Oregano is another example where our american cousins are being influenced by Spanish from whom they no doubt learned about the herb. In Spanish its spelt orégano, the accent highlights that you stress the 'Re' sound. However even then it is Spanglish because they pronounce the last letter as the English 'o' (like owe) instead of the spanish 'o' (like o in Orange)
I think that a person name, a brand, a city, a name specific to one thing or person should be learnd in the original language. Like Van Gogh I try, with difficulties, to pronunce it in Dutch. It would broaden people's minds.
I always find language observations like this interesting. I think you'll find that most Brits are essentially "bilingual" when it comes to US English and UK English - we consume SO much US media and culture. Most of us would be unlikely to use these pronunciations but they're also second nature when hearing them.
I notice a lot of Brits are using the US pronunciation for route, wifi router, woodwork router etc. Some are also adopting the American "different than", which infuriates me.
@@Phiyedough Interesting - I would make a couple of distinctions with these words - I think some Brits do use the US pronunciation for wifi router. But I think the woodworking tool has always been a "row-ter". I'm not a fan of "different than".
Niche is also a French word. Van Gogh was a Dutch painter so we Dutchies speak this in another different way. As mentioned before listen to the Dutch pronounciation of van Gogh.
As a Dutch person depending on the word I use the English and American pronunciations and probably 50/50. For all original French words I am more inclined to use a more French pronunciation (so more American but less stressed as Americans do), probably because I also learned French. But I have to correct you on the Van Gogh. For that one you should use the Dutch pronunciation since he is from the Netherlands.
Yes, even though I'm not Dutch it really bugs me when Americans pronounce the painter's name as 'Van Go'. The British pronunciation of 'Van Gock' is probably closer, but when I've heard Dutch people pronounce the painter's name it is much more guttural.
I had no idea that Americans pronounced "solder" differently to us. I only recently found this out when I heard an American on UA-cam say something like "I used a sudder-ing iron". In the UK we pronounce the "L" and say _sole-der-ring_ iron (the first syllable rhymes with coal).
@@jester5ify Precisely, its an error 150 years ago thats been propagated. Sodder (as they say and spell it) is a phrase the British reserve for interfering mother-in-laws.
Being a Brit, the one word that baffles me, and has done since hearing it used about 15 plus years ago in the US is BUOY ! As in, a float anchored in a river, sea or similar waterway. I was with some Americans, looking out to sea at dolphins, when one (paraphrasing), shouted "just there by the BOO-EE..." - I said "where, what?" (quite confused). Now I hear it all the time on US TV shows (including Star Trek, when they left a BOO-EE marker in space). How did they ever pronounce it that way? It comes from the word 'buoyancy ' and means a flotation device. Buoyant = to float. I recall the conversation I had, with NOT one of the Yanks being able to explain why they called it a BOO-EE and not a BOY !!! 😂😂😂
I have, in a magazine that I edit, a whole essay on 'Leftenant' v 'Lootenant'. BOTH were in use in England in the 17th Century and it simply depended on what part of England that you came from.
I recall reading a book where a very British RAF officer criticised an American for saying SKEDULE. "Where did you learn to speak like that?" the officer said. "I'm sorry, sir, I must have learned at SHOOL", the American said..
I'm English and was always told that it's skedule, but that it depends what shool you went to. Skedule just sounds stronger too. Which sounds tougher? "I have arrived and I am on skedule" Or the other?
There's the American pronunciation of lieutenant. There's the usual British pronunciation of lieutenant (as used in the British army). And then there is the pronunciation used within the Royal Navy: "le-tenant' veering towards 'l-tenant'....
good that you know that acts of parliament were written in Norman French for centuries. not many british know that. and then there is Clique which we pronounce cleek and americans say click. the produce one is interesting, because brits often say it differently due to context: produce said when talking about farm vegetables is said differently when talking about how to produce a document (that is take it to a police station for example) or produce a product in a factory.
There's an old guest book from when Van Gogh stayed in London, and he signed his name "Van Goff", because that was the closest the locals could get to saying it. In The Netherlands it's actually pronounced more like "Vaan (with a very clipped N) Hohh", so I suppose we're both wrong.
'address (stress on the first syllable) is the noun (=the place where you live). a'ddress (stress on the second syllable) is the verb (= direct your speech to ...)
Or the Cockney global stop for T : the wa'er in Major'a don't taste like what it ough'a. This was part of a famous beer advert in the UK, Google "the water in Majorca".
In your vid on house front doors, you pronounce foyer like coyer (= more coy) whereas we mostly Frenchify it a bit and say foyay. Love the informal presentation style, by the way.
In English (or as you would say, British English) Tune does rhyme with Dune, but it doesn't quite rhyme with Moon. Also, we don't say Prodoos, we say Produce (like it's spelt), though the emphasis shifts depending on whether it's being used as a noun or a verb.. The point here is that in both countries, the letter U on its own is pronounced as "yu", but when it appears in a word the Americans seem to prefer to pronounce it as 'oo' for some reason.
I'm originally from the US. I came to the UK when I was 19. I'm 64 now. I'd say most of the time I pronounce my words the British way but not all of them.
Brits in the midlands and north of England sometimes say 'advertisement' the same way as Americans. Another one is vase: 'vaarse' in the UK and 'vayze' in the US. It's really interesting how divergent these pronunciations have become.
Some words are pronounced as they are in theUS because of the influence of Noah Webster. The US Army officially pronounced lieutenant the British way till the 1890s, holding out a long time. The word came from Burgundian French about 1300 and was pronounced 'leev-ten-on', with the u as a consonant v.
There are a few "Frenchified" parts of American english like pants being pantalons, the pronounciation of z coming French (which is like zay) while in the UK it comes from Germanic zett and the more French pronunciation of garage. Though with so many words Americans just use the wrong vowel sounds like a long I in Iran and the way you said Americans say buoy hurt my soul.
How often do you hear the word 'advertisement' [13 letters] in full? It is usually abbreviated to 'ad' [2 letters] although sometimes you may hear 'advert' [6 letters]. It must be the most abbreviated word in English.
It's always amused me that there's a vehicle hire company in Hertfordshire called Vincent Van Hire. Not sure if it was an accident or they just decided to go for it. If I ever need a van, I'm going to them 🙂
Both pronunciations of adult, apricot, advertisement (also often with the accent on the first syllable), address, buoy and route are used in the US. Premiere may also be "pree-MEER." David Attenborough uses the "American" pronunciation of "zebra," so I suspect that's an alternative even in England.
In British English we often have more than one pronunciation, depending on things like social background and region. I, for example pronounce "zebra" as /ˈziːbrə/, and while I do pronounce "privacy" as /ˈprɪvəsi/, I think many British might say /ˈpraɪvesi/. With both these words, both forms are given in Longman's (British) Dictionary: ze‧bra - /ˈziːbrə, ˈze- $ ˈziːbrə/ priv‧a‧cy - /ˈprɪvəsi, ˈpraɪ- $ ˈpraɪ-/ Incidentally, many people in Scotland might say "advertisement" the same way as Americans. The one I find most interesting is the short "o", as in the British pronunciation of "baroque, Kosovo", which in American English seems to be more of a long "o".
So close - we actually pronounce it 'prod-juice'. interestingly though we accent the 1st syllable when it's used as a noun, and the 2nd syllable when it's a verb. Go figure.
We do that with loads of words: Convict, Protest, Project etc. They're nouns if 1st syllable is stressed and verbs if 2nd syllable is stressed. For example: He went on a PROtest march to proTEST against the Government. I can proJECT that the PROJect will be completed on time. The CONvict said that the jury's decision to conVICT him was unfair.
Un / une, deux, trois, quatre, cinq, six, sept, huit neuf dix... (?) 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10. Six is _not_ pronounced as 6 (?!) Dix is like six . That's _my_ French basically!! Apart from 'c'est la vie', (& c'est la guiere -?) _and_ the name of a song by 'Lady Marmalade': "Voulez vous couchez avec moi, ce soir" (?) and it's just a song title - I am definitely _not_ propositioning you, or anyone, (!!) and I have probably misspelt it anyway (?!) if so, pardonez moi, s'il vous plait?🤔 ...😏🇲🇫🤫🏴❤️🇬🇧🤭🖖
@@CarloCocciolo Firstly, I am surprised I managed to spell anything correctly in French, since I have not studied the language since I was 11 years old, that's nearly _60_ years ago now, and what I _do_ know of it - apart from just one school year of it, when I came _First_ in French exam, at the end of that last Term - but then was dropped from 'A Group', and placed into 'B Group', because I have dyscalculia and couldn't cope in Maths... I have merely picked up through life! As for the one misspelling, thank-you so much for taking the time to offer the edit. I appreciate your having bothered to help me. 😏🏴❤️🇬🇧🙂🖖
Oh isn’t it lovely though! I love love love different pronunciations with the same word. It’s what makes it endlessly fascinating to chat with American people in my humble opinion. Long may there be these twee differences that help us all stay friends 🤗
Having grown up in the US state of Georgia I am aware that Houston County, Georgia, is pronounced differently from Houston, Texas. And that brings up my big pet peeve with this English language, nothing in its common written form tells you which of the many options to use when pronouncing the vowels, it is all "because they said so".
A couple more for you. Schedule in the UK is pronounced like “shed-yule”. Lever and leverage. In the US they tend to use “leverage” as a verb, whereas in the UK it’s a noun. Like, “We can use the low price as leverage just to get this client to sign”, whereas in the US you tend to say, “We can leverage the low price…”. I’ve also noticed that in the US some syntax is incorrect (not that anything in grammar is correct anymore with our evolving language). When a film is released to the cinema Americans make the verb “to release” describe the film/movie as the subject and not the object. Like “The movie releases to theaters Friday”. This syntax is very Latin but without the reflection on the verb. Here’s that sentence in Catalan: “La pel·lícula s'estrena divendres”.
Gotta give you props for that segue into the sponsor. (For the record "segue" is from Italian, so that's one of the rare non-french loanwords in English).
@@BillDavies-ej6ye Exactamundo - welsh. Via American back into UK English. Or merely homonyms. Entries linking to buddy. booty (n.) mid-15c., bottyne "plunder taken from an enemy in war," from Old French butin "booty" (14c.), from a Germanic source akin to Middle Low German bute "exchange."
1:35 No! No! No! There is no stress syllable in French (except as part of sentences). Equal emphasis per syllable. British pronunciation is much closer as emphasis is normally mild, and earlier in a word.
100% incorrect. French absolutely unambiguously strongly stresses the final syllable of the word. British English is strongly iambic - there is always a huge difference between a stressed and unstressed syllable -- English in general uses stress more heavily than most languages -- we have primary and secondary stress patterns that are really hard for second language learners to grasp.
@@otsoko66 No. French has no stress syllables for the words. Stressed syllables are purely in the context of the entire phrase. You probably confuse with long and short syllables. But even if that's the case, the "French absolutely unambiguously strongly stresses the final syllable of the word." is simply wrong.
@@jpj084 I'm not sure - I understand Italian, well, more or less, but I don't encounter it often enough to really be able to tell. I do live in France however, so, even though french isn't my first language, I can tell. It's been a huge debate between (Northern) Germans and Swiss/Southern Germans. Germans tend to stress the last, Swiss the first syllable of french words. And both say "Ours is the right way, just listen!" But actually, both just hear their usual stress patterns - which are different between northern and southern German dialects - because French has none 😁
Well done for that UK/US list👏. I would have ballsed it up for defo 😀. Depot comes to mind UK: Depp-o/US: Deepo. And of course...Varse: UK: vars like mars/ US: vase like face. Thanks GGL!
I agree with the US on Yogurt (I'm Irish), Lieutenant, Advertisement, Military, Tune (but I say tchune), Privacy, Lever (but I say leever) Americans tend to use the Aw instead of Ah sound for A's. I've seen Americans not knowing how to pronounce ABBA, they say OBBA. Americans (playing Scribblio) struggling to spell Kebab because you pronounce it Kebob. She pronounced Premier wrong for the US, you say Pre-meer. "Produce" we says fruit and veg or to produce something we say projuice Jay Leno once got annoyed and shouted at Jamie Oliver (I think) because he said pasta instead of posta.
I noticed that when Americans say 'produce' the stress the 'O' when in British English we don't but for the word 'process' we stress the 'O' in British English but in American English they don't. So sometimes it seems arbitrary with no rules.
@@valeriedavidson2785 And don't forget, those other inhabitants of the British Isles also have their own languages. If anything, it's English English. And to keep it simple, just don't mention dialects!
If you tap on to pronunciation on your phone it will say the correct way of pronouncing an English word. There is a correct and an incorrect way with pronunciation. To say "Anything goes" is ridiculous. (We all know that Americans are incorrect).
@@valeriedavidson2785 Valerie, there are different forms of English, whether you like it or not. I'm referring to the English who are brought up in England. I would say native-born English, but North Americans can claim that, too. The Celtic communities of Britain have their variants, and by some accounts we British have about 40 different accents. What form would you say is the correct one?
I realise that these comparisons can be mildly interesting or even humorous to some but the reality there is still clear understanding of what is being said. This is the only important part.
I've heard 'adult' pronounced both ways, sometimes depending on whether the word is being used as a noun or an adjective. The same with 'address,' although in this case, whether a noun or a verb.
One that surprised me , when i heard an Amercan audiobook narrator, was 'shone'. In the uk, the sun 'shone' rhymes with 'gone'. In the US, it rhymes with 'stone'. Now that I've come across the difference, I seem to hear it a lot more, but it still throws me.
Don’t know what it is about this video but I’ve seen it stitched a couple of times on you tube in the last few days. Hopefully this will encourage more people to view your channel.
Fillet has two l's (English) - filet has one, (French & US)and therefore are pronounced differently. Herbs - pronounced by Americans without the "H" - as if it were French, but the french word is spelled differently, herbes. I'm a Brit - but I pronounce Van Gogh as Van Gok. Not sure why - perhaps the Dutch say it similarly. The Brits knowledge of French is comparable to the American knowledge of Spanish - you don't realize how much it is intermixed into everyday speech here. Taco's, Tortillas, Guacamole, Jalapeños for instance (although I've heard those pronounced quite differently in the UK too!). Mascara pronounced as Mascare-a in the US. Trouble is, I've lived here so long I forget which is correct - so glad to be able to watch all the Brit TV shows to keep up with the language!
French wasn't spoken for 300 hundred years in England. Norman French was and there is a difference. The Normans spoke a rural dialect of French with considerable Germanic influences, usually called Anglo-Norman or Norman French, which was quite different from the standard French of Paris of the period. Anglo-Norman French became the language of the kings and nobility of England for more than 300 years (Henry IV, who came to the English throne in 1399, was the first monarch since before the Conquest to have English as his mother tongue). While Anglo-Norman was the verbal language of the court, administration and culture, though, Latin was mostly used for written language, especially by the Church and in official records. The vast majority of the population, surf, peasants, and yeoman spoke Anglo Saxon.
The IPA for "tune" is /tjuːn/, /tʃuːn/; nuff said! 😂 With the exception of words like "Michelle" and "machine", US so-called "English" speakers (😜) say most French-derived words like "niche", with a CH in them, incorrectly. So, "chassis", "chattel", "penchant". I find it really interesting how the pronunciations have diverged. p.s. although I don't use it myself, there's absolutely nothing wrong with "aks"; in fact, it predates "ask"!
how about the word cache, officially it's pronounced kash an acceptable alternative is kaish, I've noticed especially in American cop shows and similar it getting pronounced kash-ay, well a cachet which is pronounced that way is a completely different item cache is a hidden store of items a cachet is a seal appended to a document
Fun fact, back in the day, as you said, the Nobility spoke French and the Peasants spoke (Anglo-Saxon) English, so the workers saw the animals (Sheep, Ox, Deer) while the Nobility saw the Meat (Mutton, Beef, Venison)
A lot of British people pronounce 'privacy' the American way. It's one of my pet peeves. Also, I've recently noticed when watching American films that they pronounce 'inquiries' with a short 'i' in the middle, whereas we use the long 'i' as in 'fire'.
As a Canadian I am feeling a bit schizophrenic, we pronounce some the brit way and some the US way. Zed sometimes zee, some spellings are different, cheque, not check, savour, flavour,favour, saviour, behaviour As Churchill said America and Britain two countries separated by a common language One more, Yogurt, pronounced yaw gert in Britain. TTFN
In Britain there are three "o" sounds - the short "o" of "gone"/"pot", the longer "aw" of "law"/"lore", and the diphthongal "oh" of "go"/"dough". "Yogurt" has the short o of "gone". So if writing pseudo-phonetically we wouldn't write it as "yaw-", because that would imply a different vowel.
Nice segway into the ad 😁 The one that gets me is the pronunciation of 'Adolf'. American: 'Ay-dolf' (as in Hay). EVERYONE ELSE: 'Add-olf' (as in Mad) Why? Just why? Where did that pronunciation come from?
We, in the UK, say produce in two ways depending on whether you are using the word as a noun or the verb, If someone from the UK says "They produce the produce" both produces would be pronounced quite differently. This applies to a whole series of words where one word can be both a noun and a verb - for example: Noun: CON-duct (ˈkɒn.dʌkt) Verb: con-DUCT (kənˈdʌkt) Noun: REC-ord (ˈrek.ɔːd) Verb: re-CORD (rɪˈkɔːd) Noun: PRES-ent (ˈprez.ənt) Verb: pre-SENT (prɪˈzent) Noun: EX-port (ˈek.spɔːt) Verb: ex-PORT (ɪkˈspɔːt) Noun: IM-port (ˈɪm.pɔːt) Verb: im-PORT (ɪmˈpɔːt) Noun: CON-flict (ˈkɒn.flɪkt) Verb: con-FLICT (kənˈflɪkt) Noun: PER-mit (ˈpɜː.mɪt) Verb: per-MIT (pəˈmɪt) Noun: SUB-ject (ˈsʌb.dʒɪkt) Verb: sub-JECT (səbˈdʒekt) Noun: RE-ject (ˈriː.dʒekt) Verb: re-JECT (rɪˈdʒekt) Noun: EX-tract (ˈek.strækt) Verb: ex-TRACT (ɪkˈstrækt) Noun: PRO-gress (ˈprəʊ.ɡres) Verb: pro-GRESS (prəˈɡres) Noun: OB-ject (ˈɒb.dʒɪkt) Verb: ob-JECT (əbˈdʒekt) Noun: SUR-vey (ˈsɜː.veɪ) Verb: sur-VEY (səˈveɪ)
Have you noticed how British TV presenters have started saying "Byzantine" the American way even when the programme is for British TV? It must be because they're expecting to export the show to the US at some time in the future.
You forgot Cecil. Ralph, the common variant form in English, which takes either of the given pronunciations. Rafe, variant form which is less common; this spelling is always pronounced /reɪf/ Raif, a very rare variant. Ralf, the traditional variant form in Dutch, German, Swedish, and Polish. Ralph Vaughan Williams.
April is from 'apiere' - to open. Apricot originally came either from Arabic ' al-baquq' [plum] or as a contraction of Latin persica praecocia [early peach]. Persica for peach is from Persia [Iran] which is where they originated]. Apricots originally came from Armenia. The only connection between Apricots and April is that the apricot tree produces its pink blossom in that month.
In USA 'solder is pronounced 'Sodder' in UK it's pronounced "SoLder' (electronics) In USA hunter is ponounced 'Hunner" (as in "hunner biden" ) in UK it's pronounced "hunTer'
5:59 it might be you accent but you said bouy pretty unsualy. Most people just say boy...its essentially short for buoyancy or buoyant. You guys say those pretty similar to us so I don't know how's ended up with boueee
The UK pronunciation is closer to the Dutch, but, in the Dutch, you don't hear the "g" in Gogh - it's more of a "h" sound, like "Van Hoh". You need a bit of phlegm in your throat to pronounce it properly. :D
Fillet - here in the US I've heard people, and even the same person, say fill-ay when taking about cooking and fill-it when talking about streamlining aircraft and rockets both real and model.
A couple of words that don't generally crop up in conversation that I've picked up from science youtube channels are centrifugal and centripetal. Us Brits tend to stress the 3rd syllable on those.
@@GenialHarryGrout I often say that there is a controv-ersy on how to say cont-roversy. I also say is the pope a Coptic (which is technically right as the proper name for the Roman g=catholic leader is not pope.
The ones that stand out to me are "thorough" and words like "mirror" "squirrel" "horror". We say "thurrah" while Americans say "thurrow" and we say "mirrer" and "squirral" and "horrer". I used to watch a daytime programme about preparing your house for selling with an American woman presenter and a young man sidekick and he loved to tease her when there was mirror in the vicinity, goading her to say the word. The other thing I notice is the Americans seem to all say "different than" while in the UK it's now usually "different from".
I am an expat myselt and I love expat UA-cam channrels about language and/or culture. THANK YOU for not masking your natural beauty with chemical colors.
Hey, nobody is right & nobody is wrong since nothing in written English denotes "do this with this vowel"; there is no "Absolute Correct" there is only "We do it this way here because they said so".
Garage is another word I've heard different. UK = GAH-RIDGE USA = GA-RAWRGE Moustache is another one too I think that is different. UK = MUS-STARSH USA = MUSS-STASH And of course yeah, Any word with an A in the middle such as Brass, Grass, Glass, Water, etc, The USA uses an AH sound, (BR-AH-SS, GL-AH-SS. W-AH-DER) wheareas in the UK, its more an AR sound (BR-AR-SE, GL-AR-SE, WAR-TER, or depending where you live...WAR-ER without the T XD)
Listening to a podcast and I thought the US hosts were saying writers. They were saying riders. Confuses me each time they say it as my brain has to manually swap it back to riders.
Wrong, you can! On a flat surface, such as the sea or a desert, the horizon is thirty miles away. The Channel is only 21 miles wide at that point. From the beaches in that area on a clear day the cliffs near Calais are clearly visible. You can just about make out Calais.
Not just "military" having 3 syllable in US and 2 in UK, many words do this, for example chocolate(choclat) and strawberry (strawbree) are the same. You also missed the most famous one the internet is going crazy about - US says "water", UK say "wa er". Finally English tends to pronounce TH as F, such as US I think it's thirty three, UK I fink it's firty free. PS the me/my thing. US my car is parked outside, UK me car is parked outside.
If it ain’t baroque, don’t fix it…
Shame he only had 2 terms 🙂
You mentioned Herbs v. erbs, and Bazzil v. Bayzil, but overlooked orry-GAR-no v. o-REGG-a-no.
Oregano is another example where our american cousins are being influenced by Spanish from whom they no doubt learned about the herb. In Spanish its spelt orégano, the accent highlights that you stress the 'Re' sound. However even then it is Spanglish because they pronounce the last letter as the English 'o' (like owe) instead of the spanish 'o' (like o in Orange)
@@karatepielover well as the US had large french ans Spanish populations in early days it is hardly surprising.
Thanks!
Thank you so much, this is really really kind of you and I appreciate it so much. I hope you continue to enjoy the channel. :)
UK: Mir‒ror
US: Meeeeeeeer
😄
I swear some Americans go even further and just pronounce it "mrrrrrrrrr"!
Also UK: mirah
Not necessarily (or even usually)
Mrrrrr
Squirrel (UK) squurrl (US).
I think that a person name, a brand, a city, a name specific to one thing or person should be learnd in the original language. Like Van Gogh I try, with difficulties, to pronunce it in Dutch. It would broaden people's minds.
Congratulations 🎊 on 24K subscribers, Kalyn. I'm happy for you! 👏
I always find language observations like this interesting. I think you'll find that most Brits are essentially "bilingual" when it comes to US English and UK English - we consume SO much US media and culture. Most of us would be unlikely to use these pronunciations but they're also second nature when hearing them.
I notice a lot of Brits are using the US pronunciation for route, wifi router, woodwork router etc. Some are also adopting the American "different than", which infuriates me.
@@Phiyedough Interesting - I would make a couple of distinctions with these words - I think some Brits do use the US pronunciation for wifi router. But I think the woodworking tool has always been a "row-ter". I'm not a fan of "different than".
Speak for yourself, I try to avoid any Americanism.
@@Phiyedough A woodwork router is correctly pronounced the 'American' way, from the verb 'to rout', rather than the verb 'to route'
When my daughter was small, she told me she’d hurt her pinkie. I had to explain that we don’t have pinkies, we have little fingers 😀
Niche is also a French word.
Van Gogh was a Dutch painter so we Dutchies speak this in another different way. As mentioned before listen to the Dutch pronounciation of van Gogh.
UK Lever rhymes with Fever
US Lever rhymes with Never
I believe it's Leverage is the USA & UK. (? For ever ?)
As a Dutch person depending on the word I use the English and American pronunciations and probably 50/50. For all original French words I am more inclined to use a more French pronunciation (so more American but less stressed as Americans do), probably because I also learned French.
But I have to correct you on the Van Gogh. For that one you should use the Dutch pronunciation since he is from the Netherlands.
Yes, 'Van Gogh' was... wrong both times, I'd say; ask someone from Scotland next time, because I suspect it is less hard for them X-D
Yes, even though I'm not Dutch it really bugs me when Americans pronounce the painter's name as 'Van Go'. The British pronunciation of 'Van Gock' is probably closer, but when I've heard Dutch people pronounce the painter's name it is much more guttural.
Probably beyond the ability of english speakers to say it the Dutch way - the Dutch G is a challenge!
@@tonyobrien6282Scots are brits and have no problem with the Dutch 'ogh'. Similar to och in Scottish pronunciation of loch.
@@stevebarlow3154 Probably closer? It's a lot closer.
I had no idea that Americans pronounced "solder" differently to us. I only recently found this out when I heard an American on UA-cam say something like "I used a sudder-ing iron". In the UK we pronounce the "L" and say _sole-der-ring_ iron (the first syllable rhymes with coal).
Sounds more like soddering...
Its about time they "axed" themselves why the mispronounce it so badly!
i noticed that on Mythbusters..... 'soddering 'is something priests do, until theyre caught.
@@jester5ify Precisely, its an error 150 years ago thats been propagated. Sodder (as they say and spell it) is a phrase the British reserve for interfering mother-in-laws.
Big Clive pronounces it "sodder".
Being a Brit, the one word that baffles me, and has done since hearing it used about 15 plus years ago in the US is BUOY ! As in, a float anchored in a river, sea or similar waterway. I was with some Americans, looking out to sea at dolphins, when one (paraphrasing), shouted "just there by the BOO-EE..." - I said "where, what?" (quite confused). Now I hear it all the time on US TV shows (including Star Trek, when they left a BOO-EE marker in space). How did they ever pronounce it that way? It comes from the word 'buoyancy ' and means a flotation device. Buoyant = to float. I recall the conversation I had, with NOT one of the Yanks being able to explain why they called it a BOO-EE and not a BOY !!! 😂😂😂
now get them to say 'buoyancy'...🧐
I have, in a magazine that I edit, a whole essay on 'Leftenant' v 'Lootenant'. BOTH were in use in England in the 17th Century and it simply depended on what part of England that you came from.
Scherdule - shed-ule vs sked-ule. Although due to the influence of US TV skedule is becoming more prevalent in the UK.
Not with me. I hate mistakes.
I recall reading a book where a very British RAF officer criticised an American for saying SKEDULE.
"Where did you learn to speak like that?" the officer said.
"I'm sorry, sir, I must have learned at SHOOL", the American said..
I'm English and was always told that it's skedule, but that it depends what shool you went to.
Skedule just sounds stronger too.
Which sounds tougher?
"I have arrived and I am on skedule"
Or the other?
Send in the shopper, we're getting decimated out here!
There's the American pronunciation of lieutenant. There's the usual British pronunciation of lieutenant (as used in the British army). And then there is the pronunciation used within the Royal Navy: "le-tenant' veering towards 'l-tenant'....
good that you know that acts of parliament were written in Norman French for centuries. not many british know that. and then there is Clique which we pronounce cleek and americans say click. the produce one is interesting, because brits often say it differently due to context: produce said when talking about farm vegetables is said differently when talking about how to produce a document (that is take it to a police station for example) or produce a product in a factory.
There's an old guest book from when Van Gogh stayed in London, and he signed his name "Van Goff", because that was the closest the locals could get to saying it. In The Netherlands it's actually pronounced more like "Vaan (with a very clipped N) Hohh", so I suppose we're both wrong.
'address (stress on the first syllable) is the noun (=the place where you live). a'ddress (stress on the second syllable) is the verb (= direct your speech to ...)
Excellent talk, Kaylin. Hows about WATER?
Would've loved to hear Kalyn try to say "water" in a British accent 😆
You mean it's not pronounced WODDER?
Or the Cockney global stop for T : the wa'er in Major'a don't taste like what it ough'a. This was part of a famous beer advert in the UK, Google "the water in Majorca".
In your vid on house front doors, you pronounce foyer like coyer (= more coy) whereas we mostly Frenchify it a bit and say foyay. Love the informal presentation style, by the way.
Ive always boggled at how many syllables the Americans put into the word 'Vehicle' when in Britain it's two syllables.
In English (or as you would say, British English) Tune does rhyme with Dune, but it doesn't quite rhyme with Moon. Also, we don't say Prodoos, we say Produce (like it's spelt), though the emphasis shifts depending on whether it's being used as a noun or a verb..
The point here is that in both countries, the letter U on its own is pronounced as "yu", but when it appears in a word the Americans seem to prefer to pronounce it as 'oo' for some reason.
I'm originally from the US. I came to the UK when I was 19. I'm 64 now. I'd say most of the time I pronounce my words the British way but not all of them.
this pronunciation of basil is faulty- Basil Fawlty in fact. A niche comment! Pronounce this as you will
Compost is different either side of the Atlantic, the American com-poast (rhymes with toast), really grates.
Americans pronounce it to thyme with post.
In English, we pronounce it to rhyme with the French compôte.
Well done for not getting completely confused!
Brits in the midlands and north of England sometimes say 'advertisement' the same way as Americans. Another one is vase: 'vaarse' in the UK and 'vayze' in the US. It's really interesting how divergent these pronunciations have become.
Varz. And if you quibble, how do you pronounce 'nose.'
Some words are pronounced as they are in theUS because of the influence of Noah Webster. The US Army officially pronounced lieutenant the British way till the 1890s, holding out a long time. The word came from Burgundian French about 1300 and was pronounced 'leev-ten-on', with the u as a consonant v.
There are a few "Frenchified" parts of American english like pants being pantalons, the pronounciation of z coming French (which is like zay) while in the UK it comes from Germanic zett and the more French pronunciation of garage. Though with so many words Americans just use the wrong vowel sounds like a long I in Iran and the way you said Americans say buoy hurt my soul.
Not to mention the neighbouring country Eyerack.
@@geoff1201 And Mos-COW!
How often do you hear the word 'advertisement' [13 letters] in full? It is usually abbreviated to 'ad' [2 letters] although sometimes you may hear 'advert' [6 letters]. It must be the most abbreviated word in English.
Well done!!! I started questioning myself after a few. Ha
It's always amused me that there's a vehicle hire company in Hertfordshire called Vincent Van Hire.
Not sure if it was an accident or they just decided to go for it.
If I ever need a van, I'm going to them 🙂
Both pronunciations of adult, apricot, advertisement (also often with the accent on the first syllable), address, buoy and route are used in the US. Premiere may also be "pree-MEER." David Attenborough uses the "American" pronunciation of "zebra," so I suspect that's an alternative even in England.
In British English we often have more than one pronunciation, depending on things like social background and region. I, for example pronounce "zebra" as /ˈziːbrə/, and while I do pronounce "privacy" as /ˈprɪvəsi/, I think many British might say /ˈpraɪvesi/. With both these words, both forms are given in Longman's (British) Dictionary:
ze‧bra - /ˈziːbrə, ˈze- $ ˈziːbrə/
priv‧a‧cy - /ˈprɪvəsi, ˈpraɪ- $ ˈpraɪ-/
Incidentally, many people in Scotland might say "advertisement" the same way as Americans.
The one I find most interesting is the short "o", as in the British pronunciation of "baroque, Kosovo", which in American English seems to be more of a long "o".
another great video .
So close - we actually pronounce it 'prod-juice'. interestingly though we accent the 1st syllable when it's used as a noun, and the 2nd syllable when it's a verb. Go figure.
We do that with loads of words: Convict, Protest, Project etc. They're nouns if 1st syllable is stressed and verbs if 2nd syllable is stressed.
For example: He went on a PROtest march to proTEST against the Government. I can proJECT that the PROJect will be completed on time. The CONvict said that the jury's decision to conVICT him was unfair.
Un / une, deux, trois, quatre, cinq, six, sept, huit neuf dix... (?) 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10.
Six is _not_ pronounced as 6 (?!)
Dix is like six .
That's _my_ French basically!!
Apart from 'c'est la vie',
(& c'est la guiere -?) _and_ the name of a song by 'Lady Marmalade':
"Voulez vous couchez avec moi, ce soir" (?) and it's just a song title - I am definitely _not_ propositioning you, or anyone, (!!) and I have probably misspelt it anyway (?!) if so,
pardonez moi, s'il vous plait?🤔
...😏🇲🇫🤫🏴❤️🇬🇧🤭🖖
@@brigidsingleton1596, you wrote everything correctly in French, but you made a mistake right at the end: it's _s'il vous plait_
@@CarloCocciolo
Firstly, I am surprised I managed to spell anything correctly in French, since I have not studied the language since I was 11 years old, that's nearly _60_ years ago now, and what I _do_ know of it - apart from just one school year of it, when I came _First_ in French exam, at the end of that last Term - but then was dropped from 'A Group', and placed into 'B Group', because I have dyscalculia and couldn't cope in Maths... I have merely picked up through life! As for the one misspelling, thank-you so much for taking the time to offer the edit. I appreciate your having bothered to help me.
😏🏴❤️🇬🇧🙂🖖
@@brigidsingleton1596 I was taught to pronounce "six" and "dix" as "seece" and "deece".
Another fascinating video.i love the American side of you.. just love listening to you
Oh isn’t it lovely though! I love love love different pronunciations with the same word. It’s what makes it endlessly fascinating to chat with American people in my humble opinion. Long may there be these twee differences that help us all stay friends 🤗
Having grown up in the US state of Georgia I am aware that Houston County, Georgia, is pronounced differently from Houston, Texas.
And that brings up my big pet peeve with this English language, nothing in its common written form tells you which of the many options to use when pronouncing the vowels, it is all "because they said so".
In the US they say wader in the UK they water!
Parmesan (UK) vs Parmezhon (US). Someone please explain that!
A couple more for you. Schedule in the UK is pronounced like “shed-yule”. Lever and leverage. In the US they tend to use “leverage” as a verb, whereas in the UK it’s a noun. Like, “We can use the low price as leverage just to get this client to sign”, whereas in the US you tend to say, “We can leverage the low price…”.
I’ve also noticed that in the US some syntax is incorrect (not that anything in grammar is correct anymore with our evolving language). When a film is released to the cinema Americans make the verb “to release” describe the film/movie as the subject and not the object. Like “The movie releases to theaters Friday”. This syntax is very Latin but without the reflection on the verb. Here’s that sentence in Catalan: “La pel·lícula s'estrena divendres”.
Aluminium
Gotta give you props for that segue into the sponsor. (For the record "segue" is from Italian, so that's one of the rare non-french loanwords in English).
Not to mention all the germanic and norse words. Obviously there can be no celtic words, because...
@@etherealbolweevil6268 Are you sure, buddy? The Welsh for a friend, a mate, is butty.
@@BillDavies-ej6ye Exactamundo - welsh. Via American back into UK English. Or merely homonyms. Entries linking to buddy. booty (n.) mid-15c., bottyne "plunder taken from an enemy in war," from Old French butin "booty" (14c.), from a Germanic source akin to Middle Low German bute "exchange."
1:35 No! No! No! There is no stress syllable in French (except as part of sentences). Equal emphasis per syllable. British pronunciation is much closer as emphasis is normally mild, and earlier in a word.
100% incorrect. French absolutely unambiguously strongly stresses the final syllable of the word. British English is strongly iambic - there is always a huge difference between a stressed and unstressed syllable -- English in general uses stress more heavily than most languages -- we have primary and secondary stress patterns that are really hard for second language learners to grasp.
Japanese is syllabic. French and English and American are metric.
@@otsoko66 No. French has no stress syllables for the words. Stressed syllables are purely in the context of the entire phrase. You probably confuse with long and short syllables. But even if that's the case, the "French absolutely unambiguously strongly stresses the final syllable of the word." is simply wrong.
@@lanzji1345 It's Italian where the final syllable is stressed isn't it?
@@jpj084 I'm not sure - I understand Italian, well, more or less, but I don't encounter it often enough to really be able to tell.
I do live in France however, so, even though french isn't my first language, I can tell.
It's been a huge debate between (Northern) Germans and Swiss/Southern Germans. Germans tend to stress the last, Swiss the first syllable of french words. And both say "Ours is the right way, just listen!" But actually, both just hear their usual stress patterns - which are different between northern and southern German dialects - because French has none 😁
I once saw on a British tv show call the band Zed Zed Top 🤣
Well done for that UK/US list👏. I would have ballsed it up for defo 😀. Depot comes to mind UK: Depp-o/US: Deepo. And of course...Varse: UK: vars like mars/ US: vase like face. Thanks GGL!
Hey Kaylin, the Dutch pronunciation of Van Gogh is “ Van Ghurk with soft G making it sound like Hurk. ( I think after asking a Dutch friend )
I agree with the US on Yogurt (I'm Irish), Lieutenant, Advertisement, Military, Tune (but I say tchune), Privacy, Lever (but I say leever)
Americans tend to use the Aw instead of Ah sound for A's. I've seen Americans not knowing how to pronounce ABBA, they say OBBA. Americans (playing Scribblio) struggling to spell Kebab because you pronounce it Kebob.
She pronounced Premier wrong for the US, you say Pre-meer.
"Produce" we says fruit and veg or to produce something we say projuice
Jay Leno once got annoyed and shouted at Jamie Oliver (I think) because he said pasta instead of posta.
I am an American. My family says "Āpricot" (with a long a). We know other people who say it that way, too. It may vary regionally within the U.S.
I noticed that when Americans say 'produce' the stress the 'O' when in British English we don't but for the word 'process' we stress the 'O' in British English but in American English they don't. So sometimes it seems arbitrary with no rules.
There is no such thing as British English. It is just English because it is the correct language and is NOT a variation.
@@valeriedavidson2785 And don't forget, those other inhabitants of the British Isles also have their own languages. If anything, it's English English. And to keep it simple, just don't mention dialects!
If you tap on to pronunciation on your phone it will say the correct way of pronouncing an English word. There is a correct and an incorrect way with pronunciation. To say "Anything goes" is ridiculous.
(We all know that Americans are incorrect).
@@BillDavies-ej6ye No such thing as English English. It is just ENGLISH.
Dialects are an incorrect way of speaking.
@@valeriedavidson2785 Valerie, there are different forms of English, whether you like it or not. I'm referring to the English who are brought up in England. I would say native-born English, but North Americans can claim that, too. The Celtic communities of Britain have their variants, and by some accounts we British have about 40 different accents. What form would you say is the correct one?
‘Erbs really gets me and another one is is literally. Americans say it in such a tongue-twisted way!
I'm surprised some of the more famous ones didn't make the cut like _laboratory_ and _controversy_ .
I realise that these comparisons can be mildly interesting or even humorous to some but the reality there is still clear understanding of what is being said. This is the only important part.
The whole zed vs zee fascinates me, I'd love to know where it originated
I've heard 'adult' pronounced both ways, sometimes depending on whether the word is being used as a noun or an adjective.
The same with 'address,' although in this case, whether a noun or a verb.
Data and via are ones that immediately come to mind
One that surprised me , when i heard an Amercan audiobook narrator, was 'shone'. In the uk, the sun 'shone' rhymes with 'gone'. In the US, it rhymes with 'stone'. Now that I've come across the difference, I seem to hear it a lot more, but it still throws me.
Don’t know what it is about this video but I’ve seen it stitched a couple of times on you tube in the last few days. Hopefully this will encourage more people to view your channel.
Fillet has two l's (English) - filet has one, (French & US)and therefore are pronounced differently. Herbs - pronounced by Americans without the "H" - as if it were French, but the french word is spelled differently, herbes. I'm a Brit - but I pronounce Van Gogh as Van Gok. Not sure why - perhaps the Dutch say it similarly. The Brits knowledge of French is comparable to the American knowledge of Spanish - you don't realize how much it is intermixed into everyday speech here. Taco's, Tortillas, Guacamole, Jalapeños for instance (although I've heard those pronounced quite differently in the UK too!). Mascara pronounced as Mascare-a in the US. Trouble is, I've lived here so long I forget which is correct - so glad to be able to watch all the Brit TV shows to keep up with the language!
Scots pronounce "medicine" as a three syllable word rather than the English two syllable pronunciation.
I’m English and say it with three syllables. I would find it impossible to say it with two :)
@@Zomerset Home counties say it as "medcine"
French wasn't spoken for 300 hundred years in England. Norman French was and there is a difference. The Normans spoke a rural dialect of French with considerable Germanic influences, usually called Anglo-Norman or Norman French, which was quite different from the standard French of Paris of the period. Anglo-Norman French became the language of the kings and nobility of England for more than 300 years (Henry IV, who came to the English throne in 1399, was the first monarch since before the Conquest to have English as his mother tongue). While Anglo-Norman was the verbal language of the court, administration and culture, though, Latin was mostly used for written language, especially by the Church and in official records. The vast majority of the population, surf, peasants, and yeoman spoke Anglo Saxon.
A 70's Radio Two presenter ironically called Dynasty (US Soap) Dysentary to emulate the US pronounciation.
I couldn't tell the difference in the way you were saying "premier".
The IPA for "tune" is /tjuːn/, /tʃuːn/; nuff said! 😂
With the exception of words like "Michelle" and "machine", US so-called "English" speakers (😜) say most French-derived words like "niche", with a CH in them, incorrectly. So, "chassis", "chattel", "penchant". I find it really interesting how the pronunciations have diverged.
p.s. although I don't use it myself, there's absolutely nothing wrong with "aks"; in fact, it predates "ask"!
Loved you having an existential crisis over produce 🤣🤣
how about the word cache, officially it's pronounced kash an acceptable alternative is kaish, I've noticed especially in American cop shows and similar it getting pronounced kash-ay, well a cachet which is pronounced that way is a completely different item cache is a hidden store of items a cachet is a seal appended to a document
Fun fact, back in the day, as you said, the Nobility spoke French and the Peasants spoke (Anglo-Saxon) English, so the workers saw the animals (Sheep, Ox, Deer) while the Nobility saw the Meat (Mutton, Beef, Venison)
I was waiting for clique (cleek in the UK, click in the USA).
A lot of British people pronounce 'privacy' the American way. It's one of my pet peeves. Also, I've recently noticed when watching American films that they pronounce 'inquiries' with a short 'i' in the middle, whereas we use the long 'i' as in 'fire'.
As a Canadian I am feeling a bit schizophrenic, we pronounce some the brit way and some the US way. Zed sometimes zee, some spellings are different, cheque, not check, savour, flavour,favour, saviour, behaviour
As Churchill said America and Britain two countries separated by a common language
One more, Yogurt, pronounced yaw gert in Britain.
TTFN
In Britain there are three "o" sounds - the short "o" of "gone"/"pot", the longer "aw" of "law"/"lore", and the diphthongal "oh" of "go"/"dough".
"Yogurt" has the short o of "gone". So if writing pseudo-phonetically we wouldn't write it as "yaw-", because that would imply a different vowel.
Nice segway into the ad 😁 The one that gets me is the pronunciation of 'Adolf'. American: 'Ay-dolf' (as in Hay). EVERYONE ELSE: 'Add-olf' (as in Mad) Why? Just why? Where did that pronunciation come from?
Tune does rhyme with dune... But not with moon
We, in the UK, say produce in two ways depending on whether you are using the word as a noun or the verb, If someone from the UK says "They produce the produce" both produces would be pronounced quite differently. This applies to a whole series of words where one word can be both a noun and a verb - for example:
Noun: CON-duct (ˈkɒn.dʌkt) Verb: con-DUCT (kənˈdʌkt)
Noun: REC-ord (ˈrek.ɔːd) Verb: re-CORD (rɪˈkɔːd)
Noun: PRES-ent (ˈprez.ənt) Verb: pre-SENT (prɪˈzent)
Noun: EX-port (ˈek.spɔːt) Verb: ex-PORT (ɪkˈspɔːt)
Noun: IM-port (ˈɪm.pɔːt) Verb: im-PORT (ɪmˈpɔːt)
Noun: CON-flict (ˈkɒn.flɪkt) Verb: con-FLICT (kənˈflɪkt)
Noun: PER-mit (ˈpɜː.mɪt) Verb: per-MIT (pəˈmɪt)
Noun: SUB-ject (ˈsʌb.dʒɪkt) Verb: sub-JECT (səbˈdʒekt)
Noun: RE-ject (ˈriː.dʒekt) Verb: re-JECT (rɪˈdʒekt)
Noun: EX-tract (ˈek.strækt) Verb: ex-TRACT (ɪkˈstrækt)
Noun: PRO-gress (ˈprəʊ.ɡres) Verb: pro-GRESS (prəˈɡres)
Noun: OB-ject (ˈɒb.dʒɪkt) Verb: ob-JECT (əbˈdʒekt)
Noun: SUR-vey (ˈsɜː.veɪ) Verb: sur-VEY (səˈveɪ)
Have you noticed how British TV presenters have started saying "Byzantine" the American way even when the programme is for British TV? It must be because they're expecting to export the show to the US at some time in the future.
You forgot Cecil.
Ralph, the common variant form in English, which takes either of the given pronunciations. Rafe, variant form which is less common; this spelling is always pronounced /reɪf/ Raif, a very rare variant. Ralf, the traditional variant form in Dutch, German, Swedish, and Polish.
Ralph Vaughan Williams.
How do Americans say April, because apricot and April have similar etymology from Latin
April is from 'apiere' - to open. Apricot originally came either from Arabic ' al-baquq' [plum] or as a contraction of Latin persica praecocia [early peach]. Persica for peach is from Persia [Iran] which is where they originated]. Apricots originally came from Armenia. The only connection between Apricots and April is that the apricot tree produces its pink blossom in that month.
In USA 'solder is pronounced 'Sodder' in UK it's pronounced "SoLder' (electronics)
In USA hunter is ponounced 'Hunner" (as in "hunner biden" ) in UK it's pronounced "hunTer'
5:59 it might be you accent but you said bouy pretty unsualy. Most people just say boy...its essentially short for buoyancy or buoyant. You guys say those pretty similar to us so I don't know how's ended up with boueee
Van Gogh is only pronounced the right way in his and my homeland The Netherlands. Everywhere else it’s totally unrecognizable. 😊
The UK pronunciation is closer to the Dutch, but, in the Dutch, you don't hear the "g" in Gogh - it's more of a "h" sound, like "Van Hoh". You need a bit of phlegm in your throat to pronounce it properly. :D
@@DaddyStoatPhlegmish
Depends where in the uk you live
I loved the video btw
Fillet - here in the US I've heard people, and even the same person, say fill-ay when taking about cooking and fill-it when talking about streamlining aircraft and rockets both real and model.
Go to 4:50 for the start of the video (yes the first half is a mixture of waffle and a lengthy ad!)
We don't already pronounce adult that way though. The noun is pronounced differently.
A couple of words that don't generally crop up in conversation that I've picked up from science youtube channels are centrifugal and centripetal. Us Brits tend to stress the 3rd syllable on those.
sentient = senshent
Controversy in the UK, Contra-Versy in the US
That one is a bit controversial 😁
I'll get my coat
@@GenialHarryGrout I often say that there is a controv-ersy on how to say cont-roversy. I also say is the pope a Coptic (which is technically right as the proper name for the Roman g=catholic leader is not pope.
Hi Kalyn, all I have to say is, if it ain't baroque, don't fix it!
The ones that stand out to me are "thorough" and words like "mirror" "squirrel" "horror". We say "thurrah" while Americans say "thurrow" and we say "mirrer" and "squirral" and "horrer".
I used to watch a daytime programme about preparing your house for selling with an American woman presenter and a young man sidekick and he loved to tease her when there was mirror in the vicinity, goading her to say the word.
The other thing I notice is the Americans seem to all say "different than" while in the UK it's now usually "different from".
I am an expat myselt and I love expat UA-cam channrels about language and/or culture.
THANK YOU for not masking your natural beauty with chemical colors.
Hey, nobody is right & nobody is wrong since nothing in written English denotes "do this with this vowel"; there is no "Absolute Correct" there is only "We do it this way here because they said so".
Garage is another word I've heard different.
UK = GAH-RIDGE
USA = GA-RAWRGE
Moustache is another one too I think that is different.
UK = MUS-STARSH
USA = MUSS-STASH
And of course yeah, Any word with an A in the middle such as Brass, Grass, Glass, Water, etc, The USA uses an AH sound, (BR-AH-SS, GL-AH-SS. W-AH-DER) wheareas in the UK, its more an AR sound (BR-AR-SE, GL-AR-SE, WAR-TER, or depending where you live...WAR-ER without the T XD)
Nigel Farage's Garage.😅
Listening to a podcast and I thought the US hosts were saying writers. They were saying riders. Confuses me each time they say it as my brain has to manually swap it back to riders.
I think the difference between most US and UK pronunciation is the difference between using a hard sound for the vowel (US) and a soft sound (UK)
Strangely, in Australia, lieutenant is pronounced lef-tenant in the army and loo-tenant in the navy 😕
Not quite the same thing... Tap water comes out of a faucet?
2:23 You cannot see France from Dover, which is at sea level. You can only see France from up on the White Cliffs.
Wrong, you can! On a flat surface, such as the sea or a desert, the horizon is thirty miles away. The Channel is only 21 miles wide at that point. From the beaches in that area on a clear day the cliffs near Calais are clearly visible. You can just about make out Calais.
Dee-fence in the US versus deaf-ence in the UK and Australia. Basalt is also pronounced differently.
You should have applied the toon vs tune rule for 'produce'.. US say prod-oos. UK say prod-you-s.
Not just "military" having 3 syllable in US and 2 in UK, many words do this, for example chocolate(choclat) and strawberry (strawbree) are the same. You also missed the most famous one the internet is going crazy about - US says "water", UK say "wa er". Finally English tends to pronounce TH as F, such as US I think it's thirty three, UK I fink it's firty free. PS the me/my thing. US my car is parked outside, UK me car is parked outside.
"Firty free" is more a southern pronunciation, it's not pronounced like that in northern England
As the French say, "Vive la difference!" As long as we can understand each other, it doesn't really matter.