10 Things In British Culture IMPOSSIBLE to Explain to Americans! American Reacts
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- Опубліковано 20 тра 2024
- American Reacts to Top 10 Things in British Culture that is Impossible to Explain to Non Brits!
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British people tend to cross-code their measurements. So you could easily have a conversation about filling up your car in litres (measured in miles to the gallon), drive a few miles up the road to the pub for a pint where tables are placed two metres apart (especially during COVID) in a sweltering 35 degree heat, talk about how fat you are in stones whilst being careful to duck under the 6 foot high beam that separates the bar from the toilets. We're an odd culture but I find it endearing.
Millennials are probably the best at this because of how they learnt it but there are exceptions.
Quite right, not so long ago summer happened in Fahrenheit and winter in centigrade.
@@1daveyp said the same myself just the other day, it makes both sound more impressive. My husband is 6 years younger than me and used the imperial system at school but I was taught only metric way back in the 80's.
We used to sell lbs of metric length nails.
this is why i'm good at maths tho ;)
I suppose this is what happens when you have a culture consisting of an empire that once spanned a world where the sun never set.
I don’t think I could get through the day without tea. Two in the morning, two in the afternoon and one before bed. Can’t beat a good cup of Yorkshire, brewed properly, milk in last and no sugar. Delightful 😁
I like tea but there's weeks I don't drink it. But that's probably because we drink real coffee, not that yuk instant stuff you call coffee. I'd drink tea too then, lol
I'm one of the few Brits that don't like traditional British tea with milk & sugar, although do like jasmine tea on occaision. Definitely a coffee man. Filter coffee, not that granulated stuff.
Agree with you, but without the milk... 😄
right on.
Yorkshire>>>>>
I'm from the UK and 44. I use all measurements in a random mix. It's easy tbh everyone does it. I think it makes it easier for us when abroad as you change everything in your head automatically 😃
Yes, I use both. Often just whatever is convenient. When measuring for DIY, my house is constructed to imperial units and so I'd mainly use that, but I'm quite happy to use imperial height and metric width on the same sheet of wood, if it happens to produce rounder figures.
Having worked with people who were brought up entirely in metric, when they learned about the imperial system, they preferred to use it for estimates. For some reason, it is far easier to envisage an inch or a foot, an ounce or a pound or a pint; possibly because most are measurements that have references on the average human body.
nothing easy about converting Fahrenheit to Celsius - I'm 46 and I've never got my head around Fahrenheit!
The challenge of the village in Wales known to locals as Llanfair PG, is that although the letters used are the same as those used in English, the Welsh phonetics are totally different. Eg f = vsound, u = i, Ll,, Rh, Ng, are individual letters in their own right. So you can't attempt it with English sounds and get anywhere close
Yep, I grew up not too far away from there and always called it Llanfair PG, as if we say the whole bloody thing all the time. Conversations would be three times as long!!
@@Aled1976 even normal sized place names get shortened.
Think I read somewhere the original village was just Llanfair, however with the arrival of the railway they wanted a tourist name to attract customers.
@@Brian3989 yes I heard that, though it may have been Llanfairpwllgwyn before extension. Lots of Llanfairs around as church of Mary.
My cousin is currently teaching me how to say this! It's hard with the corrwct pronunciation but I'm determined to be able to day it
The thing that really gets me is that we price petrol by the litre, and yet measure our fuel economy in miles per gallon.
If they advertise fuel at £7 a gallon people might realise how much they are getting ripped off
@@wullaballoo2642 I'm not sure. Beyond mpg, most folk probably don't generally have an awareness of the size of a gallon, it'd just be a different price for a different unit of measure. Plus fuel is currently more like £10 a gallon at the moment.
@@abrahamtomahawk Fooking hell people wont be able to afford to travel to the next town over pretty soon and they'll have to start milking their own chickens because food is going to be unaffordable if it costs £10000's of fuel just to get it to the shops.
That's because we'd have to measure fuel consumption in litres per 100 kilometres, which would present its own problems as we measure distance in miles still.
Imperial or Metric gallon?
I don’t think I could last a whole day without a cup of tea. Coffee is useful when you’re tired at work but it’s just not a cup of Yorkshire tea 😄
Coffee in the morning to wake you up; tea in the afternoon for refreshment or relaxation. At bedtime, something stronger: cocoa.
@@partridge9698 Yep...same here.
Oh yes yorkshire tea is right at the top with assam being a very close second and always have to have a custard cream or hobnob to dunk in it or a penguin,rocky bar to use as a straw lol.
UK girl here & I grew up with parents who only drank tea, always has a pot of tea but now I'm older it's coffee for me! Oh and yes to beans on toas!!
I have to admit, being a geordie (Newcastle upon-Tyne UK) I do like to play with people with the accent and sheer speed we can talk
I was drinking Yorkshire tea from a sippy cup when I was a toddler. The tea stereotype is 100% true.
Mum used to make us a milky tea with 1 sugar and put it in our bottles 😅
I grew up in South Africa. I moved to the UK in my early 20s and have lived here for 25 years now. I grew up using only metric, but quickly converted to miles for distance and pounds/stone for weighing myself. However, I use grams/kg for weighing ingredients. I use feet/inches for measuring height and centimeters/meters for measuring fabric when I'm sewing. Basically, I'm just as confused as the rest of the UK!
Oh, and after 25 years here I understood that guy's Geordie accent perfectly. I'm starting to ask myself if I've been here too long!
One of us! One of us! One of us!
I'm British born and raised and I agree with all the ones you've said except for some reason I do weight in kg. Not a clue how much I weight in stones and pounds or how many pounds in a stone.
Definitely metres for fabric it's so annoying patterns have it in yards on the English side so you have to read the French.
@@cortalina8617 I use Kg to talk about weight as it seems easier and also used to it for cooking. However still talk about babies’ weights in pounds and ounces for some reason.
@@Looshfarmer oh yeah definitely. Then again idk what it actually means or what weight is normal for a baby. My job involves me being around kids from toddler age up a lot but never that young
Yes, I've ended up using a right mixture and I was born here!
In our house we have 2 types of 'beans on toast'. There is the normal beans on toast, plain no frills. Then there is 'special' beans on toast when it goes beyond a snack and becomes a meal.
The order (which must be followed) all placed on top of each other:
1, Buttered toast slice x 1 - white bread to be used
2. 3 slices of ham
3. Buttered toast x1 - white bread
3a. Spread marmite on this slice
3b. Sprinkle on grated red Leicester cheese
4. Add the beans
Nom nom
Oh I do a special with lightly toasted wholemeal seeded bread with marg can't stand butter, with marmite, soft goats cheese or Extra Mature cheddar cheese then add the beans. but I like side bowl with baby spinach leave, iceberg lettuce and fresh raw slice onion to go with it. mmmmmmmmm yummie now my mouth is watering.
Take the marmite out and I'm in
Mmm gunna try this but no marmite
Why on gods green earth would you butcher cheesy beans on toast with marmite?!?! Bad form 'ol chap, bad form!! 😉🤣
Nah, special baked beans l do with butter and lightly browned onions, with a pinch of paprika, garlic powder, black pepper, salt to taste served with warm crusty buttered bread.
I'm Brit born, Canadian raised! Drank nothing but tea till I was about 34! Working overtime one night, I got home about mid-night. An ambulance was parked out side the apartment. My ride joked, that's for you. As the door of the elevator opened, there was my wife, 2 medics and my 2 year old daughter on the stretcher! She'd tipped over on a chair and banged her head, staying up for daddy. Spent the night in Emergency. Got home in the first light of dawn (She was ok!) Just in time for work. First break, I asked the cafeteria lady for a coffee. She looked at me and I nodded my head! I'm 74 now and haven't had tea in decades. Peace and Love from Canada
I think "insulting your friends" is a universal thing or at least common in many countries. We Dutch do it as well.
I didn't know that, it's more widespread than I realised. 🤣
It is but we Brits do it in a very unique way, well we used too, now we have to be careful because of the PC brigade. When the Americans arrived to the UK to prepare for D day they were astounded by the way the Brits were laughing and joking and ripping eachother, while in the middle of air raids.
@ML I think the Irish do it better than we Brits.
My Irish friends are experts.
The Insult Olympics have to be the Barmy Army and their songs vs Aussie cricketers. Yet we Aussies love you guys despite it being World war 3 during test matches.
Ha! Try and explain that one!
Australians and New Zealanders as well.
Just to add further to the confusion, I live on a small island called Jersey (which gave its name to New Jersey), and is part of a group of islands known as the Channel Islands, which are not part of the UK, or the British Isles, but the residents are British.
Channel islands are crown dependencies and so have British Nationalities, but if your passport is issued on any of the islands it has different wording.
as a jersey lad myself, i can agree, fuckin confusing
You.memtion Jersey. UA-camrs the Beesleys are from Jersey. Where JT is doing reactions primarily with the UK, the Beesleys are doing reactions primarily on The US, with an occasional Canada reaction mixed in.
And when the Queen goes to Jersey, she is the Duke of Normandy despite being female.
Not forgetting where the Jersey (item of clothing) comes from! 👍🇬🇧🇯🇪
I live in Central England and we definitely refer to this 🇬🇧 as the Union Jack, never in my 39 years have I ever heard it called the Union Flag. Also we are definitely a nation of tea drinkers, the most popular being Yorkshire Tea. My mother drinks nothing else, however I love black coffee or espresso myself.
They're basically interchangeable as far as I'm concerned. A quote I've seen a few times from Hansard (Parliament records) in 1908 is "I think it may fairly be stated, in reply to the noble Earl, that the Union Jack should be regarded as the National flag, and it undoubtedly may be flown on land by all His Majesty's subjects", which is enough for me to set aside the whole 'it's only a Union Jack when it's on a boat' thing.
FWIW, an online search of Hansard supports the idea that both terms are used in modern English, but perhaps that 'Jack' is more common. From 18/08/1900 to 18/08/2023 (2004-2006 data not available), "union jack" is mentioned 1290 times in speeches, whereas "union flag" is used 580 times (and most of those are after 1980 by the look of it). For written answers though, it's the other way around ("union flag": 388 uses, "union jack": 75 uses - data up to 2010), _maybe_ suggesting that "union flag" is seen as a slightly more formal/correct term.
"Union Jack" was the old Royal Navy nickname for the flag (ensign). Officially it is only called such on board a Royal navy ship or base. However, pretty much everyone today calls it the Union Jack rather then Union Flag. It has only one correct way up too - it is often put up upside down even here in the UK by mistake - we tend to only do so for special occasions like the Queen's Jubilee etc. Each country, except Norther Island officially, also has its own flag: England: St George Cross; Scotland: Saltire; Wales: Y Ddraig Goch
Best flag in the world 👍
a Jack is flown from a Jack Staff. You fly the union flag upside down to show you are in distress. Perhaps those people are asking for help and you have ignored them?
Yes! It is so often called the "Union Jack" incorrectly. Long story short, in Bahrain in the 70's, Queen and Co. come visit, we're holding a Union Flag bedspread and Prince Philip sticks his head out the window and shouts "It's upside down!"
My parents started giving me milky tea in my bottle when I was about 6 months old. And I thank them even though they're not with us any more. God bless Mom & Dad
The tap thing: the hot water tank in the attic was subject to contamination back in the day. The tank could corrode and pigeons could shit in it (no, really). So, keeping that separate from the fresh drinking water was essential. Modern boilers don't have these issues so mixer taps are starting to creep in.
Back in the day, there you say something. It's 2022 and you STILL see it everywhere even in newer houses. I really don't get it.
@@Linda-hs1lk The tanks are mostly replaced but the taps are still a cultural holdover
We have mixer taps and to be honest I would still rather have separate taps. It strikes me as a bit of a waste of water having to run it for so long to ensure that it's actually cold.
We found a dead pigeon in my dads tank a few years back.
The most bizar British thing I found out was that the hot water tank is only heated in the morning and in the evening in 90% of the places, meaning that if somebody has taken a bath or shower in the morning the water in the house will be cold for the rest of the day until there is another heating cycle.
I work in engineering in England dealing with detailed schematics and drawings. I have to deal with precise measurements on a daily basis, and often work with a complete mixture of both Metric and Imperial, often on the same product. I'll make it clear here that the drawing is 75% of the time in Imperial fully, and 25% in metric. They dont mix on the drawing itself, I mix it as I find somethings easier to deal with in metric, and others in imperial. I can usually convert in my head 1 from the other, mostly.
And yes this has sometimes lead to mistakes.
I also do conversions in my head, all of them not just distance.
I'm old. lol
Beans on toast for breakfast is also a Kiwi thing. As a kid this was a autumn or spring breakfast usually with a poached egg. I still have it for a quick dinner.
same! Love a poached egg with beans on toast. If it’s for tea though there’s got to be bacon and/or sausages too.
If you want to react to something that happens in the UK, and the Commonwealth territories, that Americans have never heard about, why not have a look at the Commonwealth Games, which will be starting in a few days?
The Commonwealth Games is like a mini Olympics, but unlike the Olympics, only nations that are members of the Commonwealth compete. As with the Olympics, the Commonwealth Games are staged every 4 years. The four nations of the UK (England, Scotland Wales and Northern Ireland) compete individually, not as a combined group. Historically England, and Australia are the two countries that top the medal table.
My brother and his wife are going to the Opening Ceremony. We're all very proud of Brum
As an Aussie I might add that it is our little cousins the Kiwis who often seem to do the best on a per capita basis.
As someone born in the UK (London) I’ve been brought up on tea. Love it. Have numerous cups a day. Best drink ever
The thing with "public schools" is based on the history that originally there were no communal schools at all. The wealthy would have their children educated at home, often even with a single live-in tutor having their own lodgings or rooms on the estate itself. It was a case of one tutor for that one children (or a couple of children) of that one wealthy family. So when communal schools were set up - still just for the wealthy - they were deemed to be "public" in the sense of one teacher for several children of different wealthy families, and not privately 'at home'. The confusion came about only with the advent of the state-run schools for everybody. But by then, the term "public school" was so well entrenched in the English class system, and in their vernacular, that it has become impossible to adjust it.
I love the way you were so proud of your pronunciation of the Welsh town, Well done
I'm a tea drinker. Depending on the type of tea, I will have it with either milk or black but never with sugar. I can't stand coffee and even the smell of the coffee beans puts me off. Regarding baked beans, love them on toast and jacket potatoes and even cold straight out of the tin. I cannot stand marmite but my Dad loves the stuff
Always tea, made with loose tea, not tea bags, in a teapot. Talking of drinks, Scotland is the only country where coca cola isn't the number 1 soft drink. Here it's Irn Bru (made in Scotland from girders) 😁
Much better for the environment to use loose leafs as most tea bags have plastic in them. If you compost your tea bags remember to tear them open first.
I remember that advert. I always had to recite it as it was on 🇬🇧
Love Iron Bru. Much better than Coke or Pepsi.
@@debbiestonehouse yeah me too 😄 🤣
@@nicolaraybould3801 👍
I don't drink a lot of tea and sometimes drink fewer than 15 cups a day.
My Serbian girlfriend (long ,long before I met her) was astonished and concerned when she was constantly offered tea when starting out in the U.K. in Serbia Tea is only offered when you are ill, so she thought everyone though she was sick.
The whole Union Flag/Jack thing is now kinda moot as it was decided some time ago that it can be called either....
When flown by a Royal Navy warship, the Jack (not Union Jack but just 'Jack') is flown from the Jackstaff(the flagpole at the pointy end of the ship) when the ship is alongside in port or at anchor.
Great reaction video, love your enthusiasm.☺👍
Flown upside down in times of distress.
The whole Union Flag/Jack thing is now kinda moot as it was decided some time ago that it can be called either.......some time ago? Fuck that, it is the Union flag unless on a sea going vessel, Stop trying to dilute the Heritage of the United Kingdom, you mug.
one thing about us, if we don't like you, we'll say it.. If we like you, you'll know.
There is this street near me calld rom vally way and when the bus thing says the bus stop it sounds like wrong vally way lol😂
3:47 in the UK we call Private Schools Public schools as alternative nomenclature. The state run schools are referred to as State Schools or Comprehensives. We used to have a system of Grammar Schools which were selective State Schools for academic children. A few still exist, as state Grammar Schools but these are rare. Many ended up becoming Public/Private - or fee paying schools. There's still a state Grammar School in Telford which offers boarding. The tution is free, like any state school, as long as your kid can pass the entrance exam, but you can pay to send your kids off there for either just the week, coming home at weekends or for months on end.
I always keep my marmite in the fridge so it never gets thrown out before completion. Only the most skilful of marmite/fridge combo users can apply the paste and close the lid without getting some marmite on the lid's thread and generating a huge problem.
Marmite was the precursor to epoxy resin and if even one drop of it gets in between the bottle and lid and then cooled, it may then require a fully destructive reopening.
I grease my motorcycle chain with it
@@davehoward22 I bet that slowed your bike down
I never drink fewer than 4 cups of tea a day, and when I'm stressed sometimes 15 or so. I usually drink loose Irish tea because it's strong and malty.
👏👏👏👏 good knowledge on the Union Jack!
You are right about the union jack only being called that when it is flown from a jack mast
Both BBC programmes "QI" and "More or Less" looked into the Union Jack/Union Flag controversy. They found that the terms have been used interchangeably in legal documents and naval treaties for 200 years. So you can all relax - either will do.
@Barney Laurence More or Less did a similar analysis looking into the "less or fewer" debate. Same result - English literature has used both over many years and the (supposed) distinction arose quite recently. 😄 We can all calm down.
The Welsh village Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch
Actually has an interesting history and if you speak Welsh not necessarily so hard to remember/ pronounce
It used to have a much shorter name but with the introduction of rail they lengthened it to ridiculous amounts specifically to attract tourists and their cash lol
It actually translates to a description of the town and its location:
St Mary's Church in the Hollow of the White Hazel near a Rapid Whirlpool and the Church of St. Tysilio near the Red Cave
Hiya Mr or Mrs Green, I know if you want to write a letter to Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychyyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch, you just have to put Llanpg on the envelope
My mum used used to work in North Wales. As there are a couple of other places called Llanfair, and they don't always want say or write the whole thing, it's often shortened to Llanfairpwll ir Llanfair P G.
That's mind bending to pronunce in Welsh, but its English translation is like an utter mouthful.
The village's original name was Pwllgwyngyll, meaning "the pool of the white hazels", and was one of two townships making up the parish, the other being Treforion, meaning "anchoring house". The 16th-century parish name was recorded as "Llanfair y Pwllgwyngyll." I should mention my grandfather was born and raised in Llanfairpwll :D
Agreed. What should be understood is that this place name is not a single word but actually a whole descriptive sentence that is more easily pronounced, bearing in mind the Welsh pronunciation of words and letters, if it is broken down into its individual words
I learnt metric and imperial at school in the seventies. and still use both today. Baked beans with Worcester sauce mixed in on toast and covered in cheese.
Marmite is an acquired taste. It grows on you the more often you eat it. But I have to be in the right mood to want some cheese on toast with marmite. It's not difficult to switch between different measurement systems, especially if like me you're old enough to only have been taught Imperial measurements at primary school. UK currency only went decimal in 1971 when I was 14. Although metric is a far simpler and much more logical system, I still think in feet and inches for lengths, but weigh ingredients in grams when cooking and use centigrade rather than fahrenheit, which despite being widely used when I was a little girl, now leaves me absolutely clueless how hot or cold it is!
We do tend to mix and match Metric and Imperial quite a lot. We travel in miles, but would measure most liquid measures in litres. Not unusual for someone buying building products [wood , pipes etc.] to still refer to the sizes in inches! i would be a Celcius person for temperatures, but there are a few people left who who stick to Fahrenheit. This is despite the fact that i was mainly educated in the metric system at primary school in the early 1970's !
Fahrenheit may have been taught from the 70s but there are still millions of people like me born in the 40s 50s 60s who were never taught Celsius, the only reason I use metres is because I know it is only 3" longer than a yard😂 my son was born in the early 90s and he uses both systems.
Try ordering 500ml of beer!!
I tend towards Imperial for everyday/ traditional things (milk, distances, height, weight)
Metric for science/modern things (calculations, chemicals like weedkiller, soft drinks)
Except temperature which is Celsius to me
"How long?"
Three metres and half an inch or so..."
Yeah, gotta love buying fuel by the litre, but measuring fuel economy in miles per gallon. Not confusing in the slightest
JT your knowledge of us lot is astounding, I was particularly impressed with your understanding of the difference between the Union Flag and the Union Jack!!
@Barney Laurence It's only officially known as the Union Jack when on a ship.
Yes, people generally call it the Union Jack, but that doesn't mean they're correct.
@Barney Laurence, The name ‘Union’ first appeared in 1625. When a small flag was mounted on the front of a warship, the jack staff, it was called ‘The Jack’.
Sometime around 1674, the British Flag became known as the ‘Union Jack’ when mounted on a warship and the ship was not in harbour. At the same time, the British Flag was referred to as the ‘Union Flag’ on land.
I'm so glad I found your videos 😁
I can’t go a day without tea. Love it. Soon as I get up I have a cup of tea. Soon as I arrive home I have tea. They are the times I have to have tea, even though I drink it in between mornings and arriving home after going out. Love love love marmite on toast, also love beans on toast.
One jar of Marmite lasts me one month. I love it. On the term Union Jack - In 1902 the UK's Lords of the Admiralty requested that Parliament consider that the Union Jack be recognised as the flag of the nation. It did so and an Act of Parliament (1908) decreed it. The use of the term “Jack” on a warship was a hangover from the Napoleonic Wars (1803-15) and it's a myth that continues to date. The terms Union Jack or Union Flag are interchangeable since their acceptance by the Flag Institute, the UK's flag registry, in 1908. People still quote the "only on a ship" myth today.
I came here to make the same point about the Union Jack being an accepted term wherever it is flown... such an outdated myth still bandied about ! By the way, I too love tea and Marmite - Yum! Yum!
Damn, you beat me to it lol
On the marmite front, it is absolutely my favourite food "extra".
I was born in Burton, about half a mile from the factory. My dad worked there and got discount on products. He got discounts on the beer lol and bought me the marmite. Loved it ever since
Steven fry on QI said it was only on a ship
@@adelia988 - This was corrected on a later episode and on the QI website "Correction: According to a parliamentary statement, common usage of "Union Jack" when referring to the British flag is correct. Therefore, it is the Union Jack anywhere or wherever flown".
FYI: 'It is sometimes asserted that the term Union Jack properly refers only to naval usage, but this assertion was dismissed by the Flag Institute in 2013 following historical investigations'. Further: 'The Flag Institute has also stated':
It is often stated that the Union Flag should only be described as the Union Jack when flown in the bows of a warship, but this is a relatively recent idea. From early in its life the Admiralty itself frequently referred to the flag as the Union Jack, whatever its use, and in 1902 an Admiralty circular announced that Their Lordships had decided that either name could be used officially. In 1908, a government minister stated, in response to a parliamentary question, that "the Union Jack should be regarded as the National flag".
The thing with Marmite is that most people new to it vastly over-estimate how much you need for a single serving. A newspaper over gere ran an article on unhealthy foods, and listed Marmite for the high salt content *per 100 grams* Now, I love Marmite, but having 100g in one go would strip my mouth lining.
The secret of Marmite is to pre-prep the stuff! Step1 - mix thoroughly 50/50 (or to taste) with room temperature butter. Step2 - spread on bread, or preferably, hot toast. Step3 - eat with cup coffee/tea.
Compare with the other 'salty' spread, 'Patum Pepperium' aka 'Gentlemens' Relish', which is actually much saltier than Marmite (mix20:80 max with butter in Step1.
Not far from where I live is a country lane(narrow road) called 'Cocksure Lane' with a smaller sign saying 'Leading to Bunkers Hill'.
I would not agree that mixer taps haven't caught on yet. I live in a house built in 1957 and when we had a new bathroom and kitchen fitted most of the designs we were shown had mixer taps so we only have them now. Same in most houses that have either been built or refitted recently. They are not a rarity.
I’m 37, and I’ve drank 5 - 7 cups of tea every day since I was about thirteen. I know no one who does not drink tea. My generation Z relatives, whilst mad about Starbucks, still drink tea at home. My Italian father who grew up on espresso drinks two cups of tea a day. It really is a sort of universal thing.
I dont drink tea or coffee ( sorry to ruin things for u) I thought I was the only one but then when I asked around about 5 of my mates didn't either. I was amazed.
Hi. My name is Ben. I’m 37 and I’m addicted to drinking tea.
Separate hot and cold taps are a usualy found in either unmodernised homes, or retro fitted by some owners to suit the period of the house (usually a Victorian or Edwardian property) Every tap in my c1932 house is now a mixer, except the outlet in the garden for the hose. Also your Union flag/Jack is correct 👌
My house is modern, I have separate taps. Most of my friends also have separate taps, all live in modernised homes.
I mainly drink coffee but I also like to drink tea for variety. Certain foods such as a bacon butty and fish & chips seem to go better with a nice cup of tea instead of coffee. As for measurements when I'm cooking I use metric them same applies to weighing myself. For distances the default measurement for me is the mile unless it is for example measuring something precisely then it's back to metric again. I'm so used to that it isn't confusing at all to me.
I’m Welsh and we call them public schools (free) and private schools (fee paying), I was just as confused when I moved to England! 😂
Britain's public schools are far from being a mirror image of public schools in the US. Most are definitely fee-driven, except when a pupil is awarded a "free" scholarship. Mind you - if you pardon the expression - there are some words in everyday use by non-Welsh-speaking denizens of Wales that are completely lost on the squires of England, the jocks of Scotland and the Ulstermen of Northern Ireland. Our cousins over there beyond the pond don't realize that the English exist in tandem with fellow Brits, the Taffies, the Scotch and followers of Rev. Ian 'fog horn' Paisley! In that regard, one thinks of English-Welsh words such as daps, scram and mitch. Now that's tidy...in it, bach? Neon, mun, if you really are a Taffy, you'll tell me who or what JPR stands for in the principality. Don't be shy, bach...
No you don't. You family may do, the Welsh generally don't.
No you don’t.
No we don’t ! I’m also Welsh public schools are posh schools with fee’s
I call them the sane thing!
13:01 The other thing that is seemingly IMPOSSIBLE to explain to anyone (even those living here) is that our flag has a right and wrong way up. This flag is the WRONG way up (the thick white band next to the flagstaff must be above the red stripe). If you're ever confused just check any of the many other nations' flags with the union flag in the corner (Australia or New Zealand for example).
Also spotted
🤣🤣you are correct, some UK peeps don't realise that lol 👍😁 easy mistake to make though
Easy way to remember is that Scotland entered the UK before Ireland, so the white saltire from the Scottish flag ranks above the red one representing Ireland and therefore goes above it on the hoist side.
A neighbour of mine has put a Union flag in their garden and it's upside down. He constantly boast how proud and patriotic he is and I always have a little chuckle to myself. So proud you don't no it's the wrong way up.
Seeing your mind blow over the cold water tap thing is so crazy yahaha
Today I will be using an American CNC miller using metric but I only have an imperial measuring kit I bought in from home to measure the parts. Has to be between 41.91mm - 41.99mm in imperial that`s 1.650" - 1.652".
I think most Brits are perfectly happy switching backwards and forwards between the imperial and metric systems, which probably explains why the imperial system hasn't died. For instance, I measure temperature in Celsius, height in feet and inches, weight in stones and pounds and distance in miles but I'm almost as comfortable in centimetres, kilogrammes and kilometres. Fahrenheit takes a little more imagining, though. But if you know how to switch, it's quite simple.
BTW I'm a tea drinker and I hate Marmite!
Love Marmite
@@main3182 I agree we should go as metric as Ireland. (everything apart from pints of alcahol and furlongs in horse racing)
@@dasy2k1 Heck! That would be a pain - measuring distance in furlongs per fortnight! 😄
@@grapeman63 It's the Firkin Furlong Fortnight system :) It even had a page on Wikipedia but I cba to go and see if it's still there.
@@_starfiend I was introduced to the concept in the 70s through the comedy of Jasper Carrot!
I'm a tea drinker. Usually one in the morning and one in the afternoon.
Coffee is much more normal in the UK than you might believe, but I just can't bear the taste.
Got to admit that I can't stand the taste of tea or coffee. I like hot chocolate though, but I don't drink it often.
Same 👍
I don't mind the taste of coffee, but the smell make me nauseous.
@@rachelpenny5165 Maybe you haven't found the right tea or method to make it.
Tea is far superior, I don't mind a latte but I do enjoy a mocha.
I am nearly 52 and definitely a Marmite fan and Tea drinker. I only drink Yorkshire Tea with milk and a 2 teaspoons of Honey (and it has to be strong, stewing for a least 3 - 5 minutes), I used to have sugar but switched to honey a few years ago. My father used to take a pint pot of Tea to bed on a night and then wake up in the morning and drink it cold, I also used to do this for many years, it is very refreshing. I will still drink cold tea if I have been busy a work and my cup has gone cold.
The only time I drink coffee is when I am out dining and always finish with a black coffee or a liqueur coffee.
If you like Marmite on toast try adding some English mustard to it; it tastes like those Brannigans beef and mustard crisps.
I am comfortable with Imperial or metric measurements, I work in the rail industry and a lot of our maps still use miles and the "chain" measurement, which is 22 yards or the length of a cricket pitch!
The oldest imperial measurement i remember was the sixpence as I was born on January 15 1971 and decilmilisation cam in on the 15th February 1971. The sixpence stayed around for a few years after but was only worth 2.5 pence.
I find it also weird that we still buy horses in guineas which is the equivalent of £1.05 Pence.
The Welsh dragon does not appear on the Union Flag because when the first Union Flag was created in 1606, the Principality of Wales by that time was already united with England. I have always called it the Union Jack wherever it was, so I have actually gained some knowledge today!
The insulting thing is actually quite true, we have to be very correct in many areas of our lives now for fear of upsetting someone, but when we are with close friends we do tend to let rip, I will not go into detail here, but it would even make a mine worker blush!
I had tea every day since I was 6 and now it's honestly an addiction, can't have a morning without it! And yeah love coffee too, but can't have it as much
As a builder we still can say 2 metres of 4 x 2 , the 4x2 being inches, so it’s a mix of both systems. You are correct on the union flag, it’s only a Jack when it’s flown on a sea vessel. I like both tea and coffee. The baked beans in the UK are in a different sauce to the US, I would never eat US baked beans on toast or for breakfast, actually I wouldn’t eat US baked beans at all :)
Why, what's the difference between the two? I've never had American baked beans.
@@deballen7031 The rubbish sauce
Is it watery, stodgy or just unpleasant flavouring?
@@deballen7031 I understand Unpleasant by comparison
@@andyp5899 Thanks, that's interesting. About twenty odd years ago an old friend brought back some chocolate from America for me to try, I only had one square because it was really foul tasting. On the way back home I had to pull over to the side of the road in order to throw up. I think it was Hershey's or something like that. It must have had something wrong with it to taste that bad.😅
Nothing wrong with tea! And I like coffee too, as long as its good quality.
Marmite is brilliant
You guys are obsessed with us sometimes having two taps. New bathrooms have a mixer tap, so its not a thing
Beans on toast with HP sauce and grated cheese, yum!
I was in the British army, and sometimes we had "range brew" which was a big urn of tea and coffee mixed, but when it's pissing with rain, and you're cold, any hot wet sugar will do
'Union Jack' has come into everyday language and is interchangeable with 'Union Flag'. In the navy flags are flown from the 'Jack Stay'.
It used to be called a union jack when on a boat and union flag when its on land but the people who study and talk about all things flags and the govt have decided it doesn't matter anymore and it can be called either
Sorry but that is a relativly new myth that it is the Union Jack when on a ship
@@lyncohn9505 On a ship it is just called a Jack, being flown on the Jack staff.
Just remember to fly it the right way up please!
Welshie here- I found it so adorable that you've only just clicked onto the 'cold tap' stuff! I've had it before where I've said 'run it under the cold tap' and people say '...the cold tap? All taps have cold' and I have to explain that here we have two taps hahah. Many here nowadays do have the double; however I prefer the two (edit: also, milk and two sugars, thank you! And yes. We need the Welsh flag "slap bang in the middle of it" as we have the best
Nae danger taffy the lion rampant would slaughter your dragon
@@ECOWE Good luck with that
I do prefer coffee to tea, but does depend on the mood , a cup of tea at the right time can really hit the spot lol. Especially with a biscuit...tea goes better with biscuits than coffee
Tea is the best drink ever, warm in the winter, nice in the summer, very refreshing, hydrating, no sugar (for me) therefore no fat or calories. Tastier than water. Gets you out of your seat to make the many cups of tea - a sign of friendship if they know how you take it. A way to annoy people you hate by making it badly. Its an all rounder.
10:04 I depend on tea to get through the day. (Or, more often, to get through the hour...) I learned this at a young age from my parents who no doubt learned it from their parents. Tea is life!
I freakin LOVE Marmite! Always have. But I grew up on it, which apparently makes all the difference. Also, when trying it for the first time, it should be spread thinly on toast, not eaten out of the jar with a spoon!
I'm almost 30 and only started liking marmite a couple of years ago - funnily enough whilst pregnant with my now marmite-loving 2 year old - go figure?! It's great on Crumpets
🤮
Heresy! Marmite should be burnt, run over by a tank then blasted into orbit! Bluuuuuuurgh! 🤮🤮🤮
Sylvia - Absolutely! Too many times I've seen people not familiar with Marmite try it using a spoon or finger and then say it's horrible. It's meant to be spread thinly on toast or crumpets for full delicious effect. After all, you wouldn't take a big bite from a block of butter from the fridge and then state you don't like butter!
Hmmm - maybe that is why Vegemite is better. One can and does eat it straight from a jar.
As a brit, the one that stands out for me as not being quite right is the taps. Definitely as a child, separate taps were common (80s). Mixer taps were rare, although not unheard of - my grandparents had a mixer in their kitchen in the 80s. However, I'd say the transition started happening in the 90s. Nowadays, I don't know of anyone that has separate taps in their homes and they're rare in the shops. It's usually toilets in older pubs, older schools, etc, that still have them. Mixer taps are the norm these days, not separate!
Hm, most of the houses I've lived in had separate taps. Only my kitchen sink has a mixer. Now that i think about it I've never seen a mixer on a small sink in a toilet, nor a bath, even though they both exist. I should get out more :)
As an Australian the two that stood out was the claim that only Ireland drunk tea like the Brits and no one else eats baked beans like they do. Australians and Kiwis do both of those things.
We still have separate taps, quite happy with them. Also, I like marmite, not fond of baked beans, 65 years old and very much grew up with the old imperial measurements and still think in feet, yards, pounds and stones.
me and basically everyone i know has two separate taps
Everyone I know who is under 60 has mixer taps.
I was 7 when we had to learn metric.
My first Saturday job was spent measuring curtain fabric, from customers' feet and inches measurements and convertingto metric for the sale.
Converting length and weight back and forth to metric and imperial is an everyday thing now.
I can verify there's still British homes with "the cold tap" - I live in one! The cold water from the mains comes into the house and feeds the cold water tap in the kitchen, and the tank in the loft. That tank feeds both all other cold taps in the house plus the hot water heater. So the cold taps in the bathroom actually have water that's sat in the loft tank for an unknown time, and the loft tank lid isn't tight fitting so it could have dust, bugs, pretty much anything in it. It's ok to brush your teeth with but I wouldn't drink it!
Not many houses have water tanks these days, even those like mine with separate taps
@@kt19752525 depends on what you mean by "not many"! We live on a housing estate built in the 1980's, they all have a loft tank unless the homeowner has converted it. Of course modern homes won't have one but a good proportion of older homes will have.
I grew up in the UK and was always told don't drink from the hot tap. I live in Canada now and people were asking me what the no drinking from the hot tap was about. I didn't know whether it was a rule my dad had or if it was a rule that a lot of English people knew.
UK bean also here. I have a cold tap, but it's safe to drink from all taps. Hot water is also safe but there's no reason to do so. The only reason I'd feel like moving to a singular tap when I get my own house and can do that, is for one of those boiling water taps, purely for the convenience of not having to boil the kettle. It depends how efficient they are though. I don't know anyone with an attic tank so it's quite interesting that it's still a thing!
@@Lorin1228 my house is similar in that we have a tank it's just not in the loft it's on the first floor, in the airing cupboard.
Marmite is so rich in umani that it can overload the taste buds. A little goes a very long way. Those that say they hate it probably love other products that have "modified yeast" as an ingredient. Same thing to all intents and purposes; it's msg in paste form where Worcestershire (or light soy or fish) sauce is in liquid form. Everyone loves it really, they just put too much on hot buttered toast.
While I don't like it myself (I also don't like meat, it makes me queasy for some reason too), that's definitely been my observation. Someone trying it for the first time gets a surprisingly thick spread and worst is that it's usually not the person trying it that spread it.
Same happened to me as a child, my Grandad spread it so thick you couldn't tell how toasted the bread was, it was just black. Took 20 years for me to pluck up the courage and try it again at my own pace.
Absolutely correct. Only Union Jack when flown on a boat/ship
I find we tend to use imperial for large things and metric for smaller more precise measurements. And well done on knowing that the Union flag is only officialy called the Jack when flown on a boat. Most Brits are inaware of that.
there is a historical reason why fee-paying schools are called 'public'. There used to be schools that were open only to (for example) the sons of goldsmiths in the City of London, or people who went to a particular church or cathedral. Then schools opened that were still fee-paying but that anyone could apply for. These were called 'public' because they were in theory open to anyone.
And it still applies that state schools are only open to those pupils living within its catchment area, wheras public school are open to pupils from anywhere.
I always wondered about that! Thanks from a Dane who was too lazy to look stuff up on the internet.
Thank you . So few people seem to know this. The “public” refers to admissions, not to how they are funded.
Thank you!
And their charity status is due to historical scholarships for poor people.
I think in general the measure mash up tends to depend on whether you're after accurate or rough measurements. So for instance for many measurements that would include "it's about..." we'll use feet and inches since meters are too big, millimeters / centimeters are too small, but feet and inches are a handly middle ground. On the flip side you won't hear people referring to fractions of an inch or yards very often, since at that point millimeters and meters make more sense. Similarly your own weight and height don't need to be hyper accurate so people will use stone+pounds (never pounds on their own) and feet/inches.
Absolutely, and the Stones/lb for weight has a convenience, that you often forget to say I am 12 Stone 13 Lb, you magically just become 12 stone. Measured in pounds or KG makes it harder to get away with it. and for measurements, I absolutely do that.
Yes, when measurements really matter it's millimeters- cutting window glass, fussy woodworking, it's just easier.
My accent is the same as the bloke on the video. Geordies, Geordies everywhere 😆. I get up at 3.45am for work, and the first thing I do is have a cup of tea.
Just paused and jumped in the comments on the tea topic.... I prefer coffee to drink but if iv got a pack of biscuits (cookies) iv got to have a tea to dunk them 👌🤣
I'm British and love my builders brew. That means it has to be so strong so your spoon can stand up in it haha
I like both. I have one cup of coffee a day with breakfast but I drink tea throughout the day. As a general rule, we DON'T drink English breakfast tea as this video says! We drink mix blended teas that are popular. Everyone has their favorite. PG Tips, Tetley and Yorkshire tea are the big three. Each supermarket has their home brand. Tea is usually taken with Kettle boiled water, milk and if you wish, sugar or sweeteners. You can take it black with lemon but are considered posh if you do. Specialist teas are less popular.
I'm a fan of Peppermint tea with milk myself, has a nice mellow flavour
But I do use a more standard tea if I plan on having digestives or the like with it
Tetley's is best.
I’m totally confused. If mint tea tastes of mint and fruit tea tastes of fruit, how come English Breakfast tea doesn’t taste of eggs and bacon?
Coffee in the morning, or when tired. Tea for breaks at work, or when you first get home from work, to relax.
Ah! Queen Camel, that's a 5 minute drive from me.
Cantmael was a Celtic word meaning hill, which is where "Camel" comes from, the Queen is because it belonged to Queen Eleanor, Henry 3rds wife.
It's also near to Camelot! Well, possibly!
JT I'm seriously impressed!! You're absolutely right about the Union Flag- and many British people don't know that! Good work, JT!👍🇬🇧
I didn't! I've always only called it the Union Jack.
Absolutely, I was so proud lol. had that Absolutely drilled into me in scouts when I was younger
I’ve always known that it was created after the act of settlement treaty was signed in 1707 it was during the Second World War they started calling it Union Jack 🇬🇧
I love both Tea and coffee, and marmite. Also hot sweet tea is a good cure for shock, in fact it's used as a cure for moat things.
Mixed Imperial Metric untis, ...generally one of each is used as required for specific situations, reasonings, types of product, subject, or measurement needed, isn't so bad, gives a general guesstimation of rough ballpark figures between either method of unitisation.
Though myself, I've never understood just straight pound weightings (the numbers seem get too big to mean anything to me) or degrees F.
We love tea in our house. When our kids were very young they had a boccy tea, which was basically a babies bottle with milky tea. Shocking today but it was different times!
I love your videos, I love your energy, but I think what I love most is how you show that so many Americans now are paying attention to the way the rest of the world lives, and not just our little set of islands. For really far too long in the mind of the average American The World just meat America. Now there are Americans like you who are choosing to no longer be so closed off. In all seriousness, this is genuinely huge! I'm excited to see how America as a country interacts with everyone else when most of you share this curiosity and open minded view.
Would you ever consider doing irish reactions the same way you do with British? There's a lot I'd love to watch
I since I was about 14 I've been a confirmed coffee drinker (I'm 78 now). The only time I drink tea is when I'm on vacation in Turkey, where the local "çay" (pronounced "chai") is served in small glasses with no milk.
I drink more tea than coffee but only drink 2 cups of tea daily.
My guilty pleasure any time of year is a Starbucks iced latte with cinnamon syrup and whipped cream.
I hate marmite & coffee, but I love tea.
Leaving aside metric, British imperial measurementsare often bigger than US ones. A British pint = 568.261 ml, whereas a US pint = only a paltry 473.176 ml. Our pounds are the same, though a Brit hundred-weight = 112lb as against the US 100lb. also the UK routinely uses stones (14lb), with 8st = 1cwt. and 20cwt = 1 ton. We also never use cups as cooking measurements, but do generally, but not as much as in the US, use spoons (tsp & tbsp). Our acres are the same. The UK also held onto furlongs, chains, pecks, bushels and hands longer, these are now in disuse, unless we are talking horses - here hands and furlongs are still a thing. £1 = $1.2, a dollar being originally based on the Spanish Dollar, or piece of eight. The Irish Republic’s measurements are the same as in the UK, although they tend to use the metric system more, all road signs and speeds being in km and kmph. They also have the Euro (€) as currency. Not everything in the US is bigger.
The yard does fall short of the metre, I’ll admit. But what does that mean? There’s more of them
-Al Murray
We still use the chain as a measurement! It’s the distance between the stumps on a cricket pitch (22 yards)!
@@daveworrall6834 and a significant amount of the railway network is still measured in miles and chains
the best example is the British quart versus the American dry and wet quart. The three are all different.
The main reason for the difference in measures is Parliament decided we needed to standardise throughout the Realm and instead of going with metric they created a weights & measures Royal Commission to come up with a solution. In the time it took to measure all the measures (such as the Standard Pint at the Treasury holding 20 avoirdupois ounces of water), create a couple of reports making recommendations to Parliament (i.e. how to create the Imperial system), and giving the Empire a year (plus another) to switch to imperial, a certain country for some unGoogled reason decided to measure all liquids in soon-to-be-used-by-no-one-on-the-planet English wine gallons.
Most UK measuring teaspoons and tablespoons bought in the last few decades have been metric (5 mL and 15 mL respectively), and the same goes for measuring cups (IIRC, a cup is 250 mL). It can make recipes a PITA because an author's nationality and location mightn't be enough to work out what the actual measures are, which is why I usually list volume measures in mL.
The 2nd Reading of the Weights And Measures (Metric System) Bill was moved on 1st July 1863 with a condensed history of the mess of units:
"About twelve eminent foreign witnesses were examined, at the head of whom might be named M. Michel Chevalier. They were unanimously favourable to the metric system. The Committee also, whatever might have been their first impressions, unanimously recommended the gradual adoption of that system. What did they find to have been the history of our own system? Before the time of Magna Charta, in the reign of Richard I. (and even in the Saxon times) it was declared that "there should be one weight and measure throughout the land."
"From those days down to the last modern act, uniformity was the aim, or the dream, of our legislation. Yet what did we find as the result? We had at present no less than ten different systems of weights. For our ordinary measure we had the inch, foot, and yard. For cloth measure we used yards, nails, and ells. We had about seven sorts of acres. We had an Irish mile, a Scotch mile, and an English mile. There were twenty different bushels, ten different stones, three sorts of hundredweights, several kinds of tons, and many sorts of gallons."
Magna Carta Clause 35 is quite useful in any debate with someone that points at Magna Carta (e.g. Human Rights Act) because anyone that uses pints or mL clearly believe Magna Carta isn't sufficient and should be superseded. In Canada, if you order a pint in French you get 2 Imperial pints... based on the current UK pint glasses debate, the SNP are clearly missing a vote winner: order a pint in Scottish Gaelic and you'll get a proper 1,696 mL Scotch pint.
Tried Yorkshire tea once.......can't drink any other tea now 🤣
Like both tea and coffee there is a whole crazy thing about milk in first or add after such a mad ritual like the scones with jam and cream Devon has cream underneath Cornell cream on top so random thanks for this JT ❤
My parents grew up learning the imperial system in school and I grew up learning the metric system, so trying to talk about any measurements is impossible. 😂
Brief explanation of "public school" in the UK: the name goes back to the late medieval/early renaissance period - at the time schooling was done by hiring private teachers. Then people who weren't quite rich enough to hire a tutor themselves (but still wealthy) banded together to employ teachers to teach a group of their kids. These institutions became known as "public schools" because they "taught the public" instead of "teaching in private".
Today, the term "public school" is reserved for the oldest and most prestigious private schools.
Oh, and the Union Jack/Flag thing. So it's called the Union Jack when it's flown from the "jack staff" of a Royal Navy ship, when flown anywhere else you can use either term. Seriously. The only people with any defined naming is the Royal Navy; even in Parliament it's been called by both names. Today, "Union Jack" is the more common term within the UK.
Public schools are public because they are open to everyone, assuming you can afford it.
Private schools are private because the government has to give permission for you to go.
Thanks, I always presumed that but this is the first time I've seen it.
@@stephen2583 private schools have entrance exams that tend not to happen as much in public schools.
Also, the term "public school" comes from England and goes back a thousand years. It was originally used to distinguish schools that any wealthy person could attend rather than church-run schools.
It's definitely not used across the whole of the UK. It isn't a term that is used in Scotland, for example, where the non-state schools literally are called "private schools" or "independent schools". Scotland's education system has always historically been different from England's.
@@davidforman6191 yes but ANYOE can take them. Where as you can only go to a private school if the local authority allows it. If you live outside a catchment area you cant get in, where as someone from outer mongolia could attend Eton if they had the money and passed any exntrance exams.
I used to live in a village in the county of Sussex, called FULKING! One day I remember the post man laughing out loud! As some one had got the name spelt wrongly! You work it out 😁😉🤣🤣🤣
Taps always come with a sink and a plug for the sinkhole, thus you mix the hot and cold water in the sink provided.