I remember moving from SA to Austria and writing my first English test and wrote robot instead of traffic light (not knowing that the word traffic light even existed) and causing huge confusion for my teacher.
Mia 🇭🇲and Rea 🇿🇦 have credit but i like the fact that channel views were being "normal" until Lauren 🇬🇧 came back and changed even more with Christina's return. 🇺🇸
@@antoniocasias5545 that means that some people weren't watching the channel as before and then when Lauren returned people got happy in see her back and after a while Christina too
@@itumelengmasemola717 what are you on about? The person is saying she didn't know half the slang words from her own country, it's not like she owns the words, but they're from her country, & she doesn't know them, so she was effectively a little useless here. The whole point is explain the colloquial terms, so if she doesn't know them, why's she there
what's up with her accent though? A lot of people nowadays are switching up their accents. You don't hear the hard and rough general South African accent
@@kurtsudheim825 no one know evry little thing about their country plus south africa is a diverse place that sometimes has a different slangs depending on where you live. She did a good job explaining these slangs though even if it's not what she, herself, uses
I'm from Côte d'Ivoire, a French-speaking country, we have also the word "Chap-Chap" which exists in our slang, the , and it also means the same things that you said earlier. Nouchi is an ivorian slang based essentially on French, but influenced also by Spanish, English and some local languages from Côte d'Ivoire.
@@AT-rr2xw Oh really? I think it's most commonly used in Boston, so maybe not used as much in other towns. My parents grew up in Boston so I would always hear them say it haha
I'm from the US and my grandfather would say "eejit" often. I picked it up but kids at school and other people thought it was weird. My grandfather would also say "aye" instead of okay...and I picked that up also. I still get odd looks from time to time here in the US when I say certain things. If eejit originates from Scotland, it makes a lot of sense to me now. Apparently our family ancestry has a lot of ties to Scotland. I wonder how certain terms and slight accent idiosyncrasies remain in a family for so long without changing. I did grow up with my grandparents on a ranch in the middle of nowhere...so perhaps that social isolation over generations preserved those terms within our family.
You left the Irish out with Gaelic football & yes they uk football is also football, unlike uk football & American & Australia football all have same origin. Gaelic football was around before the others with another name.
Pretty sure soccer comes from the full name for footy, Association Football > Assoc > Soccer. In the same way that Rugby is really Rugby Football and sometimes called Rugger.
We definitely say "hang a left/right" in Australia but I hadn't heard of "Hang a Larry/Louie" as an North American thing before. It's so cute! Aussies say "chuck a uey" - I had no idea Americans had something similar! Never heard "head like a half sucked mango" before but I totally believe it's Australian. 😂Maybe it's from Queensland? It fits right in with similar Aussie insults that I know (they've got a face like a dropped meat pie).
I’m American too and I think perhaps I am misunderstanding this as a context thing. I don’t see anything “new” about the word dodgy but I can see how maybe i’ve been using the same word in a different way. One way I use dodgy/dodge/dodger is to mean evasive. My background is in journalism and we frequently say someone is dodging questions. So if I’m asking someone straight forward questions and they are giving me clever responses that aren’t really answers I would say “he’s being dodgy.”However I might use dodgy to mean potentially dangerous. I have seen some foreign English publications use dodgy to mean low moral character like dodgy car salesman.
I think that's why they were all confused, it's just an English word, used throughout the world. Since your bit supposed to answer if it's from your country, I think they all held back
In Australia we have been using dodgy for at least as long as I have been alive, I remember a segment on an Australian comedy show ion the 70s called Dodgy Brothers and they were a car yard selling really dodgy cars. Any Aussies know what show I am referring to?
I'm german but grew up in south Africa. I always heard 'sharp-sharp' but I only saw it written down after many years, I always thought they were saying 'shupshup'.
It terms of sarmie in SA, I would usually only use the term if I was referring to a toasted sandwich, eg: a toasted sarmie. Also at my school we called them toasted zarms instead of toasted sarmies but that is more specific to just my school.
Here in America we had a long running tv show called Supernatural. In it, one particularly gruff character has this catchphrase "idgit" that pretty much meant stupid or idiot. He also used it almost like a curse word.
@@fatimacoats5306 oh thx. Ngl, I forgot the context on this so I was like Bobby singer what? Since I knew he who he was I was just confused on why someone commented this lol. Also when did I write this comment… I can’t remember doing it even after reading it
This word, "Eejit", i've heard first time with the video with Vanille from Scotland 🏴 , even though she is from England 🏴 , Lauren did well and knew the meaning 🇬🇧
PFF... ok just because i used that too much, i remember that we have something similar to the mango one and it is like a hairstyle but thats why i love my country mexico so much
So this is what I've read regarding the appelation of 'Robot' regarding traffic lights. Before traffic lights were there in South Africa, the police used to control traffic with their hands in busy intersections as they still do at times. When the traffic controllers (the police) were replaced it sort of created an impression that a human job was replaced with a machine and hence the name robot. The original term was “robotic traffic controller“. When the traffic controllers (the police) were replaced it sort of created an impression that a human job was replaced with a machine and hence the name robot. A number of countries call traffic lights a 'robot'. Robot can also be a term for a vending machine. The word itself derives from the Czech word “robota,” or forced labor, as done by serfs. Its Slavic linguistic root, “rab,” means “slave.”
I hear Americans saying both bathing suit and swimsuit. But I lived for many years in the South. Christina is a Yankee so maybe that’s why she doesn’t hear it much.
“Shoot the shit” just means to casually talk to people you know. I wouldn’t say it means “talk it out.” To me, “talk it out” means settle and argument.
Yes we Americans do use the word dodgy. I think because we’re more apt to say sus/suspicious or sketchy that maybe people think it’s not part of our vocabulary.
@@anndeecosita3586 ‘sus’ has only recently become a popular expression in America but it’s been quite widely used at least since the ‘sus laws’ that Thatcher passed in the 80s which made it easier for police to stop and search people (famously disproportionately black) on suspicion of crimes. I suspect that ‘dodgy’ is another rare example of slang crossing from Britain to America rather than vice versa.
@@overlordnat Sus is recent but really I think sus is merely be a shorter version of suspicious or suspect which isn’t new. And the USA slang of calling something or someone “suspect” has been around a long time in my circles. I don’t mean suspect like the kind the police arrest but suspect as in not perceived as trustworthy. Like I might say “That chicken salad is suspect because it was left on the counter all night.” or “He lies a lot so everything says is suspect.” Also I sometimes use dodgy as an adjective in the family of dodge/dodger to mean evasive. So I think we use dodgy but maybe not entirely in the same context as Brits.
I certainly have, I've also heard they have a head for radio, or uglier than a hat full of bums too. But using a mango, it's probably from a more tropical region like Queensland.
I remember moving from SA to Austria and writing my first English test and wrote robot instead of traffic light (not knowing that the word traffic light even existed) and causing huge confusion for my teacher.
😹😹💔😹🤦🏾♀️
Did you still get the mark 😂😂
Mia 🇭🇲and Rea 🇿🇦 have credit but i like the fact that channel views were being "normal" until Lauren 🇬🇧 came back and changed even more with Christina's return. 🇺🇸
What do you mean channel views were being normal?
@@antoniocasias5545 that means that some people weren't watching the channel as before and then when Lauren returned people got happy in see her back and after a while Christina too
I really like the Spain/Brazil videos
Oh my gosh
I’m from South Africa and my name is Rea 😊😅
First channel with a Black South African 👏🏾👏🏾
She doesn’t know her own slang though.
@@Cd1988B how can someone not know their own slang the slang that she doesn't know is not hers lol
@@itumelengmasemola717 what are you on about? The person is saying she didn't know half the slang words from her own country, it's not like she owns the words, but they're from her country, & she doesn't know them, so she was effectively a little useless here. The whole point is explain the colloquial terms, so if she doesn't know them, why's she there
what's up with her accent though? A lot of people nowadays are switching up their accents. You don't hear the hard and rough general South African accent
@@kurtsudheim825 no one know evry little thing about their country plus south africa is a diverse place that sometimes has a different slangs depending on where you live. She did a good job explaining these slangs though even if it's not what she, herself, uses
Proud of you Rea 🇿🇦 representing us 🤗
Thank you my friend 🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
@@realebogapetlele6713 ya is very funny and laughing🎁🍻🍷🍒👍
But how can she lie about sarmies bra
This meddie knows Niks about South Africa
@@kyleglennistor5109 you should go on the show since you are better than all of us
My ex was South African so knew those ones especially the robot always amused me.
the best group so far, they are really into the purpose of the videos and seem to have fun with each other
We say sharp sharp in Nigeria too, but it means quickly or hurry up depending on the context.
I'm from Côte d'Ivoire, a French-speaking country, we have also the word "Chap-Chap" which exists in our slang, the , and it also means the same things that you said earlier.
Nouchi is an ivorian slang based essentially on French, but influenced also by Spanish, English and some local languages from Côte d'Ivoire.
Eejit is also used in America, probably from the Scots settled areas like certain parts of Appalachia
if you watch supernatural with subtitles it's spelled "idjit" which is why that spelling confused me
That makes sense, I live in Tennessee and hear it from time to time from people a little deeper in the hills.
I like rea cause she seems sweet and I'm also in south africa 🇿🇦 ❤
I do love the banter between Lauren and Christina 🤩
Same
Learned a lot of words and phrases this time! Hope you guys learned something new too! -Christina 🇺🇸
I loved the video , i've learned many words as well , nice , Christina 😁🇺🇸
@@henri191 glad you learned some too!
I am from Massachusetts too, but I have never heard of bang a uey.
@@AT-rr2xw In California we would say hang a u-ee or a lewy
@@AT-rr2xw Oh really? I think it's most commonly used in Boston, so maybe not used as much in other towns. My parents grew up in Boston so I would always hear them say it haha
I'm from the US and my grandfather would say "eejit" often. I picked it up but kids at school and other people thought it was weird. My grandfather would also say "aye" instead of okay...and I picked that up also. I still get odd looks from time to time here in the US when I say certain things.
If eejit originates from Scotland, it makes a lot of sense to me now. Apparently our family ancestry has a lot of ties to Scotland. I wonder how certain terms and slight accent idiosyncrasies remain in a family for so long without changing. I did grow up with my grandparents on a ranch in the middle of nowhere...so perhaps that social isolation over generations preserved those terms within our family.
I grew up in SE Alabama where there are a lot of Scottish and Irish ancestry. Eegit was a common word for us as well.
Eejit is also Irish, as my Northern Irish relatives use it too.
I am enjoying this. Love all the way from South Africa
The only reason I knew the meaning “eejit” one, was from watching Agents of Shield, and hearing Fitz talk😂
I wish they could bring more Africans to this channel
I'm in love with the south african accent omg
Love from Togo west Africa
for everyone confused about the australian football, we call Rugby League or AFL Footy
Dodgy has been used in the US since the 1960's
Mine in Nigeria sharp sharp means like quick quick hurry up 😅
I’m a Rea 🇿🇦 stan I love her
Thank you!! 💐💐 been seeing your comments!
Football means a different sport in the US, the UK and Australia. Weird that 3 different yet popular sports are known by the same name.
You left the Irish out with Gaelic football & yes they uk football is also football, unlike uk football & American & Australia football all have same origin. Gaelic football was around before the others with another name.
You also forgot Canadian Football, and rugby, which I've heard of being called a type of football.
Probably because all those sports are derivatives of Football ⚽️ (Soccer).
@@mhlave2440 and rugby
@@mhlave2440 I think what we in the USA call football is more like rugby.
Pretty sure soccer comes from the full name for footy, Association Football > Assoc > Soccer. In the same way that Rugby is really Rugby Football and sometimes called Rugger.
Shooot the shit, it's a bizaaaarrreeee phrase funny phrase chris 🤭🤭🤭🤭🍻
Christina and Lauren I like you so much so awesome and pretty woman for me🇺🇲🇬🇧💖
Interesting how we always learn new things if these videos. I suck at slang most of the time, so I'm taking notes haha
When the other people tried to guess shap shap my gosh no the pronunciation and guesses were so off 😂 Love these vids!
Greetings from Indonesia
Cheers from the Pacific West Coast of Canada.
The slang Sharp-Sharp in Nigeria means to do something "quickly"...
Mate, the AFL is the greatest sport to ever exist. Australia has it bloody good bro. 🇦🇺 UP THE POWERRRRRR!!!!
I remember "hang a louie" and "toss a ritchie" from polar express
Head like a half sucked mango! 😂 My Mum always says, “head like a racing tadpole” hahaha! Language is funny! 😂
Bus a lef, bus a rite 🇯🇲 Take a left, take a right🇯🇲
In Nigeria 🇳🇬 , Sharp sharp means like quickly or fast 😂🇳🇬
So i can be please make the food sharp sharp
We definitely say "hang a left/right" in Australia but I hadn't heard of "Hang a Larry/Louie" as an North American thing before. It's so cute! Aussies say "chuck a uey" - I had no idea Americans had something similar! Never heard "head like a half sucked mango" before but I totally believe it's Australian. 😂Maybe it's from Queensland? It fits right in with similar Aussie insults that I know (they've got a face like a dropped meat pie).
I know the dictionaries say it's British or chiefly British, but dodgy isn't uncommon in American English either. I've heard it my whole life.
I’m American too and I think perhaps I am misunderstanding this as a context thing. I don’t see anything “new” about the word dodgy but I can see how maybe i’ve been using the same word in a different way. One way I use dodgy/dodge/dodger is to mean evasive. My background is in journalism and we frequently say someone is dodging questions. So if I’m asking someone straight forward questions and they are giving me clever responses that aren’t really answers I would say “he’s being dodgy.”However I might use dodgy to mean potentially dangerous. I have seen some foreign English publications use dodgy to mean low moral character like dodgy car salesman.
I think that's why they were all confused, it's just an English word, used throughout the world. Since your bit supposed to answer if it's from your country, I think they all held back
We use the word dodgy here in South Africa a lot as well
In Australia we have been using dodgy for at least as long as I have been alive, I remember a segment on an Australian comedy show ion the 70s called Dodgy Brothers and they were a car yard selling really dodgy cars. Any Aussies know what show I am referring to?
In German we also say "shoot" (Schieß los) to mean "pose your question" or "tell me".
I'm german but grew up in south Africa. I always heard 'sharp-sharp' but I only saw it written down after many years, I always thought they were saying 'shupshup'.
The woman's explanation of footy is unintentionally hilarious
It terms of sarmie in SA, I would usually only use the term if I was referring to a toasted sandwich, eg: a toasted sarmie. Also at my school we called them toasted zarms instead of toasted sarmies but that is more specific to just my school.
sharp sharp in Nigeria means fast
Christina's socks are in other level...
she acts like a "blonde"- lol yeah i like the jeans.
Here in America we had a long running tv show called Supernatural. In it, one particularly gruff character has this catchphrase "idgit" that pretty much meant stupid or idiot. He also used it almost like a curse word.
Wait, who was the one who said that?
@@WhoseCarly Bobby Singer
@@fatimacoats5306 oh thx. Ngl, I forgot the context on this so I was like Bobby singer what? Since I knew he who he was I was just confused on why someone commented this lol. Also when did I write this comment… I can’t remember doing it even after reading it
In Ghana we say Sharp too
But just one sharp ..but means the same thing ...Mostly used amongst friends
This word, "Eejit", i've heard first time with the video with Vanille from Scotland 🏴 , even though she is from England 🏴 , Lauren did well and knew the meaning 🇬🇧
I guessed that it was idiot, but I didn't know where it was from.
I thought it was like Irish or Cornish but I'm from 🇿🇦 so just guessing.
It's also Irish. I have a keyring from Dublin with that word on it...
@@AT-rr2xw it's from Ireland and Scotland
I remember that video
Sarmie is sandwich, Rea was incorrect about that but right about it’s cultural use
Love u from arab world
💜 💚 💜 💚 💜
Lauren and christen
Fun Fact: In America we look at tea as fish food for sea creatures in The Boston Harbor
Bruh I’ve never heard someone say hang a Larry in canada
PFF... ok just because i used that too much, i remember that we have something similar to the mango one and it is like a hairstyle but thats why i love my country mexico so much
In Australia we also call rugby footy too.
So this is what I've read regarding the appelation of 'Robot' regarding traffic lights. Before traffic lights were there in South Africa, the police used to control traffic with their hands in busy intersections as they still do at times. When the traffic controllers (the police) were replaced it sort of created an impression that a human job was replaced with a machine and hence the name robot. The original term was “robotic traffic controller“.
When the traffic controllers (the police) were replaced it sort of created an impression that a human job was replaced with a machine and hence the name robot. A number of countries call traffic lights a 'robot'. Robot can also be a term for a vending machine.
The word itself derives from the Czech word “robota,” or forced labor, as done by serfs. Its Slavic linguistic root, “rab,” means “slave.”
interesting!
you are complicating it , its common across nearly all of southern africa... Robots is because they are robots🤣
that's interesting. I'm South African and I didn't know where it comes from lol
As an Australian that doesn’t see much Aussie content it’s amazing to see this but I say chuck a uiy
Christina did a dance that we in the USA call the robot. My friend does the robot when we are at the club and I’m like 🤦🏾♀️ 😂
Thanks again guys. Love it.
They greeted like Teletubies 🤣🤣🤣
Great video! Eejit was my favorite. Good job Lauren.
cristina and lauren i love you friend🙂🤭
Oh "bang a uey" In Australia it's like that, tho it's "chuck a uey"
Sarmi - is Afrikaans slang yes. It's short for ham and cheese sandwich
I associate "eejit" with Ireland -- but of course it makes sense it would be Scottish, too.
After the Vikings wiped out the native Scottish, the Picts, the Irish settled Scotland. Scotland, land of the Scots. The Scots were an Irish tribe.
@@davelister2961 rubbish.
in america we have certain regions that say "Idjit" which is why the spelling confused me but i said it out loud and immediately knew what it was
This was interesting.
I’m Canadian and I’ve NEVER heard of hang a Larry or hang a Louie
In south africa dodgy also means scaly.
I remember a British MP called David Cameroon, Dodgy Dave..
Dogdy is definitely sketchy.. sus is more shady
Footy is the discount rugby :)
We do actually call sandwiches sarmies here in South Africa
I got the hang a luey from the polar express
In Florida, we would normally not say swimsuit. That's a fancy term for what we call a bathing suit.
I hear Americans saying both bathing suit and swimsuit. But I lived for many years in the South. Christina is a Yankee so maybe that’s why she doesn’t hear it much.
Idk but bathing suit seems like the fancy version to me. Sounds fancier than swimsuit
@@G-B-F123 Bathing suit is a more old fashioned term but it is common in the South. Because it’s newer, some people think swimsuit sounds fancier.
In south africa a sarmie is a sandwich depending on the person who uses it
It's crazy I've never heard that word before in my life 🤣
Definitely isn't a sausage lol
Sarnie not sarmie.
“Shoot the shit” just means to casually talk to people you know. I wouldn’t say it means “talk it out.” To me, “talk it out” means settle and argument.
Half-sucked mango needs world wide usage.
Rea was right with the word “Dodgy” bc we also use it in the US. 🤷🏼♂️
Yes we Americans do use the word dodgy. I think because we’re more apt to say sus/suspicious or sketchy that maybe people think it’s not part of our vocabulary.
@@anndeecosita3586 ‘sus’ has only recently become a popular expression in America but it’s been quite widely used at least since the ‘sus laws’ that Thatcher passed in the 80s which made it easier for police to stop and search people (famously disproportionately black) on suspicion of crimes. I suspect that ‘dodgy’ is another rare example of slang crossing from Britain to America rather than vice versa.
@@overlordnat Sus is recent but really I think sus is merely be a shorter version of suspicious or suspect which isn’t new. And the USA slang of calling something or someone “suspect” has been around a long time in my circles. I don’t mean suspect like the kind the police arrest but suspect as in not perceived as trustworthy. Like I might say “That chicken salad is suspect because it was left on the counter all night.” or “He lies a lot so everything says is suspect.” Also I sometimes use dodgy as an adjective in the family of dodge/dodger to mean evasive. So I think we use dodgy but maybe not entirely in the same context as Brits.
The "Head like a half sucked Mango" reminded me of a friend's old favourite: "head on 'em like a bulldog chewing a wasp."
SLAYY ROBOT
"hang a larry"? oooh, a canadian slang!!!
MORE OF THIS SERIES 🇺🇲🇿🇦🇦🇺
Fun fact: in south africa the robot when there is not one but you would think there is the is a picture of a robot with a cross in it
Why was tsek! not there?
Australians actually do call soccer 'football'. It is the correct name for it.
I'm bad at English but I'm trying to learn
I hope you can do a video with Arabic
I’m Irish and we say eejit too lol
I really like "sharp-sharp". :D
Pronounced shup-shup ;)
@@LB_die_Kaapie Cool! :D
In Côte d'Ivoire, we have also this word in our slang, the Nouchi (Chap-Chap)
I heard footy and thought footjob. I’m going to hell
I knew footy. I’ve heard/said “hang a Louie” (not Larry) and “hang a u-ey.”
LMFAOO we use something similar to eejit in jamaica
Dodgy is used in South Africa
Eejit is Irish and I'm Irish so I would know
Okie dokie.
i have never in my life heard about the half sucked mango in my life and i’ve lived in australia my whole life 😭
I certainly have, I've also heard they have a head for radio, or uglier than a hat full of bums too. But using a mango, it's probably from a more tropical region like Queensland.
When they said sharp aharp it was kind of weird but i know is as shap shap
I would love have to friend from U.K
4:50 lmao
I'm from south africa
I thought it was slops for the shoes