country. I don't want ti get into that, but Boo-Boo is not just Yogi the Bear's friend, doo-doo is not usually a request to " do" anything, and going " number two" isn't typicalky refering to your position in line/ queue. If you want more, I am available. YW.
The word "togs" is an informal term used in New Zealand to refer to swimming shorts or bathing suits. It's short for the word "togeman", which was 16th century criminal slang for "coat". In the 18th century, "togs" started being used more generally as slang for clothes. The word may have originated from the word "toga", a Roman garment. "Toga" comes from "tegere" meaning to cover.
In the US, the burger refers not to the bun but to the meat, the burger *patty*. So a burger patty on its own is a "burger", and anywhere it's found is called a burger whether it's on bread, on a bun, in a hoagie roll, it's always still a burger.
Yep, if I fix a poor folks hamburger on sandwich bread it's still a "burger". 👍
It was actually always this way, but when the word was carried over to the UK in the past, it was misinterpreted.
Hunters and butchers in the U.S. call the ground meat of any animal "hamburger". When a hunter butchers a deer, for example, the ground meat will be wrapped in either paper or plastic and labeled "hamburger", then put into the freezer for storage. It is not called "ground deer"; it is called "hamburger". Even if the hamburger is cooked and put between two slices of sandwich bread it is still hamburger. Simply put, ground meat is hamburger.
That would be confusing...I'd label it ground Venison.
Actually, it does refer to the bun too. Go pick up a pack of buns at the store and see what they are called. Doesn't mean you have to put a hamburger in them though.
Lollies in the states are usually hard candy on a stick ‘lolly Pop’.
Swimsuits are often called Bathing suits.
Not all candy bars are chocolate.
Some terms are regional
Trolleys in the U.S. are tram cars, there aren’t many today, but they were big the early part of the 1900’s
Also the Los Angeles Dodgers when they were in Brooklyn were called the Brooklyn Trolley Dodgers because you had to dodge trolleys on the way to the ballpark. They eventually dropped trolleys and just became the Dodgers.
Sandwich\burger rules are easy once you know them. A sandwich is two pieces of bread (the type of bread does not matter) with something between them, usually meat. A burger is specifically a ground beef patty between two slices of bread, usually buns but not necessarily. A burger is a sandwich, just called burger from hamburger, which you will also see them called.
I e never heard anyone call a hamburger a sandwich and I’m American. I’ve lived in NY, CA, and NM, never called a sandwich.
Found this on the internet. "Togs" is short for the word "togeman", which was 16th century criminal slang for "coat". In the 18th century, "togs" started being used more generally as slang for clothes. In the UK, the word still just means "clothes", but in Australia and New Zealand, it came to be used in a swimming context."
This makes sense since wasn't Australia originally a penal colony for UK criminals? Also NZ was populated by a lot of people coming from Australia, so the lingo would've followed.
What's funny to me is that I've spent my entire life in the southern US, and I've always used "bathing suit" for swimsuit/togs and "turn signal" for blinker/indicator. And I've caught flak for it from other Americans. Southern American English sometimes feels like a different language!
I always call it a bathing suit too. 😂
Well, I’m from Montana, lived I. Ohio, Oregon, Washington,, and now Tennessee, and I say bathing suit, too. So do my friends who are from other states.
I'm 58 and always called them swim suits. 😂😂
I'm in AZ I'm 30 and I've never heard someone call it a blinker
I grew up on the edge of Philadelphia in the state of Pennsylvania and back in the 1960s and 1970s everybody use to call it a bathing suit.
A bit of trivia. The reason that the USA uses trunk is that early vehicles used actual "trunks" or containers that were strapped to the back of the vehicle that passengers put their belongings. Vehicles then eventually morphed into having "trunks."
In the US, 'burger' means a patty made of ground meat (mince). So you can have a chicken or turkey burger, but only if they're made of ground chicken or turkey. On the flip side, you can have burgers (like the patty melt I think you were showing in the video) on sliced bread, or for that matter you can have a low-carb burger that has no bread at all, as long as it's made of ground meat.
#9 Windshield vs Windscreen. The front glass of a car is a windshield just like a shield protects someone. A screen allows air to pass but keeps bugs out like on windows of a house. Or a screen can sift flour or dirt. Screens allow something to pass through.
Television and computer screens also allow something to pass through. Information... in the form of light. In this sense so does a windscreen.
And the windscreen on your car allows light to pass through.
@@scarlettjoehandsome6130 sure, but the point was what it does for "wind", not light
@@mralddragoon8555 They are each permeable to some things and not others and therefore they are filters also.
@@scarlettjoehandsome6130 sure, but it's not a lightshield, it's a windshield. I don't care what you call it, I'm not suggesting one is even more correct than the other; what I'm saying is that the point of the comment was it shields you from wind (it does not filter or screen wind). Trying to make the original comment about something it's not is irrelevant.
I call blinkers/indicators "turn signals". At one time, not all cars (or motorcycles) had turn signals and motorists had to know the proper hand signals for signaling a turn. Hence, blinkers/indicators are turn signals.
Even owners manuals for NZ'ers call them "turn signals". Of course...Who reads owners manuals.
Very good.
" frog togs" are rain gear. Traditionally , didnt rain gear have toggles, ie, dowels on a string ( "toggle" is camping jargon for that very thing" ) pushed through loops to secure one side of the article to the other. I wonder if there is correlation.
I was aware of many of the alternate names for the same thing (OK, togs was a new one). Shopping carts are sometimes called wagons, and blinkers are more generically called turn signals. I think most Americans consider burgers to be hamburgers (ground beef), and other fast food items are sandwiches, even if they are served on a hamburger bun.
But don't forget that due to its size, different regions of the USA have different words for the same thing too. If you go into a sandwich shop for a long sandwich, it can be anything from a hero, sub, hoagie, po boy, or any one of a bunch of other names. Yes, in some areas, certain sandwich names refer to a specific type of sandwich, and I doubt that many Americans travelling around the country would know all the variations.
In a supermarket, non-alcoholic carbonated beverages in some areas are "soda", in others, "pop" - and I think there are a few other words used as well. A liquor store in New England is called a "packie" - just a couple examples. And don't get into the various regional accents.
In the SouthEast US shopping carts/trolleys are called buggies.
When I visited Australia and New Zealand the word that jumped out to me, and I heard often, was 'windscreen'. Here in the US we call it a 'windshield'.
Ground meat has fats and sometimes other fillers added and is mostly put through a meat grinder, whereas minced meat is just the meat finely cut or minced without any added ingredients and can be ground up or finely cut with a knife.
I grew up in NY and used “blinker”. And a “trolley” is an urban train.
Same thing in Pennsylvania
In Michigan, and probably most other places, mincemeat would refer to the ingredients of mincemeat pie. It doesn't contain meat at all but is a concoction of various fruits, typically dried and especially raisins , and various spices like cinnamon.
That's called fruit mince in NZ.
Yes, if we offered you a piece of our mincemeat pie you may not want it!
I think the original old school recipe for mincemeat pie did have meat.
@@anndeecosita3586 True, but my google search indicated that faded away during the Victorian period, at least in the US.
A blinker is also called a signal or turn signal by lots of people.
The difference between a burger and a sandwich is the meat inside. A burger is ground beef where any other meat (chicken, fish, etc) makes it a sandwich. The indicater to you is referred to as a blinker or turn signal depending on where you are.
A burger is referring to the hamburger patty, not the bread, although a burger on bread is traditionally called a "patty melt". A sandwich can be made of bread, buns or rolls and could have almost anything as the filling.
It's really simple. If it is a Beef Patty it is a Burger regardless of the bread or bun. If the meat is anything else it is a sandwich regardless of the bread or bun, EXCEPT it is heavily debated among us Americans if a Hamburger counts as a sandwich! You will NEVER Get a straight answer on that one!
You rented a Durango. That rear opening I would call the rear gate. Trunk/boot is on a sedan or coupe. Hatch on a hatchback, gates on SUVs. Another difference would be hood vs bonnet.
I'd probably jut say trunk or trunk-lid for all of them just to be brief about it.
Most SUV's don't have gates anymore though, they have a hatch. Older ones like Blazers and station wagons had a tailgate that opened down and window that opened up. Now most just have a hatch.
I'd call it a hatch. Whether on an SUV or a hatchback, it's essentially exactly the same thing. I only call it a gate (as in tailgate) if it's on the rear end of a pickup truck. If it's a sedan or coupe, the space where you put the luggage or cargo that's behind the rear seat is the trunk, whereas the thing that opens and closes to access the trunk is technically called the trunk lid.
No one uses gates anymore
A burger is anything with a beef patty (or alternative meat patty). A sandwich is everything else between two pieces of bread. A hot sandwich is typically called a melt.
I love this channel and your family! I watch your videos to learn about New Zealand as much as I enjoy watching you learn about America! Thank you!
So glad!
-Burger=Hamburger
-Our blinkers are officially called turn signals
- In the Southeast we call your trolleys, buggies!
- lollies are lollipops to us
- Chocolate bars are candy bars
- Togs = swimsuits, bathing suits, trunks and bikinis (we expect our togs to get discolored)
- "Zed's dead, baby" Pulp Fiction quote. It's the name of a guy here.
What was the last one??? Glad you enjoyed your trip. Come to the southeast USA next time. It's a whole other country, and we're nicer. 😊
agreed
Bless your heart 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Blinker….is blinker….
A burger is ANY ground meat (or meat substitute) formed into a patty. Not just ground beef, but ground turkey, pork, chicken, salmon, bison, lamb, etc. plus mushrooms, veggies & “beyond.”
@jeffg.6110 yes, but if I decide to get ground shrimp formed into a pattie, cooked, and served on a bun, I'm not calling it a burger. I'm calling it a shrimp burger or shrimp sandwich. If I'm ordering a burger, I expect beef. If I want my burger made of ground turkey, I'm ordering a turkey burger. Bison? Bison burger. See my point? They're all burgers, but they need qualifiers.
By far the BEST UA-cam family period . I love you guys and how beautiful y'all are inside and out....I honestly think your family is simply PERFECT. Best family to ever come over to the US. Keep being amazing and giving us all Great footage. I'm writing from Griffin,Ga 40-45min south of Atlanta
Wow, thank you so much!! We cant wait to share our adventures with you!
I agree.
I just recently found your channel and I absolutely love watching your family!! You guys do everything together.
A funny story going the other way: Years ago I was going to England to visit a dear friend and rented a car. I knew to expect driving on the "wrong" side and it being a stick shift (manual transmission), but being groggy after an overnight flight, I was further challenged in trying to understand British English by the clerk having a strong Indian accent. He took me to the car and after I got in he's pointing to the different parts, including saying "There are your indicators." I had absolutely no idea what he meant, as to me (and many Americans), "indicators" refers to the lights on the dash that tell you when something is wrong (low oil, etc.). So my response to him was "my What???" After going back and forth a few times, he finally reached in and touched it and asked "What do you call these?" "OH! Turn signals!" 😀
We use indicator, blinker, turn signal or directional. All interchangeable. On a US driving test it will most likely say indicator or turn signal.
As a baby boomer, I always called them turn signals; not aware of the term blinkers.
I'm a Boomer from Cali and always call it a blinker
I'm on the east coast and everybody calls on blinkers but some people say turn signals
@@hippielady123 And I'm sure according to calli, it cause cancer.
@@jeffhampton2767 So am I and and it's always been turn signal. Then, wait for it, when you push the little red triangle, it's the emergency flashers.
Funny/sad thing is, regardless of what we call them in the states, a lot of people think they're optional. . .
"Trunk" came about in the early early cars that had a trunk mounted on the back.
You distinguish the difference between sandwich and burger by the bread; we distinguish by the type of “meat” inside. If the “meat” is ground (minced) it’s generally a burger. Ground (minced) beef, turkey, chicken, veggies pressed into a patty form are generally called burgers. You can put a burger between two slices of bread and it would still be a burger; a burger bun is called that because it houses a burger. If you put cheese and tomato in a burger bun it’s a sandwich.
If you make it to Florida in your RV come to Crystal River.
You can swim with manatees.
They are peaceful creatures who graze on sea grass.
They are called the cows of the sea and some people think they are what early sailors referred to when they spoke of mermaids.
Be Careful when you come to Tennessee. If someone has a blinker on, they bought the car that way! Lord knows they didn't turn it on!
True for the entire South. 🤣
We call it a trunk bc we also used to say trunk for chests or Storage boxes. Now ppl just say totes.
We say bins where I'm from. My mom will say grab the bins from the trunk or from the back seat of the car.
Hey Guys, Big Fan here. I was lucky enough to spend a month on the North Island during a joint military exercise between the U.S. & New Zealand Armies. They gave us 4 days off and of course we spent that time in Aukland. Fantastic People who showered us w/ their Hospitality. Just an unforgettable time.
I was watching WAY too much UA-cam the other day, as usual, and it hit me when I saw it. One of the most Unique to American things that an entire Family can enjoy and be "WoW'ed" at is an indoor Monster Truck event. It's usually not too long, it gets the senses fired up and it's usually relatively inexpensive to see one of these events. I took a girlfriend to see one in Pocatello, Idaho for a first date and we had a Blast ! If this is already on the list and has already been suggested, my apologies.
Enjoy that RV experience, I'm from Oregon and I think ur all gonna enjoy that one. If you happen to be near the West Coast in July, find some Rainier Cherries, nothing like them anywhere else and they are Delicious. Named for Washington State's Mt. Rainier, if ur within a few hundred miles, you'll find it. 😊 Thanks for the YT content, it's Fun & Refreshing to see. 👍
Wow thats so awesome! Glad NZ showed you a good time while you were here. So keen to get to a monster truck event if we can. We will def look out for those cherries!! Thanks for the tip!
We also call shopping carts buggies
Rarely. Never have heard that.
@@mflewis1 It depends where in the US you live. In some states, shopping cart is never used and buggy is used instead
@@BlessingsfromBridget Or just not say shopping and just say carts.
You really need to come to Michigan known as the mitten state due to its shape (gee do you call them mittens?) Go up north towards the Mackinaw bridge 5 miles long across 2 of the Great Lakes. Go to Mackinaw island where no cars allowed walk or horses bikes and lots of wonderful fudge. Then go further into the upper peninsula of Michigan for some beauty. Stop by and see the Soo Locks can be interesting. Think you would rather enjoy the beauty.
Found this about Togs:
Where does the word togs originate?
Words for swimwear also developed along with beach culture. Australians use a variety of terms to describe their bathing attire, including 'cossies' (a shortened version of 'costumes') and 'togs', which Gwynn explains is an abbreviation of the 16th-Century word 'togeman', meaning coat.
My father was in medical in WWII in England. He always called the back of a car the boot so that is what I still call it. He pronounced other words with a different accent...such as schedule.
My father was in World War II in England also one of his favorite words that he brought back from England was calling men blokes. He was dating my mother before the war and came back and married her, to make a long story short. In the 1970s he admitted that he left two children in England. Then approximately 10 years ago after he had already died two of my sisters joined ancestry when all the sudden they started getting messages from people all over England and Wales that they match up to us. It was shocking to find out that our father who was stationed in England during World War II was a gigolo😂😂 he was impregnating women all over the UK including a nurse from Wales who was stationed in England during World War II. He probably didn't even know about some of these children since these women were mostly one-night stands. My sisters are really upset about it but I found it kind of funny.
I later researched a lot about it and found out that American soldiers were impregnating women all over England and Europe in World War II, and that there are millions of war children that were left there after the American soldiers came back home.
You might want to join ancestry which is the most common site. There could be half brothers and sisters looking for you to find out who your dad was, you just never know.
A good way to understand the word sandwich is this... Sandwich is like the word automobile (the main category). Then you have car, truck, van, SUV as the secondary category. With Sandwich (the main category) . Then you have Hamburgers & Cheeseburgers (Burgers), Chicken Filet, Fish Fillet, Subs, Tuna Salad, Ham etc... are the secondary Categories.
Yes, just another here confirming as others said, a large travel trunk was always strapped to the rear of them older cars when traveling; and the term stuck. "Put it in the trunk" has from then on meant put it in the back storage compartment.
Once again I have thoroughly enjoyed your video. I can’t wait to see what you all think of small town America. Safe travels. 🩵
I’m from the most north eastern corner of the Midwest section of America and it’s here where the majority of immigrants from Germany, Poland, and the Netherlands settled. It was the German immigrants who brought the hamburger to America. Originally it was just a beef patty and pickles between two pieces of toasted white bread. It wasn’t until much later the hamburger bun came around. In my area at least the only thing we considered a burger is the hamburger itself, the rest are just sandwiches regardless of what type of bread they are on. One famous Polish desert you have to try in the Northern Midwest is the paczki (pronounced punch-key). It basically a Polish style donut covered in powdered sugar and filled either with a mixture of fruit and jam or Bavarian cream. In rare instances you might find one filled with chocolate. I feel in that video you watch on favorite desserts in America that definitely should have beat out the buckeye peanut butter balls for the favorite of Ohio. A tip when you do the buckeyes though, after you dip them place them on parchment paper to cool, not wax paper like a lot of places tell you to do, the wax paper adds a weird and undesirable flavor to the finished product.
Burgers vs sandwiches. In the US burgers are determined by the type/style of meat, not the bun. If it is ground meat or a plant based version that is supposed to imitate a ground beef burger Patty, then it’s a burger. Anything else between two slices of bread or in a bun is a sandwich. If it’s not a veggie burger, ground beef burger, or ground meat turned into a burger patty, it’s a sandwich.
That vegan burger is not a burger at all, it's just ground plants with other additives to make it look like hamburger, but it's not a burger. It's more like a booger, you know the crusty thing you pick out your nose?
Some early car models had space on the back of the chassis, behind the cabin, where a literal trunk (surely you know the word in the context of old-fashioned luggage?) could be strapped. Later models had a trunk already bolted on, so you didn't have to supply your own; and then eventually the trunk (and also other components that were originally separate, e.g., the fenders) became integrated into the design of the car's body.
The original meaning of "hamburger" was meat (originally any kind of meat, not just beef) that was sold pre-ground. The practice was introduced to the English-speaking world by people who had seen it in Hamburg (in what is now Germany). In America, the meaning was narrowed to ground _beef_ specifically pretty early (late eighteenth or early nineteenth century), and in some contexts it has since been further narrowed to certain quality grades of ground beef. (When reading product labels, ground chuck, for example, officially has a lower fat content than hamburger. I'm not sure where exactly the USDA got the definitions, but there are specific rules for product labeling.) The hamburger sandwich was popularized in the very late nineteenth or very early twentieth century, and hamburger buns were introduced about a decade later. I'm not sure when people started calling the entire sandwich simply "a hamburger", but that usage is probably ancestral to the suffix -burger being applied to patties made from other ground substances (turkey-burger, soy-burger, etc.) that emerged some time in the twentieth century. In the present day, Europeans now use the term "burger" for sandwiches regardless of whether the meat is ground up, but America never got the memo on that innovation, which suggests that it likely happened some time before the widespread adoption of the internet, but presumably after the hamburger sandwich was popularized internationally, which places it pretty squarely in the twentieth century. Etymologically, hamburger buns are named for the hamburger patties that they were made to sandwich, not the other way around. And yes, in America, if you put a hamburger patty between two slices of bread, it's still a hamburger; if you put it between two halves of a bagel, it's a hamburger on a bagel; if you eat the patty by itself, without any bread or bun, it's still a hamburger. And if you cook it loose and put it in spaghetti, it's still hamburger, in the spaghetti. No bun required, and I have to say that putting buns in spaghetti would be a little odd, though I wouldn't be surprised if somebody somewhere has done it as a novelty.
And now I'm gonna blow your mind: "mincemeat" doesn't have meat in it, and it never did. The word "mincemeat" is older than the current meaning of the word "meat". Originally (and we're going pretty far back in the history of the English language here), "mete" was a general word for solid food (as opposed to beverages). The word hasn't been used that way anywhere in the world for a long time; but it survived for a while longer in a handful of compound words, e.g., "sweetmeats" (an old-fashioned word for candy), "nutmeat" (which means the edible part of the nut, excluding the shell), and "mincemeat", which is made from minced fruits and nuts, sometimes with spices, and historically, I think it used to also have alcohol in it at least some of the time. But there was never a time in history when "mincemeat" had what we would today call meat (i.e., animal flesh) in it. The meaning of the word "meat" was narrowed to that later, after "mincemeat" was already named. There was also the age-of-sail phrase "meat and drink", which in some cases referred to ship's biscuit (i.e., hardtack) and a beverage. However, mincemeat *is* minced (i.e., cut into small bits), and presumably the British use of "mince" to refer to ground meat, is from that meaning of "mince" as well. Even a person's steps can be "minced", which is when somebody takes a larger number of really really small steps, instead of just taking a couple of big steps.
I find it difficult to imagine that you haven't encountered the word "candy" in American TV or movies at some point. There *are* other words for it, but "candy" is overwhelmingly more common in North America than all of its synonyms combined. There are candy bars that don't contain chocolate; I think Payday may be the most famous example of that.
The word "togs" is of British origin and originally meant basically the same thing as "clothes". I don't know the extent to which they do or do not still use the term these days. Ask a Brit. In any case, your usage (meaning a swimsuit) is probably a shortening of "swimming togs"; once you'd left off using the word "togs" for other types of clothing, the qualifier "swimming" would have seemed redundant and unnecessary.
The name of the letter Z is a case where the American version is the innovation. I think it was changed to more closely match the names of other letters. (Most of the consonants either have names rhyming with B and C and D or J and K, or else they have a short-E vowel followed by the letter, like F, L, M, N, S, X. W is a notable outlier, and Z used to also be an outlier, until we changed it. Britain never got the memo on that change.)
Down here in the south mincemeat was always tiny bits and chips of fruit and pectin combined into a small pie with crust on the bottom and top.
@@BarredCoast0 Yes, that's reasonably typical, although I think most versions also have some nut content, and many versions omit the top crust. My mom's (Ohio farm country) version contained dates and raisins and walnuts and cinnamon and suet, not sure what else, I haven't had it in decades.
I have never heard of the word "trunk" as an old fashioned word for luggage. Maybe it's only an American thing. I'm from NZ.
Mincemeat in NZ has always meant actual meat. 'Mince' by itself is always beef by default, but you can get chicken mince, pork mince etc too but theyre always specifiied. What you're referring to woukd be called fruit mince. But many of us are aware of the old meaning from the UK.
We have all definitely heard of the word candy, but we almost never call it that. Always lollies, but we don't refer to chocolate as lollies like you do for candy. A "candy bar" here would be called a bar of chocolate. Lollies and chocolates are seen as two separate things, but two different types of sweets.
@@shaungordon9737 The second meaning of "trunk", referring to a semi-portable chest used for luggage, is about twice as old as the American colonies; it was already old and well established when Chaucer used it in the late fourteenth century. It appears to have been originally coined in Old French, possibly in reference to the locked chests used by the Roman Catholic church to collect and transport offering money; but by Chaucer's time it was a general-purpose term for a traveler's chest. Only the automotive application is specific to American English.
With that said, the first meaning, referring to the trunk of a tree or of an elephant, is much older yet, going back at least to classical antiquity in Latin.
Just to add to the confusion ... here in the states, a man's swimsuit is often refered to as "trunks." I don't know why we use the plural. Have a great next trip to the US. Hope it's even better than the first.
Swim trunks are also commonly referred to as "swim shorts." Also plural. I'm pretty sure any garment you pull up over your feet and legs is referred to in the plural:
Pants, trousers, panties, leggings, stockings, nylons, jeans, tights, shorts, slacks, trunks, undies, britches, etc. All of those words are plural. In languages other than English, the corresponding words are also plural.
In America, burger describes the round meat patty, not the bread. That's why double burger is 2 meat patties, or double cheeseburger, when cheese is added, melted on the meat patty. Though caveat is Vegan burgers are burgers because they resemble meat burgers and are meant to replace them, taste similar, but made out of vegetables. Therefore, buns vs toast vs Texas toast (thicker bread), or just plain square bread is just the bread of the sandwich. As @Deadcntr put it, all burgers are also sandwiches because they are meat between two slices of bread, but all others are just sandwiches; ex: chicken sandwich.
This American absolutely loves your channel and your family. I look forward to them.
'Togs' is actually derived from a 16th-century word for coat, 'togeman', according to the BBC. It got shortened to 'togs' overtime, and usually referred to any type of clothes. It wasn't until the early 20th century that it came into use to refer to swimming attire.
When we say "burger" we are specifically referring to a ground beef product, not the type of bread used. We may also use the term to indicate other meats/products that are ground up (i.e. turkey burgers, veggie burgers). Here, a burger is a burger, and a sandwich is a sandwich regardless of whether it is in a bun or sandwich bread which is why your Popeye's chicken sandwich was a sandwich, and if I prepared a burger for you at my home and used sandwich bread (very common) it would still be a burger.
I love the phrase differences. We consider lollies to be lollipops specifically, and even here togs is an old school word for clothes so older people would be more familiar with swimming togs, gym togs, work togs, etc. Mince is more of an old school term too, but most people get it when they hear it.
In the US, in addition to chicken sandwiches, we also have chicken burgers and chicken patties which, as far as I know, are only available in the freezer isles of grocery stores and supermarkets.
• Chicken sandwich - A piece of chicken breast that has either been breaded and fried or just seasoned and grilled.
• Chicken burger (at least what I've seen in grocery stores and supermarkets) - Ground chicken that is formed into a hamburger patty shape and grilled.
• Chicken patty - Ground chicken that is formed into a hamburger patty shape then breaded and fried.
Where I'm from, we dont say shopping cart. We say buggy
Burgers in the US refers to anything ground/mince beef/hamburger. Every other type of meat is a sandwich or sub. Indicator is 4 syllables!! Blinker is shorter to say lol Love your videos!
A “boot” was the shelf on the back of a coach (stagecoaches) where luggage was placed. A “trunk” was/is a very large piece of luggage which was placed on the Coach boot.
While in Las Vegas, a lovely Australian couple (with the thickest accent I’ve ever heard) 😄 stopped me and asked “Is zat uh lie-eze luh”? I had to ask them about three times to please repeat the question. Finally, he said, “Is zat uh lie-eze toilet”? 😂 Ohhhhhhhh! (Is that a ladies loo)? 😂 They were so lovely and good natured. We all laughed at our language barriers.
A funny comment. When I was a kid, all sodas were seen as 'Coke'. I ordered a coke as a 7 year old at the bowling alley one day, so the waitress gave me a Coke. She was quite confused when I said, "I wanted the clear kind." I had wanted a Sprite.
Actually it depends on which state you're in. Each one has their own terms for sodas
That's more of a **regional** thing ["...in a galaxy far, far away..."] than a temporal thing ["...a long time ago..."], I think...
Some call all carbonated beverages: "soda," "pop," "a Coke [exemplar-Brand-as-category-name; kind of like all facial tissues are 'a Kleenex']," etc.
A burger place near me was staffed with Spanish Americans Though bilingual, when someone asked what fountain drinks they had, it stumped the whole restaurant.
There are still areas in the U.S. that call them pop.
@@geoffreysmommy When my dad visited my in college (home was western New York State while college was eastern NY), he liked to visit restaurants and order a "pop", just to get the reaction. I would then have to explain that he meant a "soda".
To most Americans, mince meat is not meat, it is a pie we have during the holidays, mince meat is made of apples, apple cider, candied cherries, brown sugar, apricots, dried cherries, cranberries, currants, figs, orange zest, orange juice, golden raisins, raisins, schmaltz, allspice, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, cloves, salt, and rum . . .at least in PA and OH, also, a burger on toast or bread with grilled onions and cheese is called a patty melt. . .
Original mincemeat pies, or minced pies, did contain meat and many recipes still do even though the ones without meat are the more popular ones nowadays.
@@kevinfleming9919 True.
So in America out west they are called swimsuits, but on the East Coast they are more commonly referred to as bathing suits
My mum was born and raised in England and I was born there as well. So the terminology we used was similar to yours so I understand what you were talking about.
I live in Rainier Oregon right next to the Columbia River. In fact there is a bridge that connects Oregon to Washington. Hopefully you get a chance ro check it out.
1. Trunk refers to the actual suitcase built onto the back of cars back in the day. There was no boot, only a literal trunk.
2. A burger is the beef patty. It has nothing to do with the buns/bread. A burger or hamburger is a beef steak patty from Hamburg, Germany. It was a thing before it was put between bread.
3. Mince vs ground beef is just a difference in saying. Both are the same. One most likely originated before the other, but who really cares?
4. Same here as number 3. Just a different use of words. I don’t think there is any history behind this difference except the time at which the English language was split by an ocean.
5. A trolley to the USA is a public person carrying machine. Tracked, like a train and used within cities, such as San Francisco.
6. A lolli or lolly is short for lollipop. A sucker candy, typically round, wound into a spiral, flat, and usually multicolored.
7. Swim suit just makes more sense than tongs. Tongs doesn’t make any sense to anyone outside of New Zealand/Australia.
8. Zed doesn’t really make sense because it’s the only letter you spell out. It doesn’t make any logical sense, from either end. Zed was usually said because it was more identifiable over radio than “zee” that could be mistaken for “Cee””. That was a British norm during WW2. That’s the only thing that I can see making a historical difference.
Most of American English is an offshoot of old British English mixed with French spelling and other words from other languages of the early 1700s and beyond. Many of our words that describe the same thing come from an older English language that is no longer spoken in Britain or its former colonies (that split off way after the United States did). Some predate English words. Our use of trunk predates the use of the word boot for example, as the United States was the first country to mass produce the automobile and create the industrial standard terminology.
Is THAT why? I have always wondered WHY ground beef is called HAMburger. Of course, I've also wonder why we call fish and chicken, fish and chicken. But we call cow and pig, beef and pork.....and then the HAM issue.
@@Raggmopp-xl7yf Yea, actually it really is. Are you trying to say it’s not with your chicken/fish statement? Or the capitalization of HAM meaning it was originally made of pig? I don’t really get the point of this reply. You didn’t do a great job at making your point clear. If you are attempting to be flippant, you failed poorly.
@@MlTCH He's not writing poorly, you're reading poorly. It's a fairly light hearted reply. Eat a snickers.
The trunk comes from early automobiles that literally had a trunk attached to the back of the car and was detachable so it could be carried inside.
@@MlTCH TRYing to say? I thought I said it pretty well. I mean, I got a lot of info from your post. You tryin' to pick a fight outta thin air? Have fun! I won't be participating.
Fun Fact: Not all Americans say trunk! I am from North Carolina specifically I'm a Down Easterner or from the tide water coastal area of NC. We say boot of the car. I have all my life. When I married my husband who is from the middle of North Carolina he made fun of me when I said called it boot! So you will be right at home if you visit the eastern costal area of my beautiful state!
My dad was from. Harnett County and called it boot. I live in Davidson County and always hear trunk.
For whatever reason, buns started being used on everything that used to be sandwiches between two pieces of bread. Then buns took over for everything.
Growing up in Canada, our family called ground beef 'minced meat' and the blinker was called an indicator or turn signal.
Burger has ground beef
We call an indicator a turn signal also, you guys are great!
I call it whatever I'm thinking of at the time, but most times I call it turn signal.
If you want to see small town America, you need to drive the 101 from LA to San Francisco and back down visiting the Sierras… See Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, Carmel, Santa Cruz, San Francisco… then see Napa, Tahoe and Yosemite. You’d have a blast. I know you saw Los Angeles, but California has so much more to offer… Also driving Route 66 across the south of the country to DC is a cool drive. You see something like 8 states, including Vegas, the Grand Canyon, Nashville and Washington DC with all its museums. You could stay a couple nights in each of the places I mentioned, and have an amazing small town American vacation. Anyways, love the videos. Glad you’re coming back to America.
And there's no experience quite like driving through Gilroy, am I right?
the fact that yall were even interested in turn signals puts you head and shoulders above large portion of American drivers.
I think if we had to say " indicator" like yall say it, then it would add a bit of fun, maybe class, and maybe a bit less road rage. Americans staying angry while saying
" in dikate uh" might be less likely. I like it.
Burgers are only made from ground chuck meat. All others are sandwiches, even steak. What bread you use is irrelevant. You wouldn't call a tuna sandwich a tuna-dog if you put it on a hog dog bun just as you don't call a chicken sandwich a chicken-burger.
It's called a hamburger because it's was from Hamburg Germany.
Lets go new video. Love to see it. Enjoy your RV trip throughout America
We have a weird sense of humor here in the USA for example when we have a new guy on the job we ask him to go get the board stretcher or blinker fluid 😁
So many of these terms can have variations across the US (blinker, turn signal, indicator) and also sometimes will vary across generations. I used to call it the glovebox growing up because that's what my grandparents (born before cars were much of a thing) called it. Then glove compartment. I learned to talk in the Chicago area, but lived as a young child in New England so I also picked up a lot of different words there (pop vs. soda). Then moved to Colorado when I was 12 and switched up words and learned new pronunciation ("ant" and uncle" vs "aahnt" and uncle). Also, I grew up watching British TV and still watch a ton of it, so there are so many words I just know (and sometimes use) instead of the American word (windscreen, for instance). I also think that 9 times out of 10 you can figure out what someone means by context. I spent several months in the UK in my late 20s and rarely couldn't figure out what they meant using context clues. I am never lost in your videos, with the exception of when you say "deck," I always hear, um, something else! 🤣
I hate when Brits call the ground outside the floor
A burger is any kind of ground meat formed into a patty... turkey burger, shrimp burger, chicken burger... the bread is usually a bun, but if the meat is ground, its a burger
Most of America uses the word shopping cart (cart) but in some areas they call it a buggy
Burger is short for hamburger so only a beef hamburger can be a burger.
@jeffhampton2767 thats a half truth... the beef hamburger is the original, but there are other types or burgers now
@@purrfectnails No, people might refer those other meats as burgers, but in reality, ground chicken is a chicken sandwich. Ground turkey, well is just nasty. No such thing as a shrimp burger, you have a seafood sandwich.
@@Blueknight1960 if you say so 🙄
@@purrfectnails I did say so.
A burger is short for a hamburger. A burger is always a ground beef patty...hamburger, anything else is a sandwich.
So ground turkey formed into a patty and grilled and then put on a bun is a turkey sandwich. And, sliced turkey on a bun is a turkey sandwich.
Hmm, I would think just call one a turkey burger to avoid the confusion. 😂
@@user-kv6wh5ut6o fake account
A burger is a ground patty that is grilled without breading. It doesn't matter what type of meat. If you take ground chicken meat and grill it up like a hamburger, it's a chicken burger. If you take that same ground chicken patty and bread it and deep fry it, it's a chicken sandwich. As for using a ground beef patty, you can make a chicken fried hamburger steak sandwich out of a hamburger patty and it's NOT a burger. You can also make a Salisbury Steak sandwich... NOT a burger.
@@seethe42 Congratulations, you're apparently a burger expert. Do you feel really smart and proud that you're an "expert" on burgers?? It's not all that important but you're certainly worked up about it huh?
I had a confusing (and amusing) moment over "hamburger" with a British friend. We were talking about making something for dinner, and I mentioned a quick and delicious (but peculiar) dish my family used to make, which was to brown some ground beef/mince and scramble some eggs into it. I was talking about how we'd need "hamburger" for it, because (at least in my northwestern area of the US) we use that term for ground beef in general (whereas "a hamburger" or "hamburgers" are the sandwiches made with ground beef patties). And she was highly confused, trying to figure out how you'd incorporate a hamburger patty of ground beef into scrambled egg, not at all familiar with the term "hamburger" to simply describe ground beef. After some explanation and a giggle, we got hamburger. But not hamburgers.
Have y’all ever traveled in a camper or RV before?! I’m scared for you as a family!! That sounds like a HUGE undertaking in a small space!! Just remember you love each other!!! And communication is KEY!