If I'm at work, and there's no kettle or pot (or even stove!) I'm going to use the microwave and "nuke" my water for my tea. Or use the coffee maker and make hot water that way. Just so subconscious
nar i think she putting it on and speaks with an essex acsent when no ones around , she probs thinks in it too , . 🤣🤣🤣🤣 jokes if ya dint see it calm down calm down 🤣🤣🤣🤣
It’s actually comical to me how they are talking about how different the UK is place to place but have one American on who seemingly incorporates “all Americans”
The same goes for Canadians. Every province has a distinct accent, with many regional accents. No one would ever think a Nova Scotian and an Albertan sounded similar. Newfoundlanders sometimes sound more Irish than the Irish do. Northern Ontario is distinct from southern Ontario, etc. I live in NS and our Acadian communities have very distinct community accents…….
I was thinking the same. Even a smaller state like Arkansas there are a bunch of different accents depending on the area you are in. Multiply that times 50 states.
the uk is comprised of four countries so you cant get one british person to sit there and represent four places with different cultures, histories and languages ALSO scottish, welsh ect people don't usually refer to themselves as british however regardless of the state they live in a person in the US would refer to themselves as american
@@paulamcdonald1393 Agree, I'm American New England and there is nothing this 'american' does/says that I can relate too haha. And speaking of Canada the Nova Scotian would be pretty similar to we New Englanders :) (tho they are New Scotland haha)
4:54 I live in London and it doesn't really rain much at all. Before it started raining 1-3 days ago it didn't rain at all for about a month and most of the grass is completely dried out and yellow. Last year we had a severe drought and a lot of the grass was completely brown and dead because there was no rain for about 2 months.
Last time I was in London (a few week before the Olympics), it was not raining at all. It was bloody hot (I was on the crew that sailed the Wylde Swan to Britain and up the Thames, the ship would do tours on the Thames during the Olympics, so did many other sailing ships)
My experience is that there are a lot of high quality cheeses in the USA but they usually cost more. In fact most supermarkets have two different sections where they sell cheese. The higher end cheese is in the deli. Actually, you can also buy cheeses, milk and other dairy products directly from creameries which I do sometimes. The cheese in my refrigerator right now is made of goat’s milk. From watching a few British reaction channels I got the impression goat’s milk cheese isn’t that popular in the UK because they acted like it was odd when it was an ingredient in their food at an American restaurant. I don’t eat dairy as much as I used for health and digestive reasons. I switched to almond milk.
I have never been to the UK. But the phrase "I'll put on the kettle" means a lot to me. Perhaps it is all the Doctor Who, British crime procedurals, and Sherlock I have consumed.
good for her. very few us had to grow up with the abomination that is government cheese. and government cheese is not the same as American processed cheese.
I just looked it up & apparently the term "government cheese" stopped being used in the '90s. The cheese still existed, but it was no longer called "government cheese." So, it makes sense for people born in the late '80s & beyond not to be familiar with the term.
@@Ivan-fm4ehApparently it was called "government cheese" because it was owned completely by the government. It still exists in cold storage, but is now owned by private companies. It seems to vary between companies. I'm learning this right now with you, just to clarify lol. I had no idea.
@@101steel4 bud this is a South Korean channel. Contrary to what you apparently think not everybody who isn't from the UK is American, there's more than 2 countries in the world 🤦♂️
@@figs449 England is the main/capital region of the UK. Also as you can see from the video itself, Welsh and Scottish people like pretending they're not British while English people usually identify as British above all else. So relax.
Also, the processed cheese product you see on low end burgers in America is usually Kraft Singles. It’s made that way because it’s supposed to melt perfectly onto a burger patty when grilling outdoors during the summertime.
processed [ˈprəʊsɛst理済み·加工を施した·加工[かこう]した] | North or Latin America[n][s]? | be supposed to [其積りで·はず[ᕽ筈·ᕽ弭·ᕽ彇]] | low-end [🅐ローエンドの·低価格仕様の] | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!
The Welsh dude talking about different accents coming out? Yeah, that happens to me as an American; different dialects and accents I grew up speaking will come out at different times. I normally speak with an American broadcast standard accent, but a country accent will come out whenever I get intense about something Southern, and when I'm really upset or annoyed I'll code switch into Black American English, which can be really jarring because I'm whiter than sour cream.
My former coworker is from the NOLA West Bank. Whenever he gets angry his accent goes full West Bank, and we can’t understand everything he’s saying. 😂😂 I think anger and drunkenness brings out people’s true dialects.
Sophia needs a strong coffee, she's so calm I am not sure whether she's the most relaxed person in the world, or if she's trying to hide severe depression....
She’s from the south lol. I’ve heard a saying where some good ol southern people move like their life is in molasses. Honestly I think speaking slow and deliberately is a good change of pace.
@@MS-vk9ph she did say before she's a tea drinker. but you need more coffee shops in the south apparently... if you don't like Starbucks, you can try Brazilian coffee, or Turkish coffee, or even the highest quality Yemeni coffee.... 😛 ps: I am joking, not making fun of anyone, you do you ❤
Wisconsin here. We have so many great cheeses here. Processed cheese is disgusting. Velveeta, also disgusting. We have various ages of Cheddar, along with Colby, Monterey Jack, Pepper Jack, Mozzarella, Provolone, Swiss, etc. Why eat anything else? I don't even eat any cheese flavored snacks. I make a batch of white popcorn and cut a few slices of cheddar to eat along with it. Sophia is growing on me. It's not very often that you're introduced to someone that is that genuinely sweet.
Wisconsin has great cheese, as does Vermont, California, and Washington State. It's just that the processed cheese food is what is known outside the US, and thus... yeah.
When you say "swiss cheese" what exactly do you mean? Do you mean Emmentaler, Appenzeller, gruyère, Raclette cheese, Tilsiter, Tete de Moine? Many other Swiss cheeses out there but it alwayd confuses me what Americans mean by swiss cheese.
@@laurajane192 Essentially, Emmentaler, and then American Swiss and Baby Swiss (aged 1 month) are variations on that recipe, but lighter and more buttery. One example of a cheesemaker would be Edelweiss Creamery in Monticello, WI. Had a Schweiz burger for lunch today.
@@huskytail We're kind of up to our ass in cheese here. 3.52 billion lbs. (1.6 billion kg) in 2022. 6 million people live here. I don't think we have had a lot of Bulgarian immigrants move here. Havarti, Münster, Gouda, Butterkäse, etc., but I couldn't find anyone making Kash kaval. The European ancestry here is mostly German, Dutch, Scandinavian, Irish, and Polish.
The orange colour of cheese is a product of high fat concentrates in cheese, where the cows eat grasses that have large carotenoid content over traditional cheeses. Dying the cheeses orange was a means of increasing the product to make more money.
2:09 finally someone said that meme can be from the "boddle of wader" too! If glottal stop like "Bo'le" can be a meme then Americanised T sounding D like "Boddle" should also be a meme.
That meme is bizarre. It's very weird to consider 'aitch' a funny 'British' thing - not only is it the standard term in both the UK and the US, it's also a term British folk use less than most! 'Aitch' is basically universal in North America, but only used by about two thirds of British folk, with the rest saying 'haitch'. FWIW, 'aitch' is the older form, and 'haitch' developed out of hyper-correction.
@georgio101 haitch is older actually. But is was dropped after French influence as can be seen by what we know Queen Elizabeth the 1st spoke like. The R sound was still prolific though
literally watched some make tea like this the other day, whilst we where talking about what on earth they where doing, and then another dude said yeah i tried aht the other day and bunt myself, adn tehn the other guy burned himself :D there where literlay 2 kettles in the kitchen and they chose to microwave the water.
Americans have separate coffee makers, so electric kettles are superfluous. A lot of American cheddar has annatto coloring added. Government cheese is Velveeta process cheese.
Historically cheddar made up of milk from free graze cattle was more orange in colour due to betacarotene content of the milk, and that cheddar was more in demand. So some clever ppl discovered food dyes, and now most red cheddars are dyed orange, while the good old yellow one suffers neglect.
The Aitch/Haitch one is more prominent in Australian even most teachers get it wrong which used to drive me nuts and I'd even try to correct it sometimes
He has never heard a person from the USA speak so slowly. Is it some kind of dialect or does the girl "just" speak slowly? What state in the US is she from, or where do they speak so slowly?
She's supposedly from Georgia according to a previous version of this conversation. She definitely doesn't have a Georgia accent which may partially explain.
US Southerner here. There are some people who do speak this slowly, but it's not very common, even in much of the south. Most people I know speak at Lauren or Eoin's speed. To be honest, the slow speech drives me a bit crazy. I've started watching the videos with Sophia in it at x1.25 speed. Nothing against her, but I struggle to stay focused on what's being said at that slow a pace.
@@tomgiorgini9154 ah, gotcha. She does look like she's in high school or fresh out of high school while the others are in college/university or already graduated years ago
@@OhWaker exactly my point, they pick a child ,or someone with little to 0 life experience to represent the american, which today maybe an accurate representation unfortunately
5:42 - Oh dear, someone at World Friends didn't think things through... The irish guy is representing a country that's not part of the UK nor it's considered british.
Technically, both the UK and Ireland make up the British Isles, so (geographically) they’re not wrong. The Irish definitely don’t get called British though - maybe they just couldn’t find a Northern Irish person?
As an American, I can say that we call Kettles a Tea Pot. And it's non-electric because i know that Kettles are electric. Most of them you fill up the water, turn on the flame eye to the stove top: boil the water and then put the tea bags in and let the tea steep, then once it's done steeping you put a cup to a cup and a half of Sugar in the pitcher, you put the tea into the pitcher and stir it so that the sugar disolves. That's how you make tea in America. Of course it's different because that's typically southern sweet tea which usually preferred cold as apposed to most british teas that are more commonly hot.
In the uk we use tea pots as well as kettles, as you say kettle is used to describe the electric version or older versions where u don’t brew the tea in it. Most people in the uk will just have a kettle and some will have both, generally older generations will have tea pots used for when guests are over, but we pour it directly from the pot to cup so it’s hot. At breakfast cafes it’s not uncommon to get a pot of tea if asked for rather than separate tea in just a cup.
@@athos163 That's typically how it works in American Restaurants too, Typically you get a glass of it and then they'll refill the cup as you go if you ask. Typically you pay for the initial glass because refills are usually free in the US. As i understand that's not the case in the UK? Correct me if i'm wrong.
@@AtsumuMiya123 ur correct, if u ask for a cup/glass u just get the one unless the place offers a bottomless drink, these are normally self service dispensers. For tea if u ask for a cup of tea u get the one, however some places u can ask for a pot (generally breakfast cafes not restaurants) and they'll brew the leave the tea pot on ur table for u to use until none is left. If there's a few of you it's generally a cheaper option rather then getting a cup each, or cheaper if u really like tea and can drink a pots worth in one sitting
When Lauren is introduced why does it say GB with a Union Jack next to her? I thought it was about which part of the UK or the British Isles respectively everybody's from. She's from England (it's on her badge ;).
the whole how you make hot water for tea drives me insane. You can boil water on the stove, in an electric kettle or in the microwave, its' still all just boiling water
Kettles in US run by 110 V which takes a lot of time to boil water compared to kettles in UK and other countries which run by 220 V (takes about half the time) That's why kettles are not very convenient for Americans compared to other countries. Plus tea is not very popular drink in US compared to UK.
I am French and I have a diploma in the field of electricity. I never understood what interests have Americans to have such a low electrical tension. Especially since the USA is much larger than France, on the contrary, they should have a higher source voltage due to the voltage drop which comes from the natural electrical resistance of electric cables. With 110 volts, they must need many more neighborhood transformers and tension rectifiers than with a voltage of 220 volts. In addition, an alternative tension of 110 volts is no less dangerous for humans than 220 volts. Finally, the electric cables must heat more since it takes more electrical intensity on a network in 110 than in 220 volts for the same power as P = U × I
@@arnosolo5248 I’m surprised why they still use it also. I don’t have good knowledge about electricity but I heard some yt talking about this topic and it’ll be better to adapt the 220 V
@@arnosolo5248We don't transmit at 120V over power lines my dude... there is a step down transformer outside the house or apartment. American homes have circuits running at two voltages. We run large appliances like washers, driers, and stoves at 220-240V. Small appliances run at 110-120V. Most people don't have electric kettles because tea is less popular in the states than coffee. Most Americans have drip coffee makers in their house. Most Americans have stove top kettles too. I have an electric kettle as I drink a lot of tea and coffee and use it to heat to the proper temperatures.
That argument makes no sense. As an American with ADHD and a working memory of about three seconds, an electric kettle is by far the easiest and safest way for me to boil water. Just click a button, forget about it while you do other things, and then let it alert you when it's done. And even taking longer, it boils water in a very short period of time. If your time budget is such that you can't take an extra 2 to 3 minutes, the problem isn't the kettle or electricity, it's time management.
British is England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, so the title should be American, British, and Irish, or American, English, Welsh, Scottish and Irish
Government cheese was delicious. You'd get it in this huge block. We'd also get this giant can of peanut butter that you'd have to stir back together. Fellow WIC kids, raise your hands if you grew up on cheese and peanut butter sandwiches!
Spaniard from Madrid here. If I have to be frank, I haven't *ever* used a kettle, it's so alien. That reminds me of old Thames' sitcoms like George and Mildred, or Robin's Nest... I barely remember if my parents had one at their place; they had a thick aluminium Italian coffee pot, but I really don't know if you could call that a kettle. Anyway, when I make tea I boiled some water in a pan, and then pour it in a mug with a tea bag. Even that it's too laborious. I'd end up buying a can of lemon iced tea at the supermarket round the corner! 😂
East coast USA - brought up always using a kettle on stove to boil water for tea. Now many people have an electric kettle, but I prefer one on stovetop.
You have to read it in a British accent, oddly enough, then it sounds roughly like a General American 'bottle of water'. Most North American accents lack a distinct short 'o' vowel: so ''bother' and 'father' rhyme, and eg. 'con' sounds like 'Khan'. This sounds very unusual to most other native English speakers- all your short O's sound like our A's. This is how almost all North Americans sound to other native English speakers, with the exception of some North Eastern accents.
@@georgio101Hi I agree we tend to rhyme bother and father. I wasn’t so sure about con and Khan because my first thought was the word falcon which is like khun. but then I thought of other words like convict which is khan. But then there’s words like contempt. So my conclusion is that con is a mixed bag for us Americans as far as pronunciation.
British homies! Why must we use a kettle? Does it make the boiled water taste better than the microwave? I just feel like microwaving my cup of water makes more sense, time wise and dirtying dishes wise 😂
For anyone from Northern Ireland who read the above antagonistic comment, I just wanted you to know that Northern Irish accents are my favorite accents I've heard so far in my life. Listening to a Northern Irish accent has genuinely brightened up some very crappy days in my life. Your accents feel like music to my soul 🥰😇 (Just in case the perfection of your accent was in question for you, heaven forbid.)
1:42 there are different coloured cheeses all over the world. Get over yourselves. 3:20 I hate tea and coffee, but I always have a kettle to make hot chocolate. Even my friends from the states have one
i never understand the bottle of water meme cuz americans pronounce it: Buddlef wodder But English people (south of england) say bottle of water exactly like it's written.
Someone else needs to speak for Americans. Cheddar cheese is not processed. That's American cheese. The stuff they put on goldfish crackers is some kind of powdered cheese. Real cheddar is not processed cheese.
It's crazy how a massive ocean can change so much. Culturally I feel very close to the English girl as a Dutch person, the way she acts. But the American girl, otherworldly. I know people always say English people are very polite and roundabout, but that certainly doesn't go for all of them. Many of them are just as direct as Germans and Dutch people.
I think Brits are closer to Americans, Canadians, Aussies, and Kiwis than to the Dutch. There’s just more shared culture and cuisine, music, language, etc. despite the vast oceans that separate them all. The Netherlands is really foreign by comparison which is probably why many British tourist stick out like a sore thumb over there but in the states you can’t really tell the difference until you hear the accent.
It has to do with where we speak in our mouths. I've practiced a lot of accents and learned that as a generalization, Americans speak further back in their mouths which makes pulling our tongues forward to make a sharp T sound in the middle of a word jarring (it causes me to stumble over my words). It's the same reason that in some English accents there aren't any harsh Rs in the middle of words. Many English accents are spoken a bit more forward in the mouth than most American accents, and since a harsh R sound is spoken further back in the mouth it would likely be jarring for them to pull their tongues back for an R in the middle of a word. Once you learn the positioning of the tongue, movement of the lips, etc. to successfully pull off an accent, suddenly all of these little details start to make sense 🙂
As far as I know the UK uses the metric system instead of old imperial system. I guess every UK citizen must know the metric system to travel and trade around Europe and the World. Canada is very weird because they use a mix of both. 😮
I get the impression that the joke that Americans don't have kettles is something that other cultures simply enjoy believing and repeating, regardless of fact. In reality, probably somewhere between 30-50% of American homes have kettles. There are higher and lower percentages in concentrated areas, because the US is huge. Obviously that's not near the percentage that you would find in the UK or some other countries, but the myth that Americans don't have kettles dismisses the experience of a fair portion of the population. I know it's probably because of the area I live in, but I don't personally know anyone who doesn't have a kettle. It's just not as important for American culture as it is for some others. Edited to fix typo.
It's not really a joke, it's something we genuinely find very surprising. You're underestimating how ubiquitous they are in the UK and Ireland. I've seen and met bona fide Americans who say they've never encountered an electric kettle (or hadn't before coming to the UK). It's literally as odd to us as saying you've never encountered a television or a car.
I’m American and while I definitely know there are Americans who own kettles, I am not offended by people thinking we don’t in large part. Like you said we are huge with different cultures. I don’t own a kettle. no kettles were in my relatives homes when I was growing up. No one in my family or friends owns a kettle. The number one reason for this is most people I know either don’t or rarely drink hot tea. Even these popular Boba tea places popping up is cold tea. For one think we live in a very hot climate and we see tea as a refreshing type of drink. We brew our tea in a pot on the stove and chill it, serve it from a pitcher. Only way I drink hot tea is if I’m sick and I also make it in a pot on the stove.
@@georgio101That makes sense. I felt that way when Brits told me they get charged for non-bottled water in some restaurants. Blew my mind. To us that’s like charging for breathing their air.
Whenever I listen to Sophia it feels like she lives life in slow motion. It's great.
😂
Soo true..
She is little bit dizzy... 😂😂😂
@@ankushverma6904XD
Same
Horrendous monotone vioce that could put a glass eye to sleep.
Sophia's voice can cure insomnia, I am pretty sure.
It turns me on a lil😂😂
"American people love to make fun of Bottle of water" in fact not just american people 😂 , even no-native speakers make fun of it
Americans say wadder 🤦♀️
@@maria17Hyeah a lot of people like to make fun of the bottle of water 😂😂😂 it’s so annoying
@@maria17H and Australians say wodda
@JackSonEFla2 trust me, your comedy about Americans is stale, too, like nothing new in the last century.
@JackSonEFla2as a German I want to thank the whole of Britain for giving us Monty Python's!!! Only the Brits can produce such sarcastic humour ❤
"Microwave" -Lauren : "Oh s..., here we go again" 😂 , so pissed off at Christina at the time 😅
If I'm at work, and there's no kettle or pot (or even stove!) I'm going to use the microwave and "nuke" my water for my tea. Or use the coffee maker and make hot water that way. Just so subconscious
Sophia is so calm 🤗 I love her
She seems to be on drugs or something
she sounds like she`s on something tbh
she's slow
@@unknownceres5714 slow 🤔
She’s high tbh
Hearing someone say “haich” instead of “aich” is like nails on a chalkboard to me.
What about "Zed" instead of "Zee" ?
@@jimgorycki4013no no
Zee instead of Zed
@jimgorycki4013 same. Actually that one makes less sense
Sophia’s voice is so soft and gentle, it’s adorable!
sounds like the song - "little fluffy clouds" by the orb
nar i think she putting it on and speaks with an essex acsent when no ones around ,
she probs thinks in it too , .
🤣🤣🤣🤣
jokes if ya dint see it calm down calm down
🤣🤣🤣🤣
I don’t think majority Americans sounds like her
i thought she was high at first, buts its just me
fluffy [ˈflʌfɪけばの·綿毛の·ふわふわした] | orb [ɔːb球[体]·[十字架付きの]宝珠[ほうじゅ]·天体[てんたい]·目·眼球[がんきゅう]]@@CRD250 | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.
i love Sophia, she is super CHILL
Looks like she’s high
It’s actually comical to me how they are talking about how different the UK is place to place but have one American on who seemingly incorporates “all Americans”
The same goes for Canadians. Every province has a distinct accent, with many regional accents. No one would ever think a Nova Scotian and an Albertan sounded similar. Newfoundlanders sometimes sound more Irish than the Irish do. Northern Ontario is distinct from southern Ontario, etc. I live in NS and our Acadian communities have very distinct community accents…….
Spot on.
I was thinking the same. Even a smaller state like Arkansas there are a bunch of different accents depending on the area you are in. Multiply that times 50 states.
the uk is comprised of four countries so you cant get one british person to sit there and represent four places with different cultures, histories and languages ALSO scottish, welsh ect people don't usually refer to themselves as british however regardless of the state they live in a person in the US would refer to themselves as american
@@paulamcdonald1393 Agree, I'm American New England and there is nothing this 'american' does/says that I can relate too haha. And speaking of Canada the Nova Scotian would be pretty similar to we New Englanders :) (tho they are New Scotland haha)
“Can” and “can’t “ is definitely an interesting topic to discuss between the American accent and other English accents! @worldfriends
North or Latin American accent? | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.
FYI A large percentage of Americans don’t actually pronounce can’t that way. Many of us say it like cain’t.
@@anndeecosita3586 I just say “can”😂😂 i never pronounce any Ts
Most people are able to understand me even when I travel abroad the US! I know for a lot of people it can be confusing as they don’t know the drill😂😂
@@xohyuu what do you mean? I don’t quite know the difference haha
4:54 I live in London and it doesn't really rain much at all. Before it started raining 1-3 days ago it didn't rain at all for about a month and most of the grass is completely dried out and yellow. Last year we had a severe drought and a lot of the grass was completely brown and dead because there was no rain for about 2 months.
Same in The Netherlands, summers are getting drier.
Italia has both very hot ﹠ very rainy ﹠ alga seasons in EuropeTT | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.
Do most people and businesses there not use sprinkler systems or hoses to water their lawns?
Last time I was in London (a few week before the Olympics), it was not raining at all. It was bloody hot (I was on the crew that sailed the Wylde Swan to Britain and up the Thames, the ship would do tours on the Thames during the Olympics, so did many other sailing ships)
global warming
My experience is that there are a lot of high quality cheeses in the USA but they usually cost more. In fact most supermarkets have two different sections where they sell cheese. The higher end cheese is in the deli. Actually, you can also buy cheeses, milk and other dairy products directly from creameries which I do sometimes. The cheese in my refrigerator right now is made of goat’s milk. From watching a few British reaction channels I got the impression goat’s milk cheese isn’t that popular in the UK because they acted like it was odd when it was an ingredient in their food at an American restaurant.
I don’t eat dairy as much as I used for health and digestive reasons. I switched to almond milk.
[ at an American restaurant ] > North or Latin America[n] one? | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!
@@xohyuuGo back to English class, study harder, and you won’t have to ask such questions.
@xohyuu They said U.S.A so probably a north American restaurant. 🙂
So satisfying to hear Sophia's voice
I thought she was on drugs
@@ScamL1ke1ynah she’s just high on life
@@surfboarding5058 or meth ?
Horrendous monotone that could put a glass eye to sleep.
I’m here in Wales and it’s currently raining 😂
I have never been to the UK. But the phrase "I'll put on the kettle" means a lot to me. Perhaps it is all the Doctor Who, British crime procedurals, and Sherlock I have consumed.
The American not knowing what government cheese is means she hasn’t struggled one bit
good for her. very few us had to grow up with the abomination that is government cheese. and government cheese is not the same as American processed cheese.
@@Ivan-fm4eh agreed! It is interesting how other countries are aware of our government cheese tho
I just looked it up & apparently the term "government cheese" stopped being used in the '90s. The cheese still existed, but it was no longer called "government cheese." So, it makes sense for people born in the late '80s & beyond not to be familiar with the term.
@@naivenostalgia what did they call it afterwards? i only know it as government cheese and i was born in the late 80s
@@Ivan-fm4ehApparently it was called "government cheese" because it was owned completely by the government. It still exists in cold storage, but is now owned by private companies. It seems to vary between companies.
I'm learning this right now with you, just to clarify lol. I had no idea.
Uhmmm... "British", Welsh, Scottish and Irish?
You either mean "English", Welsh, Scottish and Irish, or you mean "British" and Irish.
So annoying that Americans don't know the difference between British and English.
Yeah even the flag in the part of the video and in the description, they all have their flag and England has the British flag like wtf
@@101steel4 bud this is a South Korean channel. Contrary to what you apparently think not everybody who isn't from the UK is American, there's more than 2 countries in the world 🤦♂️
@@figs449 England is the main/capital region of the UK. Also as you can see from the video itself, Welsh and Scottish people like pretending they're not British while English people usually identify as British above all else. So relax.
@@ParadiseDB7 where did I say that?
*8:15** the Arabic text says 'Stuffed asshole"* 🤣
How did they show this in vidoe 😂
VidoeTT@@cookieking4236 | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.
It’s English, Irish, Scottish and Welsh. There’s an English girl there!!! Sort it out.
sortousort out [分類する·えり分ける·えり抜く·まとめる·改善する·整理する·整頓[せいとん]する·解決する·こらしめる·やっつける] | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.
Also, the processed cheese product you see on low end burgers in America is usually Kraft Singles. It’s made that way because it’s supposed to melt perfectly onto a burger patty when grilling outdoors during the summertime.
Kraft Singles are mostly milk fat with dye to look like cheese.
Then there's Velveeta which isn't really a dairy product at all
@@benschultz1784true, but mixed with Rotel it makes an amazing nacho dip!
processed [ˈprəʊsɛst理済み·加工を施した·加工[かこう]した] | North or Latin America[n][s]? | be supposed to [其積りで·はず[ᕽ筈·ᕽ弭·ᕽ彇]] | low-end [🅐ローエンドの·低価格仕様の] | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!
Great video , thanks world friends , especially like Lauren`s contributions.
The Welsh dude talking about different accents coming out? Yeah, that happens to me as an American; different dialects and accents I grew up speaking will come out at different times. I normally speak with an American broadcast standard accent, but a country accent will come out whenever I get intense about something Southern, and when I'm really upset or annoyed I'll code switch into Black American English, which can be really jarring because I'm whiter than sour cream.
dafuq is “bIack american english”
@@antoniocasias5545 he prob means aave, african-american vernacular english
@@Ivan-fm4ehAave? Never heard of her.
My former coworker is from the NOLA West Bank. Whenever he gets angry his accent goes full West Bank, and we can’t understand everything he’s saying. 😂😂
I think anger and drunkenness brings out people’s true dialects.
Didn't expect to see a Doctor Who meme in this! (The tea & kettle one)
Me neither
The way you put the American in a different kind of chair just slightly separated from the rest of them lol
Sophia needs a strong coffee, she's so calm I am not sure whether she's the most relaxed person in the world, or if she's trying to hide severe depression....
Or an autistic lack of intonation
She’s from the south lol. I’ve heard a saying where some good ol southern people move like their life is in molasses. Honestly I think speaking slow and deliberately is a good change of pace.
@@MS-vk9ph
she did say before she's a tea drinker.
but you need more coffee shops in the south apparently... if you don't like Starbucks, you can try Brazilian coffee, or Turkish coffee, or even the highest quality Yemeni coffee....
😛
ps: I am joking, not making fun of anyone, you do you ❤
@@MS-vk9phppl in the south do not speak slow. i guess maybe an old hick accent but she does not even have a hint of a southern accent
Your on point 🤌🏾
Sophia is growing on me. But the pace at which she speaks is jarring lol
grow on […にだんだん募ってくる·だんだんに気に入るようになる] | jarring [dʒɑː耳障[みみざわ]りな·神経に障る·食い違[ちが]う·不調和[ふちょうわ]な] | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.
i would love if we could bring back a canadien! i am canadien myself, and would love to see another one on here!
It is impossible to bring back a canadiEnTT | Миру мир!
Wisconsin here. We have so many great cheeses here. Processed cheese is disgusting. Velveeta, also disgusting. We have various ages of Cheddar, along with Colby, Monterey Jack, Pepper Jack, Mozzarella, Provolone, Swiss, etc. Why eat anything else? I don't even eat any cheese flavored snacks. I make a batch of white popcorn and cut a few slices of cheddar to eat along with it.
Sophia is growing on me. It's not very often that you're introduced to someone that is that genuinely sweet.
Wisconsin has great cheese, as does Vermont, California, and Washington State. It's just that the processed cheese food is what is known outside the US, and thus... yeah.
When you say "swiss cheese" what exactly do you mean? Do you mean Emmentaler, Appenzeller, gruyère, Raclette cheese, Tilsiter, Tete de Moine? Many other Swiss cheeses out there but it alwayd confuses me what Americans mean by swiss cheese.
@@laurajane192 Essentially, Emmentaler, and then American Swiss and Baby Swiss (aged 1 month) are variations on that recipe, but lighter and more buttery. One example of a cheesemaker would be Edelweiss Creamery in Monticello, WI.
Had a Schweiz burger for lunch today.
Why eat anything else? Because you have not tasted the different variants of kashkaval 🥰
@@huskytail We're kind of up to our ass in cheese here. 3.52 billion lbs. (1.6 billion kg) in 2022. 6 million people live here. I don't think we have had a lot of Bulgarian immigrants move here. Havarti, Münster, Gouda, Butterkäse, etc., but I couldn't find anyone making Kash kaval. The European ancestry here is mostly German, Dutch, Scandinavian, Irish, and Polish.
8:19 almost everyone in England does that, I say haich I don’t think I’ve ever met anyone that says that too.. 😔
The orange colour of cheese is a product of high fat concentrates in cheese, where the cows eat grasses that have large carotenoid content over traditional cheeses. Dying the cheeses orange was a means of increasing the product to make more money.
OMG the American in this video sounds high 😂
Please make more videos of this style❤️
2:09 finally someone said that meme can be from the "boddle of wader" too!
If glottal stop like "Bo'le" can be a meme then Americanised T sounding D like "Boddle" should also be a meme.
8:30 oh yes, very “proper” to call a letter by the name that doesn’t even have its own sound in it
That meme is bizarre. It's very weird to consider 'aitch' a funny 'British' thing - not only is it the standard term in both the UK and the US, it's also a term British folk use less than most!
'Aitch' is basically universal in North America, but only used by about two thirds of British folk, with the rest saying 'haitch'.
FWIW, 'aitch' is the older form, and 'haitch' developed out of hyper-correction.
@georgio101 haitch is older actually. But is was dropped after French influence as can be seen by what we know Queen Elizabeth the 1st spoke like. The R sound was still prolific though
literally watched some make tea like this the other day, whilst we where talking about what on earth they where doing, and then another dude said yeah i tried aht the other day and bunt myself, adn tehn the other guy burned himself :D there where literlay 2 kettles in the kitchen and they chose to microwave the water.
Everyone is more enthusiastic than Sophia. More monotone she is
Americans have separate coffee makers, so electric kettles are superfluous.
A lot of American cheddar has annatto coloring added. Government cheese is Velveeta process cheese.
@@thal1691 ope, we've got one of those trashy 'X country doesn't have as good [whatever food] as we do' folks in the chat. 🙄
You should edit your title to replace "British" with "English".......
"America doesn't have kettles"
America: invented the electric kettle
Eoin is a very patriotic guy which his hair color and shirt is same of last color of Irish flag.
Colour
Same or the same?@@101steel4 | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.
Cheddar cheese is different than processed cheese... Our cheddar cheese is real cheese.
processed [ˈprəʊsɛst理済み·加工を施した·加工[かこう]した] | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.
Historically cheddar made up of milk from free graze cattle was more orange in colour due to betacarotene content of the milk, and that cheddar was more in demand. So some clever ppl discovered food dyes, and now most red cheddars are dyed orange, while the good old yellow one suffers neglect.
7:45 I’ve never heard of that. But it’s like the French with Canadians.
The Aitch/Haitch one is more prominent in Australian even most teachers get it wrong which used to drive me nuts and I'd even try to correct it sometimes
American cheddar cheese?
Cheddar is a place in England.
As is Ham and Sandwich 😁
North or Latin America[n]? | Миру мир!
The American girl always looks like she is about to fall asleep 😅👍
she sounds heavily medicated
He has never heard a person from the USA speak so slowly. Is it some kind of dialect or does the girl "just" speak slowly? What state in the US is she from, or where do they speak so slowly?
She's supposedly from Georgia according to a previous version of this conversation. She definitely doesn't have a Georgia accent which may partially explain.
US Southerner here. There are some people who do speak this slowly, but it's not very common, even in much of the south. Most people I know speak at Lauren or Eoin's speed. To be honest, the slow speech drives me a bit crazy. I've started watching the videos with Sophia in it at x1.25 speed. Nothing against her, but I struggle to stay focused on what's being said at that slow a pace.
some kind of [どこかの;何かの;何かしらの;ある種の;なんらかの] | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.
საქართველო@@PrometheanRising | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.
i’m pretty sure it’s because this is a korean channel so she is trying to be understandable to a non native english audience
Omg why is the American talking so slowly
The girl from the USA looks really sleep deprived🤣
The American girl puts the word "like" every three words. 😅
she was a poor representation of an American, she was 16 as the others were in there twentys
@@tomgiorgini9154 How do you know she's 16?
@@OhWaker I have no idea how old she is that's my perception
@@tomgiorgini9154 ah, gotcha. She does look like she's in high school or fresh out of high school while the others are in college/university or already graduated years ago
@@OhWaker exactly my point, they pick a child ,or someone with little to 0 life experience to represent the american, which today maybe an accurate representation unfortunately
In response to bo-o o wo-uh, listen to "singing in the rain", where the silent actress says "I can' stan' i'."
5:42 - Oh dear, someone at World Friends didn't think things through... The irish guy is representing a country that's not part of the UK nor it's considered british.
There's also an English girl representing the whole of Britain 😂
Technically, both the UK and Ireland make up the British Isles, so (geographically) they’re not wrong. The Irish definitely don’t get called British though - maybe they just couldn’t find a Northern Irish person?
@@101steel4(Great) Britain is England, Scotland and Wales, so they’ve actually got a complete set
3:51 it should be "dont tell me you put milk in a tea"
As an American, I can say that we call Kettles a Tea Pot. And it's non-electric because i know that Kettles are electric. Most of them you fill up the water, turn on the flame eye to the stove top: boil the water and then put the tea bags in and let the tea steep, then once it's done steeping you put a cup to a cup and a half of Sugar in the pitcher, you put the tea into the pitcher and stir it so that the sugar disolves. That's how you make tea in America. Of course it's different because that's typically southern sweet tea which usually preferred cold as apposed to most british teas that are more commonly hot.
In the uk we use tea pots as well as kettles, as you say kettle is used to describe the electric version or older versions where u don’t brew the tea in it. Most people in the uk will just have a kettle and some will have both, generally older generations will have tea pots used for when guests are over, but we pour it directly from the pot to cup so it’s hot. At breakfast cafes it’s not uncommon to get a pot of tea if asked for rather than separate tea in just a cup.
Is the way Sophia talks normal in the US?
@@athos163 That's typically how it works in American Restaurants too, Typically you get a glass of it and then they'll refill the cup as you go if you ask. Typically you pay for the initial glass because refills are usually free in the US. As i understand that's not the case in the UK? Correct me if i'm wrong.
@@علي-ش7ث8ب Not where i'm from, that's more of a Californian LA thing.
@@AtsumuMiya123 ur correct, if u ask for a cup/glass u just get the one unless the place offers a bottomless drink, these are normally self service dispensers.
For tea if u ask for a cup of tea u get the one, however some places u can ask for a pot (generally breakfast cafes not restaurants) and they'll brew the leave the tea pot on ur table for u to use until none is left. If there's a few of you it's generally a cheaper option rather then getting a cup each, or cheaper if u really like tea and can drink a pots worth in one sitting
When Lauren is introduced why does it say GB with a Union Jack next to her? I thought it was about which part of the UK or the British Isles respectively everybody's from. She's from England (it's on her badge ;).
Where’s Northern Ireland representative?
Only real Ireland gets represented.
Finally you did some Welsh stuff
2:31 over here in America we don’t use a kettle we use the harbor
the whole how you make hot water for tea drives me insane. You can boil water on the stove, in an electric kettle or in the microwave, its' still all just boiling water
Kettles in US run by 110 V which takes a lot of time to boil water compared to kettles in UK and other countries which run by 220 V (takes about half the time)
That's why kettles are not very convenient for Americans compared to other countries. Plus tea is not very popular drink in US compared to UK.
I am French and I have a diploma in the field of electricity.
I never understood what interests have Americans to have such a low electrical tension.
Especially since the USA is much larger than France, on the contrary, they should have a higher source voltage due to the voltage drop which comes from the natural electrical resistance of electric cables.
With 110 volts, they must need many more neighborhood transformers and tension rectifiers than with a voltage of 220 volts.
In addition, an alternative tension of 110 volts is no less dangerous for humans than 220 volts.
Finally, the electric cables must heat more since it takes more electrical intensity on a network in 110 than in 220 volts for the same power as P = U × I
@@arnosolo5248 I’m surprised why they still use it also. I don’t have good knowledge about electricity but I heard some yt talking about this topic and it’ll be better to adapt the 220 V
American drinks more tea than the UK.
@@arnosolo5248We don't transmit at 120V over power lines my dude... there is a step down transformer outside the house or apartment.
American homes have circuits running at two voltages. We run large appliances like washers, driers, and stoves at 220-240V. Small appliances run at 110-120V.
Most people don't have electric kettles because tea is less popular in the states than coffee. Most Americans have drip coffee makers in their house. Most Americans have stove top kettles too.
I have an electric kettle as I drink a lot of tea and coffee and use it to heat to the proper temperatures.
That argument makes no sense. As an American with ADHD and a working memory of about three seconds, an electric kettle is by far the easiest and safest way for me to boil water. Just click a button, forget about it while you do other things, and then let it alert you when it's done.
And even taking longer, it boils water in a very short period of time. If your time budget is such that you can't take an extra 2 to 3 minutes, the problem isn't the kettle or electricity, it's time management.
British is England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, so the title should be American, British, and Irish, or American, English, Welsh, Scottish and Irish
Government cheese was delicious. You'd get it in this huge block. We'd also get this giant can of peanut butter that you'd have to stir back together. Fellow WIC kids, raise your hands if you grew up on cheese and peanut butter sandwiches!
i did but disagree that the cheese was good. or are you being sarcastic
Y'all are talking about "American Cheese". The Europeans are correct -it is NOT a "cheese"!!
3 of those are GB and you only said Lauren is, just FYI.
Next video: Nigerian English reaction.
im from scotland and I never pronounce the T... ABSALUTY NEVEAA
Scoland? | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.
What everyone was calling “government cheese” or “plastic cheese”, the generic American name for that is “American cheese” believe it or not 😂
Surrrre. There are other colours of cheddar in the states
@@antoniocasias5545 Cheddar cheese is British anyway so calling it American cheese is wrong in the first place.
@@antoniocasias5545 I don’t know if I would call it cheddar, it tastes like the plastic it comes in haha
@@ChrisCrossClash I think that’s why it’s called American cheese, it’s so processed and not-cheese-like that we all just assume it must be American
@@codyfromhumanresources6435 don't think you're eating the right one
Spaniard from Madrid here. If I have to be frank, I haven't *ever* used a kettle, it's so alien. That reminds me of old Thames' sitcoms like George and Mildred, or Robin's Nest... I barely remember if my parents had one at their place; they had a thick aluminium Italian coffee pot, but I really don't know if you could call that a kettle. Anyway, when I make tea I boiled some water in a pan, and then pour it in a mug with a tea bag. Even that it's too laborious. I'd end up buying a can of lemon iced tea at the supermarket round the corner! 😂
Pues cambiaria tu vida chaval !!
6:11 The thing is the brits don't skip the t... They drink it.
Did u guys know what the heal that username " طيز محشي " mean 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 8:51
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
They forgot the whole country of Northern Ireland though
They got some troubles out there.
Sophia is so cute! More of her please!
more of a [いっそう;~というよりは·…の一部分] | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.
East coast USA - brought up always using a kettle on stove to boil water for tea. Now many people have an electric kettle, but I prefer one on stovetop.
Saying "baddle of warder" as an American makes it sound like the Minnesota/Canadian accent.
You have to read it in a British accent, oddly enough, then it sounds roughly like a General American 'bottle of water'.
Most North American accents lack a distinct short 'o' vowel: so ''bother' and 'father' rhyme, and eg. 'con' sounds like 'Khan'. This sounds very unusual to most other native English speakers- all your short O's sound like our A's.
This is how almost all North Americans sound to other native English speakers, with the exception of some North Eastern accents.
@@georgio101Hi I agree we tend to rhyme bother and father. I wasn’t so sure about con and Khan because my first thought was the word falcon which is like khun. but then I thought of other words like convict which is khan. But then there’s words like contempt. So my conclusion is that con is a mixed bag for us Americans as far as pronunciation.
North or Latin America[n]? | Пeрeмога Үкраїнi!
British homies! Why must we use a kettle? Does it make the boiled water taste better than the microwave? I just feel like microwaving my cup of water makes more sense, time wise and dirtying dishes wise 😂
It's just "that's different from the way we do it so it must be bad", lowkey xenophobia but not that serious
If your British it best not to mention tht u micro your water.
Your people might disown u
@@spirituallyyoujustbeenx185 but why 😂 just cause isn’t a good enough reason for me to waste time and create more dishes imo
A kettle is not expensive, it got my nerves when I found out an acquaintance used an electric stove to boil water.
Makes as much sense as cooking a chicken on a microwave
***[American vs British] American, ENGLISH, Welsh, Scottish, and Irish react to the memes!!
Why couldn’t they get someone from Northern Ireland if you wanted UK?
who wants to hear their horrible accents XD
Possible they couldn't find someone. They film this in Seoul, and recruit models and English teachers.
For anyone from Northern Ireland who read the above antagonistic comment, I just wanted you to know that Northern Irish accents are my favorite accents I've heard so far in my life. Listening to a Northern Irish accent has genuinely brightened up some very crappy days in my life. Your accents feel like music to my soul 🥰😇 (Just in case the perfection of your accent was in question for you, heaven forbid.)
@@ponyxaviors4491Ian Paisley,Frank Carson and John Cole to name but a few.
It's the girl that eats edibles again. Lol!
edible [🅐[毒性などがないので]食べられる·食用に適する[⇔inedible][cf→eatable]🅝[[複]]食用品] | lol [laughingoutloud[[爆笑[ばくしょう]];大笑いして]] | Cầu nguyện cho Үкраїна và hòa bình.
What happened to Christina?
For sophia part play video at 1.5 speed
And for that red hair guy play video at 0.75 speed.
6:20 "Why is there no T?"
Because you poured it all in the harbor
1:42 there are different coloured cheeses all over the world. Get over yourselves.
3:20 I hate tea and coffee, but I always have a kettle to make hot chocolate. Even my friends from the states have one
And even if you don't have a kettle, it's not impossible to improvise and come up with perfectly fine results.
You make hot chocolate with a kettle? Don't you use milk?
@@laurajane192 put cocoa in a cup. Pour hot water. Stir. Then maybe milk.
@@laurajane192you don’t? MILKE?? I need to try that
@@mattybrunolucaszeneresalas9072 I exclusively use milk for my hot cocoa
5:55 why is the 'r' there
i never understand the bottle of water meme cuz americans pronounce it:
Buddlef wodder
But English people (south of england) say bottle of water exactly like it's written.
What even is a 'British' accent ffs?? lol. Have you heard how many accents there are in England alone?
Someone else needs to speak for Americans. Cheddar cheese is not processed. That's American cheese. The stuff they put on goldfish crackers is some kind of powdered cheese. Real cheddar is not processed cheese.
Replacing T with a glottal stop is only done by working-class Londoners; most Brits pronounce the T.
Making tea in the microwave ???
That American voice turns me on a lil😂😂
It's crazy how a massive ocean can change so much.
Culturally I feel very close to the English girl as a Dutch person, the way she acts.
But the American girl, otherworldly.
I know people always say English people are very polite and roundabout, but that certainly doesn't go for all of them. Many of them are just as direct as Germans and Dutch people.
I think Brits are closer to Americans, Canadians, Aussies, and Kiwis than to the Dutch. There’s just more shared culture and cuisine, music, language, etc. despite the vast oceans that separate them all. The Netherlands is really foreign by comparison which is probably why many British tourist stick out like a sore thumb over there but in the states you can’t really tell the difference until you hear the accent.
4:05 soo true!😅
I literally had an argument with someone about how to pronounce the letter h. its aitch!!!!!
i think that it would be 'eich'^^; | Миру мир!
I just microwave he water, not the tea
I think it's strange how Americans pronounce the letter "t" as "d" if it's not at the start of the word.
It has to do with where we speak in our mouths. I've practiced a lot of accents and learned that as a generalization, Americans speak further back in their mouths which makes pulling our tongues forward to make a sharp T sound in the middle of a word jarring (it causes me to stumble over my words). It's the same reason that in some English accents there aren't any harsh Rs in the middle of words. Many English accents are spoken a bit more forward in the mouth than most American accents, and since a harsh R sound is spoken further back in the mouth it would likely be jarring for them to pull their tongues back for an R in the middle of a word. Once you learn the positioning of the tongue, movement of the lips, etc. to successfully pull off an accent, suddenly all of these little details start to make sense 🙂
North or Latin American? | Пусть наш Бог хранит Үкраїну.
8:53 THE USER?? IF YOU KNOW ARABIC THEN YOU WILL KNOW 💀💀
As far as I know the UK uses the metric system instead of old imperial system.
I guess every UK citizen must know the metric system to travel and trade around Europe and the World.
Canada is very weird because they use a mix of both. 😮
We use both
I get the impression that the joke that Americans don't have kettles is something that other cultures simply enjoy believing and repeating, regardless of fact. In reality, probably somewhere between 30-50% of American homes have kettles. There are higher and lower percentages in concentrated areas, because the US is huge. Obviously that's not near the percentage that you would find in the UK or some other countries, but the myth that Americans don't have kettles dismisses the experience of a fair portion of the population. I know it's probably because of the area I live in, but I don't personally know anyone who doesn't have a kettle. It's just not as important for American culture as it is for some others.
Edited to fix typo.
North or Latin Americans? | Миру мир!
It's not really a joke, it's something we genuinely find very surprising. You're underestimating how ubiquitous they are in the UK and Ireland.
I've seen and met bona fide Americans who say they've never encountered an electric kettle (or hadn't before coming to the UK). It's literally as odd to us as saying you've never encountered a television or a car.
I’m American and while I definitely know there are Americans who own kettles, I am not offended by people thinking we don’t in large part. Like you said we are huge with different cultures. I don’t own a kettle. no kettles were in my relatives homes when I was growing up. No one in my family or friends owns a kettle. The number one reason for this is most people I know either don’t or rarely drink hot tea. Even these popular Boba tea places popping up is cold tea. For one think we live in a very hot climate and we see tea as a refreshing type of drink. We brew our tea in a pot on the stove and chill it, serve it from a pitcher. Only way I drink hot tea is if I’m sick and I also make it in a pot on the stove.
@@georgio101That makes sense. I felt that way when Brits told me they get charged for non-bottled water in some restaurants. Blew my mind. To us that’s like charging for breathing their air.
Actual law in the US requires American cheddar to be orange.
The american speak so slowly I almost thought I passed the video into *0.5 speed 😮 is the a friend of snoop dog ? 😂
The american girl lives in 0.75x