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10 Weirdest & Most Confusing Things About British Homes (+ Free PDF & Quiz) 

English with Lucy
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British homes are a bit...different! Why are there plugs in our lights? 📝 GET THE FREE LESSON PDF here 👉🏼 bit.ly/BritishHomesPDF 📊 FIND OUT YOUR ENGLISH LEVEL! Take my level test here 👉🏼 bit.ly/EnglishLevelTest12 👩🏼‍🏫 JOIN MY ONLINE ENGLISH COURSES: englishwithlucy.teachable.com... - We have launched our B1 and B2 Complete English Programmes!
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28 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 4,1 тыс.   
@EnglishwithLucy
@EnglishwithLucy 2 года назад
British homes are a bit...different! Why are there plugs in our lights? 📝 *GET THE FREE LESSON PDF* _here_ 👉🏼 bit.ly/BritishHomesPDF 📊 *FIND OUT YOUR ENGLISH LEVEL!* _Take my level test here_ 👉🏼 bit.ly/EnglishLevelTest12 👩🏼‍🏫 *JOIN MY ONLINE ENGLISH COURSES:* englishwithlucy.teachable.com/courses - _We have launched our B1 and B2 Complete English Programmes!_
@auroraparker2689
@auroraparker2689 2 года назад
We have or I have in my house a light switch on the outside of the bathroom and inside of bathroom
@Ella-zk6ge
@Ella-zk6ge 2 года назад
I only have it outside or a pull one
@fuhrermk92
@fuhrermk92 2 года назад
cute baby 🌸 we olso in oman 🇴🇲 have electric things like yours
@sl2047
@sl2047 2 года назад
I've paid Council Tax for over 10 years, living in those humid, damp hovels near Peterborough.
@Chanteldang
@Chanteldang 2 года назад
I llllllllllllllllove
@e1123581321345589144
@e1123581321345589144 3 года назад
Lucy: makes video to teach English. me, who already knows English: watches video anyway for the cultural oddities.
@evangelist6277
@evangelist6277 3 года назад
I watch for Lucy, she's gorgeous
@daneiltherat2327
@daneiltherat2327 3 года назад
Same.
@nvwest
@nvwest 3 года назад
1.25 speed is nice
@spqdz
@spqdz 3 года назад
@@evangelist6277 simp
@evangelist6277
@evangelist6277 3 года назад
@@spqdz There is nothing simp about appreciating beauty
@locky2562
@locky2562 2 года назад
As I British person, I can confirm that carpet in the bathroom is the devils work! Not all of us do it.
@MyRegardsToTheDodo
@MyRegardsToTheDodo 2 года назад
I can imagine that it's really disgusting. Even if your toilet doesn't overflow, the carpet must be moldy, because it never really dries out if you shower daily.
@sharonboot478
@sharonboot478 2 года назад
I was born 65 years ago in England and I can confirm that I have never had, or ever been anywhere that has had a carpeted bathroom where on earth have you got this "fact" from!!
@nekotranslates
@nekotranslates 2 года назад
What about a carpet that you can just put down for when showering / using toilet, then go wash? Like they're small enough to put in the washer, and not big enough to cover the whole bathroom.
@MyRegardsToTheDodo
@MyRegardsToTheDodo 2 года назад
@@nekotranslates Like a shower mat?
@nekotranslates
@nekotranslates 2 года назад
@@MyRegardsToTheDodo yup
@jessicabader8010
@jessicabader8010 Год назад
I would be able to listen to you all day long. Your accent as well as the varied vocabulary you use make your videos the most academic and entertaining in RU-vid
@seanbeckerer5089
@seanbeckerer5089 7 месяцев назад
"On RU-vid" not "in".
@gregvergara7596
@gregvergara7596 2 года назад
A lot of the things on your list still exist in older homes here in the Eastern United States, such as separate taps, chain pulls, and electrical plugs in the light fixtures. Unfortunately, simply placing an electrical plug higher, doesn't make it any safer. Most of our bathroom and kitchen electrical devices use GFCI (ground fault circuit interrupter) technology, which switches off the power within milliseconds in the event of an electrical shock. We also have grounding pins on our plugs, and most two prong plug ends can only be inserted one way, as one blade is wider.
@kelblueskies3937
@kelblueskies3937 2 года назад
Yup I think part of the thing with England is how much older the average house is there compared to the the average age of the US home.
@janellcrews6108
@janellcrews6108 2 года назад
On the Delta King they have the chain pull thing. That's the only thing I know of. I didn't know we still had sepret sinks for hot, and cold but I don't go to old buildings much.
@Tweeza57
@Tweeza57 2 года назад
@@janellcrews6108 separate taps not sinks
@___LC___
@___LC___ 2 года назад
Same in the Midwest.
@owelguitar
@owelguitar 3 года назад
Overflowing vocabulary. You're one of the most intelligent English teachers on RU-vid.
@anameclips3395
@anameclips3395 3 года назад
K thanks
@swapnilkamble7717
@swapnilkamble7717 3 года назад
I think she is the most beautiful teacher on RU-vid. What do you think beautiful Lucy?
@user-iy2wr3yd3s
@user-iy2wr3yd3s 3 года назад
Definitely💚
@ronenr1405
@ronenr1405 3 года назад
I disagree. She is a good teacher, but highly overrated
@kanpat57
@kanpat57 3 года назад
Absolutely
@SheldonHelms
@SheldonHelms 2 года назад
I enjoyed your video. I wanted to point out one thing, however. Here in the United States, we don’t have screens on our windows to prevent mosquitoes specifically. We mostly have them to prevent houseflies from coming into our homes. In my new home, I have a screen that is in desperate need of replacement, and leaves a gap on one side. Each time I leave that window open, I notice a half dozen or so insects of various types have managed to come into my bathroom.
@misseselise3864
@misseselise3864 2 года назад
i think what she had in mind was the mosquito screens that were kinda like curtains. my neighbor had one bc she always had her porch door open if she was awake and at home. but we live in georgia so the bugs get in however
@rockeerockey6941
@rockeerockey6941 2 года назад
Here in Florida we have screens for mosquitoes & a plethora of other insects, bugs & reptiles.
@brettbuck7362
@brettbuck7362 2 года назад
@@rockeerockey6941 Like the euphemistically-named "Palmetto bugs" - which sounds a lot better to the Ft. Lauderdale Chamber of Commerce than "gigantic skunk roaches". Just wanting to be your friend, by spewing a foul-smelling liquid at you when threatened. It's not just Florida, almost anywhere in the USA you would be innudated with flies, mosquitos, bees, wasps, dirt daubers, spiders, lizards, scorpions, birds, etc if you didn't have screens on the windows. It's nearly inconceivable that you would just leave the windows open with no screen around here.
@arnoldfossman1701
@arnoldfossman1701 2 года назад
67 year old US citizen here and when I was a kid we often had pill cords on ceiling lamps in bathrooms as well as other rooms. Bathroom lamps often has plug sockets (or receptacles) for shaving some other ceiiing lamps also had receptacles but for purposes other than shaving. Often the lamps with pull cords and receptacles also had wall switches, this allowed the item plugged in there to be left turned on while the light was off. I recall my grandmother having a toilet that had a chain. No carpets in the bathrooms but having grown up in Wisconsin It would have seemed great until the toilet overflowed.
@Sailaway1030
@Sailaway1030 2 года назад
When I grew up our washing machine was in the kitchen the first was an easy spin, the only electric socket was in the light over the mirror in the bathroom when I was a child I stuck a hairpin in the electrical socket and got the shock of my life, my grandmother had a pull chain toilet, yes we had two faucets for hot and cold but only in the bathroom, we did not have air conditioning we used fans the house I grew up in was built in the late 1890’s there was a coal bin in the basement, and even though it had been upgraded in the past the gas fixtures in all the rooms were still operational. As an adult I have carpet in my bathroom but not in my son’s lol
@elultimo102
@elultimo102 2 года назад
The Brit house reminds me of my grandfather's ca.1930 Chicago 3-flat. The laundry appliances and water heater were in the kitchen, as well as one of two gas (originally oil) space heaters. One bath sink had the separate taps, and a ceiling pull-chain light. (They used to advertise an adjustable pipe with an aerator, that would connect the two taps, but may have been in the '60s).
@aspenrebel
@aspenrebel 2 года назад
how about people who put "carpeting" on their toilet seat cover?
@OhPhuckYou
@OhPhuckYou 2 года назад
@@aspenrebel Ugh, I'm so glad that fad died off in the early 00's. I remember people having the ring seat carpeted too. As for carpeted floors? I've seen a couple houses with carpeted bathrooms and the smell of urine was always present. After all, many men tend to miss the toilet while peeing. I'm American by the way.
@sherbear1261
@sherbear1261 2 года назад
How fast we forget!
@rich1383yt
@rich1383yt 2 года назад
#9: sockets in bathrooms: U.S. code requires these to be GFI (Ground Fault Interrupt) circuits - these detect shorts instantly and trip the circuit breaker in the socket to prevent shocks.
@classicrock986
@classicrock986 2 года назад
GfI's have been standard for a long time to
@paulburley7993
@paulburley7993 2 года назад
I won't allow any mats around the toilet area. I call them "piss mats." Absolutely disgusting.
@elultimo102
@elultimo102 2 года назад
@@classicrock986 I have a rather elegant house from the early '80s in Arizona. No GFI's or CO / smoke alarms. Some little projects for me to complete.
@dillzilla4454
@dillzilla4454 2 года назад
If I recall correctly the UK has these at the breaker box rather than the outlet
@HariSeldon913
@HariSeldon913 2 года назад
@@dillzilla4454 The GFI breakers exist in the US, but it seems more common to have them on the outlets. This is likely because you can hit the reset button right there (instant gratification) instead of having to walk all the way to the breaker box and back to reset and be able to use the outlet.
@fff8910
@fff8910 3 года назад
I ADORE these cultural videos. You boost both your language and your knowledge of the culture!
@EnglishwithLucy
@EnglishwithLucy 3 года назад
thank you so much Fernando!!!!
@fff8910
@fff8910 3 года назад
@@EnglishwithLucy When will we hear your Spanish again. I'm delighted every time I listen to you doing it. I'm a native Spanish speaker from Colombia (maybe my name gives a hint). Love ALL your content.
@rafikraf19
@rafikraf19 3 года назад
@@EnglishwithLucy please 🙏 can u recommend a channel of learning how to programme for me pls🌹✨
@rafikraf19
@rafikraf19 3 года назад
OmG ...four likes ...and no response 💔😞
@redrooster1908
@redrooster1908 2 года назад
And shows how some stuff is universal. Nuts. But we all have done it.
@matildamantell
@matildamantell 3 года назад
I live in england and our bathrooms don't have carpet,we have push button toilets I have wall sockets with buttons ,our washing machine is in the kitchen I have light pull cords . We have shaving sockets in bathrooms
@RandomMackem3247
@RandomMackem3247 3 года назад
Same no carpets in the bathroom on a towel on the floor
@armosa
@armosa 2 года назад
You probably live in west London, champagne socialist, liberal elite hotspot. Not England. You need to feel the damp, mouldy smell of bathroom carpets before you call it real England. After you had a shower with that box thingy to adjust your shower temperate that never works of course. Real brits have (weekly!) baths not showers of course.
@minnie2185
@minnie2185 2 года назад
You can buy push button toilets in the states also.
@MichaelWilliams-ro9bm
@MichaelWilliams-ro9bm 2 года назад
@@armosa -so basically you like to sit in your dirt while you bathe?
@susandavey2361
@susandavey2361 2 года назад
It's funny how they think we live 😂
@teresayates8274
@teresayates8274 2 года назад
The screens aren't just for Mosquitoes, they keep ALL insects out of the house. I can't imagine having no air-conditioning or screens.
@HotRod12667
@HotRod12667 2 года назад
Also to keep people and pets inside.
@micheal49
@micheal49 2 года назад
Flies. Flies eat *** and bother people. And they carry all kinds of bacteria, germs, viruses, and other nasty *****.
@aerynstormcrow
@aerynstormcrow 2 года назад
I live in the mountains. We don’t have AC either bc we don’t need it. It never gets over 75 degrees outside so no point. Same for UK. Doesn’t get hot. No need for AC.
@SvenTviking
@SvenTviking 2 года назад
@@aerynstormcrow Er, it does. I have an air conditioner in my bedroom because it gets so hot and humid in the summer.
@haroldinho9930
@haroldinho9930 2 года назад
I live in Ireland. Never seen a mosquito here
@christyrussell596
@christyrussell596 2 года назад
I visited my niece who is stationed in the Air Force. She lived Bury St Edmonds which I thought was an adorable town! I noticed just about everything you spoke about while we were there, but I also noticed other things such as the tiny refrigerators, the charge for a bag at the store, the fact that sooo many people walked everywhere, the many tiny little goodwill type stores, how big and very bright the vegetables were, but the thing that I thought was the oddest was the only place that had an air conditioner was this tiny little bathing suit shop!! It was really warm while we were there and we wore shorts the entire time. The newspaper said it was a “heatwave” and it was only 75 degrees or so. Loved, loved, loved that little town!
@kriss.universe8899
@kriss.universe8899 2 года назад
That is so cool! Thank you you sharing!!🤩😁
@arlascott
@arlascott 2 года назад
I live just 20 minutes from Bury and it is not a little town😅 England is split into counties(like states), counties have towns and cities. I live in Ipswich which is the biggest town of Suffolk - the 3rd *largest* county in England… Bury St Edmunds is also in Suffolk, in fact it’s the 2nd *largest* town in the county. So, it’s the 2nd *largest* town in the 3rd *largest* county in the *entire* country. Not small at all. 😂 x
@BuinidhMoChridheDoAlba
@BuinidhMoChridheDoAlba 2 года назад
It's not worth having air conditioning here. All that money for the sake of one month a year
@lucindapinnellova190
@lucindapinnellova190 2 года назад
Im sorry to say, but Bury isnt really a small town. Bury st. Edmunds is where pretty much everyone i know goes if they need to go shopping because it’s the only place with shops and actual activities nearby. We live about half an hour away in a small town with about 1/4 of it’s population Bury is always the place to go to hang out with friends unless you go to a town like Mildenhall for some reason or other, which still only has a few fast food restaurants, a Sainsbury and some other small shops in the centre.
@lucindapinnellova190
@lucindapinnellova190 2 года назад
funny thought though, i almost had a heart attack when i saw ‘Bury St Edmonds’. It was such a specific town to name in all of England and i just found it quite amusing.
@megu_mareta7850
@megu_mareta7850 3 года назад
Hi, I live in Italy and we have a weird object in our bathrooms called "bidet". It is used to clean your bottom when you need the toilet. When Italians go abroad, they really miss it because it's also useful for women's period and also save a lot of water avoiding to do a shower every time.
@ArianaSol16
@ArianaSol16 3 года назад
En Argentina también tenemos gracias a ustedes... Aunque mí baño es chico para uno, nos las ingeniamos para eso.
@ainaravillada2154
@ainaravillada2154 3 года назад
¡En España también tenemos!
@ninatankardina8644
@ninatankardina8644 3 года назад
Yeah, even in quite small bathrooms! I am astonished by how skilfully it is always put even in kinda small spaces, where it seems no additional place left - and here it is, the bidet, always in its place))
@ChickenSoup736
@ChickenSoup736 3 года назад
Indonesian homes also have the bidet, especially the jet spray bidet. I missed this stuff when I traveling to the USA
@anaritasantiago6581
@anaritasantiago6581 3 года назад
We have bidets in many houses in Brazil.
@bellalogan414
@bellalogan414 2 года назад
Hello! I'm American and lived in England in the early 80's. I found all the things mentioned in your video to be true for me, especially the separate taps! One thing in my house you did not mention was door handles. We have door knobs (round) and my home in England had handles/levers instead. Also the front/exterior door had neither. It had a key hole and a little metal lip to pull the door closed. I love your videos, they bring back fond memories of my time in England.
@Roosmarijn035
@Roosmarijn035 2 года назад
Also quite common in the Netherlands for frond doors: just a key hole and a metal lip to pull the door closed or (for older houses) a knob to close the door. The house I grew up in also had door knobs on all doors (house from 1889) and separate taps everywhere but the kitchen. It was ideal with cats. Nowadays, living in a more modern house, the cats can open the door why hanging on the door handle
@roadie3124
@roadie3124 2 года назад
There was another safety reason for having separate hot and cold taps. When houses were plumber with lead pipes, the hot water could contain more lead than cold water. It was safer to drink cold water with lower lead levels. I don't know if it's still done, but electric plugs used to have fuses in the plug. Shaver sockets in bathrooms had special protection to stop electric shocks.
@morticiaaddams7866
@morticiaaddams7866 2 года назад
Ground Fault Interrupt sockets. Common in the US.
@konaguzzi1
@konaguzzi1 2 года назад
The reason believe it or not with having two separate taps is to do with the potential accidental back flush of contaminated water from the low pressure header tank for the hot water system (the header tanks were often open) and you could get dead rats mice etc. in them causing fouled water, if the mains pressure lines lost water supply or water pressure this could then run back into the town supply(not good at all).
@roadie3124
@roadie3124 2 года назад
@@konaguzzi1 That makes sense. It's also why you're not allowed to install or modify plumbing in your house.
@paulburley7993
@paulburley7993 2 года назад
GFI ( ground fault interrupt) required by code in Canada.
@basilpunton5702
@basilpunton5702 2 года назад
@@morticiaaddams7866 After WW2 there was a drastic shortage of copper in the UK. So there was no GFI in new buildings and they needed a lot of reconstruction. So the plugs had a fuse inside. Most countries have GFI as a standard. Once a standard is set it is then bloody near impossible to change. Although China seems to be changing to the Aus/NZ plugs.
@amyfarah3799
@amyfarah3799 Год назад
Another weird thing: separate taps in the tub, no shower. Having to buy a strange rubber implement to make do!
@markchristy9704
@markchristy9704 3 года назад
I grew up in the States living in a home that was built in the 1920s and all of our "taps" were separate, except for the kitchen sink.
@ozsfi
@ozsfi 3 года назад
I have no socket in the bathroom or airconditioning. I live in an apartment house in Norway built in 1957 so the basin has separate taps. When I moved in, the cold tap was not working but I have not had it repaired, because I can get much colder water from it to drink than from the kitchen sink when there is no water coming to the hot tap. The toilet is quite modern but it has only one button for flushing.
@colinbisasky1134
@colinbisasky1134 3 года назад
@@ozsfi as long as the toilet's up to standards, right? lol. Is there much need for air conditioning in Norway? Wasn't sure how hot it gets there.
@MrMikey1273
@MrMikey1273 2 года назад
When I was a kid here in Pennsylvania some of the older great aunts and uncles or great grand parents homes would have a wall mount or pedistal sink in the bathroom with a separate hot and cold tap. I believe that US homes built after the tweenies or thirties and definitely after WWII had all mixing taps like we have now.
@lancer1993
@lancer1993 2 года назад
I think the 2 taps thing is more down to the age of the house than something specific to the UK, I'm sure older homes here in Australia have them if they haven't been renovated.
@JeffDeWitt
@JeffDeWitt 2 года назад
@@MrMikey1273 There is a cottage in my family that was built over a century ago, and it has separate taps in the bathroom. Come to think of it my Grandparents house did too, that house was built in the 30's.
@freedomfighter5957
@freedomfighter5957 3 года назад
I'm in the UK and when I lived in my flat, the bathroom had no window. The light was turned on by a pull cord, which also set off the extractor fan.
@philthefarrier9469
@philthefarrier9469 3 года назад
The string is to isolate you from electric switches or the switch is outside the bathroom, so you don’t get zapped when wet after a bath or shower
@Trish....
@Trish.... 3 года назад
In the US, we call that a vent, or fart fan lol
@freedomfighter5957
@freedomfighter5957 3 года назад
Yes that's right. The annoying thing was that the extractor fan would keep going long after the light was switched off. As the bedroom was right next to the bathroom it was very noisy. 😂
@mikecumbo7531
@mikecumbo7531 2 года назад
@@freedomfighter5957 in the US you can have a timer switch on your exhaust fan instead of a plain on/off switch. The switch in the one powder room has five buttons, #1 turns fan on for 5 minutes, #2 15 minutes, #3 30 minutes, #4 is 60 minutes, the fifth switch turns the fan on or off, no timer function.
@seanrodgers1839
@seanrodgers1839 2 года назад
In Canada we have GFCI sockets in the bathroom. Ground fault circuit interruptor, there's a circuit breaker in the socket. These shut off at the first hint of a short, like water getting in, so no one can be electrocuted.
@improvisiongaming5385
@improvisiongaming5385 2 года назад
We have that also but we call it a fuse, if theres no fuse in your plug the appliance in nearly most if not all cases wont work
@yougottabekidding7476
@yougottabekidding7476 Год назад
Thank you for this video. As an American living in the lovely UK I have noticed , of course, all that you have spoken about. The two things that baffled me were the no outlets in the bathrooms and also no screens on the windows. When I was having new windows put in I asked the window guy about screens and he just looked at me blankly. We don't have mosquitos where I live but we do have flies and bees. It would be so much better if there were window screens. As far as the bathroom plugs go, I found them to be a minor inconvenience, because in America we have plug outlets all over the bathroom, haha. Doesn't sound too safe though! Saying all of that, I LOVE the UK and wouldn't live anywhere else! Thanks again for your informative videos!
@douglasasselstine7497
@douglasasselstine7497 3 года назад
I live in Canada....Raised in Britain...1941-1950....I'm 79 and you brought back so many memories of things that I'd almost forgotten....thanks for the memory!
@ojjenkins7110
@ojjenkins7110 3 года назад
Have you watched lost in the pond?
@cassandra8620
@cassandra8620 2 года назад
Because the rest of the world moved on
@rob5197
@rob5197 2 года назад
Ya outside toilets which you can see to these days in very old terraced houses
@ghostly.creature
@ghostly.creature 3 года назад
I installed mosquito nets just to prevent bugs, wasps and bees getting in because I'm scared of them, so now I feel much more relaxed when the window is open
@SwirlingSoul
@SwirlingSoul 3 года назад
Same!
@elatheone4530
@elatheone4530 3 года назад
And the sams here!
@gordbaker896
@gordbaker896 3 года назад
How do stray cats and bats get in?
@em7ee230
@em7ee230 2 года назад
most UK windows open out the way so mesh's would need to be on the inside
@keescouprie5968
@keescouprie5968 Год назад
We used to have a chain pull toilet flusher in the house where I grew up (in the Netherlands). Later we moved to a house with a high mounted water tank, but you had to pull down the pipe (weird, I know) to flush. My father mounted an old doorbell with a chain right next to the water tank. Always fun when we had unexpecting guests.
@jsullivan9238
@jsullivan9238 2 года назад
It may seem strange, but the first household oddity I noticed in the UK was door handles. They were very rare in the US in the 70s but everywhere in the UK and Europe.
@catherineek9995
@catherineek9995 3 года назад
In Scandinavia, at least in Finland and Sweden, we usually have the washing machine (and tumbler) in the bathroom. One family houses normally have a utility room with washing machine etc.
@ylpea5170
@ylpea5170 3 года назад
And if your washing machine is leaking for some reason, there‘s no drama as there is a drain at the lowest point of the bathroom. Oh how I miss Finland!
@spiritwolf7
@spiritwolf7 3 года назад
And we also have the light switch in the bathroom,i have switch near the shower,so can turn on or off while i taking a shower..lol..live in sweden
@paulburley7993
@paulburley7993 2 года назад
@@ylpea5170 Yes!! $18,000.00 later I now have a floor drain installed in my laundry room!!🙄🇨🇦
@viktoriiav4337
@viktoriiav4337 3 года назад
In Russia we often have a washing-mashine in the bathroom :) .. the light switch is on the outside of the bathroom. :)
@towaritch
@towaritch 3 года назад
France here. Washing machine in garage if you're in a 🏠.
@ChickenSoup736
@ChickenSoup736 3 года назад
Indonesia here. The light switch in my house is also on the outside of the bathroom
@barbmcbride2653
@barbmcbride2653 2 года назад
FYI, we have two prong plugs in Canada, you cannot plug them in either way. One prong is wider. I think you used to be able to turn them.
@auroraparker2689
@auroraparker2689 2 года назад
It’s not bout Canada mate
@barbmcbride2653
@barbmcbride2653 2 года назад
@@auroraparker2689, you clearly don't listen well, mate!
@sherrygawith6839
@sherrygawith6839 2 года назад
I was fortunate enough to travel to the UK back in 1999. We have a friend who was from Liverpool so he schooled us on a lot of the cultural differences before we went. However, the two oddest things we found were: you would sometimes have to put a pound coin in the meter to get electricity (this happened in several places), but the oddest and most confusing was in a little resort fishing town. There was a big red button on the wall between the bathroom and the living room area. We had six people staying there and four of them took either ice cold showers or took a dish pan from the kitchen filled with hot water into the bathroom and just washed that way, until someone decided to push that big red button and found that it activated the hot water in the bathroom. Crazy 😜
@jurgentreue1200
@jurgentreue1200 3 года назад
Many Australian appliances also have three prong plugs. Especially with high wattage appliances. The bottom prong is the earth and is used with appliances that aren't double insulated. It's a safety feature. Australian wall sockets also have an on/off switch.
@valeriedavidson2785
@valeriedavidson2785 2 года назад
That is because it has had British influence. All ex British colonies have British type plugs.
@auroraparker2689
@auroraparker2689 2 года назад
Half the time we only use the top two prongs on it
@Emy53
@Emy53 3 года назад
Ehen I lived in Brooklyn, we lived in an old house that had a chain to flush the toilet. We even had a bathtub in the kitchen that doubled as a table. It had a cover when not in use.
@durburbur4949
@durburbur4949 3 года назад
Wow, that's pretty cool =)
@Stiglr
@Stiglr 3 года назад
One of the highlights of the classic 1972 movie, The Godfather is the scene where Tessio describes "the chain thing" in the bathroom as a place to plant a gun for Michael Corleone, so he can bump off the rival mobster and the police captain who was protecting him. "Louie's Restaurant" was also in The Bronx!! :)
@dr.jamesolack8504
@dr.jamesolack8504 2 года назад
@Amelia Wojnicz Must have been a tall bathtub to double as a table.
@zuke-ci4vd
@zuke-ci4vd Год назад
As a lifelong American I was looking forwards to learning some new English vocabulary. Imagine my joy in having understood every word you said! I guess watching all those episodes of Monty Phyton's Flying Circus finally paid off!
@jrivers0005
@jrivers0005 2 года назад
In my area of the US, people often have "HVAC" systems in their homes. The units heat, ventilate, and cool homes, so there is a measure of convenience, but when I upgraded mine--it cost me nearly $10k... Eek!
@jengentry06
@jengentry06 3 года назад
I'm from the US and my grandparents on my mom side always lived in homes with carpeted bathrooms. It was weird. But as I kid, I thought it was normal.
@marisagonzalez1543
@marisagonzalez1543 3 года назад
In Mexico City we don't have air conditioning nor heater either. It is never too hot for having air condition in the house, but winter can be very chilly.
@edwardholbrook8351
@edwardholbrook8351 2 года назад
I’ve lived in homes that had the light switch outside the bathroom, & bathrooms that only had the outlet in the mirror. Since we don’t have switches that let us cut off the electricity supply to countertop appliances, we just leave them plugged in. Air conditioning is a must here.
@adventureridergirl
@adventureridergirl 2 года назад
We have washer/dryer combo units in the States as well, but they're extremely uncommon outside of RVs and yachts. I've never had one in a house but I did have one in my Class A RV before I sold it and I currently have one on my yacht. The one in my RV was a Smeg and it worked fairly well but the one on my yacht is Miele and it works nearly as well as my household washer and dryer.
@serena1785
@serena1785 2 года назад
I am an American and grew up in a home that was built in 1905. We had hot and cold separate taps in our bathroom. It had no electric outlets either. Our washing machine was in the kitchen, my mom hung clothes on a clothes line outside to dry, we did not have air conditioning either. We also had a coal furnace and a coal bin in the cellar. The coal truck would arrive with the coal it was then dispensed down a chute into through basement window into the coal bin. Hmmmm I wonder if an Englishman built our home. No this is the way most homes were in America way back when👍🏻
@auroraparker2689
@auroraparker2689 2 года назад
Whats a cellar?
@BS-ns8hb
@BS-ns8hb 2 года назад
@Aurora Parker you might call it a basement? It’s the room (or space) underneath the house
@auroraparker2689
@auroraparker2689 2 года назад
@@BS-ns8hb oh I don’t know what we call it I’ve forgotten might be basement but I know that’s what Brit’s call it
@purplemoonlight1356
@purplemoonlight1356 2 года назад
I'm british and remember going to my friends house for the first time and went to use the bathroom which had carpet as a floor! Thought that was very strange and my opinions not changed 15 years later lol
@puunkim8465
@puunkim8465 Год назад
Thank you so much for this video, Lucy. I've been watching lots of your videos and it really does wonders for me. To me, this one is not only good to learn something new about weird British things but also a good exercise to pracrice listening. Thank you so so much again. Oh, one thing I forgot, I'm 17 and I definitely will have to learn a lot of things from you in the future.
@turnbullstravels735
@turnbullstravels735 Год назад
American here, with loads of British relatives. I totally agree with carpeted bathrooms, separate taps (one of my Biggest pet peeves), yucky push button toilets, switches on the plugs (me: why isn’t this light turning on?), and as for air con…I understand that, but pairing that with no window screens makes no sense!
@DmanAS1989
@DmanAS1989 3 года назад
My lord. I’ve just had the biggest hit of nostalgia the moment you mentioned light cord switches. I would have not remembered that any other way 😅
@jwb52z9
@jwb52z9 3 года назад
I haven't seen one of those in an American home since the early 80s and then the home was decades old already.
@inamiyagi8990
@inamiyagi8990 3 года назад
So funny! Nostalgia, when chain pull toilet flushes come around!👵
@dr.jamesolack8504
@dr.jamesolack8504 2 года назад
@elook “….the biggest hit of nostalgia….” I recall from the late 60s, we called that a “flashback”. Then again, there was a considerable amount of LSD going around. At the age of 69, I truly miss those days…..
@ronmasters751
@ronmasters751 2 года назад
Worked as an expat in London for several years, lived in a few old suburban places. Loved it. One kitchen had a tap with two channels in one pipe to keep hot & cold separate until they exited. And a geyser! Incomprehensible.
@Everettf99
@Everettf99 2 года назад
I just found your channel. I’m an American so obviously understanding English isn’t a concern for me. However, I really enjoy hearing what you have to say about English culture. I’m a huge Anglophile and I hope someday to make it there.
@yuvalpn8838
@yuvalpn8838 Год назад
Talking about electric sockets in bathrooms, I have seen the most unbelievably location for electric socket INSIDE the shower space. That was in a small family run hotel in Kutaisi, Georgia. This hotel had other weird things, for example, the room door lock had which had the key side inside the room and the handle (key-less) side on the corridor side. Someone who built this place had too much Chacha (A Locally made alcoholic drink with 50%+ alcohol).
@bublikitv2943
@bublikitv2943 9 месяцев назад
😂
@melikesahin4355
@melikesahin4355 3 года назад
I can't stop smiling while watching your new videos, I loved this new format. The fun of your English videos can be compared to your vlogs, amazing!
@EnglishwithLucy
@EnglishwithLucy 3 года назад
so lovely Melike! thank you!
@bencekiss4693
@bencekiss4693 2 года назад
Same! I was also smiling during the whole video! I really enjoyed it☺️
@adrianfs6739
@adrianfs6739 3 года назад
I'm Spanish and I lived in Brighton for a couple of years. The first time I went to a toilet I spent like half an hour trying to find the light. How I would imagin that the light turns on pulling a cord! Never seen this before
@quinomonte
@quinomonte 3 года назад
I lived in Brighton too.wicked place!!!👍🏽
@fabianachavez7338
@fabianachavez7338 3 года назад
🤣
@adrianfs6739
@adrianfs6739 3 года назад
@@quinomonte I loved Brighton, so much fun
@lmhlmh6015
@lmhlmh6015 3 года назад
@@quinomonte U can also see the same switch in the Chinese countryside.
@johnspikes8102
@johnspikes8102 3 года назад
On visiting Brussels, we checked into our hotel room at night and spent 10 minutes trying to figure out how to turn on any lights. No one had mentioned that the key card had to be placed in a specific slot by the door to engage the lights in the room. I guess this saved them money by not allowing you to go out and leave a light on in your room.
@biggiebaby3541
@biggiebaby3541 2 года назад
In Tennessee: I was talking to a old timer some years back, this guy was born probably around the turn of the century. I asked him what was the best invention he's seen come about. He thought for a minute and said one word: screens.
@Brandyalla
@Brandyalla 2 года назад
I live in the US, and the place I live in now came with a combo washer/dryer machine. I love it. The dryer is a little finicky, but it works very well most of the time. No more forgetting I did laundry and ending up having to rewash the load!
@anavitale8090
@anavitale8090 3 года назад
Once in England I had to call the landlord because I couldn't open the front door of the house I rented, it was then I discovered that they turn the key in the opposite direction. 🤔
@faheemmajid4646
@faheemmajid4646 3 года назад
😂😂😂
@dr.jamesolack8504
@dr.jamesolack8504 2 года назад
@@faheemmajid4646 😴😴😴
@TheLizardKing1967
@TheLizardKing1967 3 года назад
Hey Lucy, i live in South Carolina in the states and we always had carpet in our bathrooms. My mom was born and raised on the Eastern shore of Maryland where there was a heavy British influence. My 89 year old mom still hangs her wash outside on a clothes line.
@jwb52z9
@jwb52z9 3 года назад
Carpet in American bathrooms was a thing before the 80s, so it does still happen in older homes around the nation.
@jeannetteaugstein3793
@jeannetteaugstein3793 3 года назад
Your mum is a clever woman. Hanging your laundry 🧺 outside is smart and economically perfect. We all ought to do the same. You’ll find lots of people doing this in many different countries.
@jljordan1
@jljordan1 3 года назад
@@jeannetteaugstein3793 I did this once, and ended up with insects in my laundry
@jeannetteaugstein3793
@jeannetteaugstein3793 3 года назад
@@jljordan1 yes, it can happen but not all the time.
@roustus66
@roustus66 3 года назад
Most people in rural areas of Australia, and many in the city also, hang their washing on the clothesline to dry. I have a drier (it's now 40 years old & still going) which I use maybe 3-4 times a year when I'm desperate.
@Whitbypoppers
@Whitbypoppers 2 года назад
In Canada, where I’ve lived on both coasts, I never lived with air conditioning until I moved to Ontario. A/C is very common in Central Canada, but elsewhere, it’s as you describe for the UK.
@majorramsey3k
@majorramsey3k 2 года назад
I live in Atlantic Canada, nearly everyone has air conditioning.
@dallasoch4040
@dallasoch4040 2 года назад
A lot of the older house stuff we have in old homes here. Like the 2 water faucets in the sink, pull cord lights, electrical outlets on the light in bathroom etc. But I was always curious about the washing machine & dryer in the kitchen. What I've seen with small apartments & duplexes or homes with no room for a laundry room is they'll have a small closet in the hallway where they have a washer & dryer, sometimes stacked
@ward1tony
@ward1tony 3 года назад
Hi Lucy, I am from Australia and we have similar rules regarding electricity regulations. I think the reason why we and the UK have these rules is that we run on a 240 volt system that will kill you if you accidentally touch a wire. In the US and other countries they tend to run on a 110 volt system that will give you a shock but not kill a person who touches a wire. Regards, Tony
@susanbrookes9719
@susanbrookes9719 3 года назад
That's a myth. It's the amps that kill you, not the voltage. As you will know, watts = volts x amps. If an appliance draws 480 watts, then in Britain it will draw 2 amps, but in the US it will draw 480/110 = 4.4 amps. I'm English, and I moved to California 45 years ago. I had several electrical appliances that would work on either voltage at the click of a switch. What they didn't tell me is that, when you move the switch to the lower voltage you have to increase the size of the fuses, or they will blow. 240 volts is much safer than 110 volts.
@taxidude
@taxidude 3 года назад
The problem with half the voltage is that you have to run your appliances at twice the current so you have to use twice as much copper in your cabling and in your appliances. The odd thing is that US homes do have a 220 volt supply but they centre tap the output making it into a 2 x 110 volt supply!
@rwsrwsrwt
@rwsrwsrwt 3 года назад
@@susanbrookes9719 It’s not a real myth. Even if it is the current and not the voltage that kills you, it’s not the current running through the wires you’re touching that matters, but the current that eventually runs through your body. That depends on the resistance of your body and since the current is equal to the voltage divided by the resistance the risk of a fatal shock increases with a higher voltage.
@marbleman52
@marbleman52 3 года назад
@@susanbrookes9719 Correct...220-240 volts draws just 1/2 the amps of 110-115 V circuits, and so the electricity cost will be cheaper. Also, I changed over my wood working table saw from the standard 110V to run on 220V. The saw now draws 1/2 the amps but is more powerful and cuts through the wood a lot easier.
@toddlerj102
@toddlerj102 3 года назад
Ashes to ashes dust to dust, if the voltage don't get you the ampage must.
@KTLam
@KTLam 3 года назад
Lucy, you can read me a telephonebook...your voice combined with the perfect English is so soothing. Also, I like the typical British humor that flashes every now and then. Like!
@pclayton5063
@pclayton5063 2 года назад
All those mentioned too but the thing I remember about my uncle's house in Cambridge was he had a power meter inside the house, in the hallway, that he would put coins in to keep the power on. I remember him telling me that when they were away he had to feed lots of coins into it to keep the power on for the fridge, etc. On my last visit (1985) that meter was gone.
@deleinedean7088
@deleinedean7088 2 года назад
Gas or electric meters. Always kept 50p for the meters
@dallasoch4040
@dallasoch4040 2 года назад
That's meat
@moerahman6749
@moerahman6749 2 года назад
I once visited someone at their charming oak house in the British countryside and was equally confused and amused by the sight of a sink in one of the bedrooms. Lol. And it worked!
@paulburley7993
@paulburley7993 2 года назад
When I was growing up in Canada we had sinks in bedroom. Makes sense because you didn't monopolize the (usually) only one bathroom. Now most homes have 2 or 3 or more bathrooms.
@simonarcher1510
@simonarcher1510 3 года назад
Lucy, I remember the tank in the loft contained cold water, which wasn’t safe to drink, as you describe. We once had a bird on ours too. The tank only served the bathrooms, and it was up there to create pressure. The hot water probably came from your boiler, that also heated the radiators, which wasn’t safe to drink either. The cold water downstairs was safe to drink because it came straight from the “mains”.
@seaskimmer
@seaskimmer 3 года назад
Spot on.
@kenthepen4857
@kenthepen4857 3 года назад
Many years ago I was in the loft of a very large, and very old country house. The water storage tank for the hot water boiler was huge and made of slate. In it was the skeleton of a cat, probably been there for many years. Having separate taps was a wise decision.
@spencerwilton5831
@spencerwilton5831 2 года назад
O K it was probably installed in the Victorian era. Water supplies were intermittent at best, and they needed storage tanks to deliver water even when the main supply was interrupted. Plus, they lacked the technology to produce cylinders that could withstand mains water pressure and yet still be reasonably light and corrosion proof. Hot water was stored in copper cylinders, which could not withstand mains pressure so was fed from a loft tank.
@danpate3825
@danpate3825 2 года назад
What an eloquent received pronunciation accent. I could listen to our Lucy all day.
@erinw8787
@erinw8787 2 года назад
As an Aussie yes we have screens on our windows but they aren’t just to keep out bugs they provide an extra layer of security to your home .
@ohmightywez
@ohmightywez 2 года назад
Not having a light switch inside the bathroom was something I forgot about over and over. I usually travel to the UK once a year for work and I would walk into the bathroom and close the door while I groped around on the wall in the dark looking for the switch. I felt foolish every time I forgot.
@digitalsurfer5458
@digitalsurfer5458 3 года назад
I can listen to Lucy for hours and hours. (I am reading the above sentence and, in my mind imagining it in the voice of Lucy, so that it sounds better than it would if I were to speak it.)
@familiecole
@familiecole 2 года назад
A bathroom is divided into zone 0, zone 1, zone 2 and everywhere else, the zones relating to the proximity to a source of water, such as a tap. You can place a pull cord anywhere as there is no danger involved in their use. A plate switch, however, must be placed a minimum of three meters from the boundary of all zone 1 areas as there is a closer proximity to the source of danger.
@3rdworlds
@3rdworlds 2 года назад
Why don't they simply use GFCI sockets?
@ericmcrae7758
@ericmcrae7758 2 года назад
@@3rdworlds Don't forget in the UK our mains voltage is 220 - 240Volts but USA is mainly 110 -120V but they do have 240V from 2 phases.
@grahamb7947
@grahamb7947 Год назад
As a British person, I legit forgot about the light pull cords in bathrooms. I was about to ask you wtf kind of house you grew up in, but then I remembered, I once set off the NHS alarm at my grandparents bungalow after pulling on their red NHS cord thinking it was the light switch, because my council house formerly had such a light cord in the bathroom. Not only that, but we also had the cords in bedrooms, too! Made turning lights on and off when going to sleep/waking up so easy and safe... but then the councils just had to make life harder for everyone and remove them. Get out of bed when you're finally sleepy to turn off the light... WELL DAMN, NOW I'M BLOODY AWAKE AGAIN BECAUSE I GOT OUT OF BED!!! Then there were the huge cisterns in the bathroom airing cupboards which I thankfully saw get retired. Having to flip a switch to turn hot water on, and wait an hour for the cistern to heat up so you could take a bath... not fun lol
@ian9outof10
@ian9outof10 3 года назад
There's a slight error here, I think. It was cold water that was usually stored in the loft/attic. Hot water was usually kept in the "airing cupboard" in a gigantic insulated cylinder. The loft tank was for cold water, and you shouldn't drink from it for exactly the reaon you mentioned (the hot water is sealed, to keep the heat in, but probably still not drinkable). My understanding of the cold tank's purpose was that pressure was not usually good enough to service the upstairs, so a tank was kept for toilet flushing and filling the bath. That meant you had one tap, usually the kitchen, that was safe drinking water from the mains. The rest would be for hand-washing or bathing only, and feed the rest of the taps.
@MaggieValera
@MaggieValera 2 года назад
With the exception of the washer/dryer in the kitchen I've had everything you've listed in homes I've lived in here in the United States. It all depends on how old the building is. I do currently have a washer and a tumble dryer in my kitchen though. This single unit washer/dryer is rather new in the US, and hugely expensive. The first time I ever saw one of those it was in the upscale motorhomes. I have however also had a washer & dryer that was stacked, along with an old fashioned ringer washer.
@richardwilson1234
@richardwilson1234 Год назад
I learnt something new today and I'm English. I've never noticed that one of the prongs on a plug is longer than the others. Thanks for explaining 😊
@mom23js
@mom23js 2 года назад
Back in the day (50s to 80s) it was not uncommon to find carpet in a united states bathroom. My grandma had carpet in her bathroom. And also a lot of chains as switches.. Seems like a lot of UK trends didnt die out until very recently here in the US. also this house was in California.. Loved this video. I am so happy RU-vid did something right for once and recommended you to me💜🖤.
@eileensilverstein5819
@eileensilverstein5819 Год назад
I'm in NJ and the home I grew up in during the 1970s and 80s originally had carpet in all three bathrooms as well as in the kitchen, all done by the original owners (the house was built in the mid-1960s). My parents got rid of that carpet within the first year of living there; it was NOT hygienic!
@lucylamolina5899
@lucylamolina5899 3 года назад
So spot on ! A Brazilian here married to an English man and noticed all of this .
@SavageGothamChess
@SavageGothamChess 3 года назад
I'd definitely rate this video as underrated. I absolutely love these lessons.
@anameclips3395
@anameclips3395 3 года назад
Thank you
@commonsense548
@commonsense548 3 года назад
Problem is that most of what she talks about is JUST PLAIN WRONG. I am a Brit but have lived in the USA for 51 years. She is WRONG about the electrical plugs and the plumbing with 2 taps. Neither does she understand much about the USA Read my comments at the beginning of these comments.
@yinhannasjournal
@yinhannasjournal 3 года назад
Same!
@firsttuna2535
@firsttuna2535 2 года назад
I love your channel so much. It really help me improve my listening skill and increase vocabulary. Thank you so much.
@garyronan5568
@garyronan5568 2 года назад
Good day Ms. Lucy. Your comment on mosquitoes makes me wonder if you have type O blood? A study that I read about hypothesized that people with type O blood attract more mosquitoes. As I have type O+ blood and live in Minnesota I can confirm that this is very true as mosquitoes absolutely love me! Just found your channel and I will be watching more of your videos in the future. You have a very lovely manner. Take care and much luck in your endeavors.
@ishrakalvi4446
@ishrakalvi4446 3 года назад
Most satisfied vlogger in youtube and one of the most potential teachers i have met till now......... Well wishes from 🇧🇩😊😊
@xsardas1999
@xsardas1999 3 года назад
2:02 "in UK it gets very cold" also UK, running water lines on elevation. It is not cold unleas it passes -25C.
@MsVarie
@MsVarie 2 года назад
I love the separate hot and cold taps I get upset when we have to renovate and we have all these modern taps
@LindseyN1223
@LindseyN1223 2 года назад
Older manufactured homes (trailers, mobile homes) in the US often have carpet in the bathrooms if they were never renovated. My dad still lives in the same manufactured home that he bought with my mother in 1994, and it still has the same plum carpet in both bathrooms. It's a pretty color even by today's home decor standards, but there's still an "ick" factor involved.
@keelyharris4600
@keelyharris4600 2 года назад
I like the idea of carpet in the bathroom, especially in houses like mine where it gets crazy cold. However, it's not practical. If your kid gets water on the floor while taking a bath (like most kids do) or your toilet overflows, your bathroom is ruined! At least toilet seat covers and floor mats can be washed.
@LindseyN1223
@LindseyN1223 2 года назад
@@keelyharris4600 same here, I like the idea of it but the reality of it isn’t practical.
@karinelfwing9095
@karinelfwing9095 3 года назад
In Sweden we also have small houses and small apartments. But we put our washing machines in the bathroom, not the kitchen... If you live in a apartment you to have access to a common washing room that the tenants share so you have to book time..
@camanchacos
@camanchacos 3 года назад
And this is the weirdest thing about Sweden (where I've been living for over three years). These trips with a laundry bag - in winter, in the snow to the building with a laundry room. Nightmare!
@k.j.hulander2204
@k.j.hulander2204 3 года назад
That’s to do with Sweden’s insanely strict insurance policies for water damage. All bathrooms in Sweden must be wet rooms where all surfaces can withstand at the very least a showering of water and where the floor must withstand a leak with water sitting on the floor without leaking through. This makes the bathroom and ideal space to put the washing machine as the potential economic consequences of a leak in a living area such as the kitchen could be catastrophic-tens of thousands of pounds in renovation costs and no insurance money to cover it.
@constanzagarcia348
@constanzagarcia348 3 года назад
Here in Spain, we have washing machines in the kitchen. It blow my mind! In Argentina, we have a room specially for laundry.
@Mrgaston016
@Mrgaston016 3 года назад
In Uruguay 🇺🇾 you find both cases.
@andyt8216
@andyt8216 3 года назад
That's good to know. Maybe it is more widespread in the rest of Europe, and not just a British thing.
@letitiakearney2423
@letitiakearney2423 3 года назад
@@andyt8216 I have a utility room separate from my kitchen and most of all my friends have their laundry rooms away from the kitchens. I’m in Northern Ireland. All new houses have them. My house is twenty years old and have a big one.
@loonyspangles8173
@loonyspangles8173 3 года назад
I have a washing machine in my kitchen and a tumble dryer outside in a cupboard. Can't imagine what foreigners think 😂😂
@marcelfischer7
@marcelfischer7 4 месяца назад
Hi Lucy, I just came across your channel. Both very entertaining and very useful for improving my English. Thank you so much indeed! In my opinion, one of the weirdest but very useful things in English homes is that your windows open to the outside. I prefer the system along with being able to adjust and fix the angle of the window. Great "invention"! In Switzerland, where windows open inwards, you should never leave anything near a window, especially that crystal vase.
@matteoconcato6350
@matteoconcato6350 Год назад
You forgot to say that the staircase going in the UK is very narrow, so you can't place all your foot plant on a step. So especially when walking down the stairs, you can't use your toes to keep your balance. You can find that not only in private houses but also in public buildings.
@PhongTran-tr4sv
@PhongTran-tr4sv 3 года назад
I could not turn my head around why UK has 2 saperate hot and cold taps until watching your video, and my house also has light pull cord in the bathroom. Great job, Lucy
@smokescreen2146
@smokescreen2146 3 года назад
what's the tap like in nam
@conlon4332
@conlon4332 3 года назад
The way I cope with the heat is to shut all the doors, windows, and curtains during the day and open them at night. A well insulated house will help to keep it cool if you shut the heat out like it keeps it warm in winter if you shut the cold out.
@hannahbanana9901
@hannahbanana9901 3 года назад
Same and close the curtains. Also turning the fan on
@rich7447
@rich7447 2 года назад
Assuming that it cools down all that much at night.
@conlon4332
@conlon4332 2 года назад
@@rich7447 It generally does get quite a lot cooler at night. Hot days normally have clear skies which make for colder nights.
@paulburley7993
@paulburley7993 2 года назад
@@conlon4332 Doesn't work for us here in Southern Ontario and Quebec. It just doesn't cool off here at night and even if it does the humidity is very high. You either have A/C or you suffer.
@sydneyliu4825
@sydneyliu4825 2 года назад
@@conlon4332 What if it's cloudy and 30+ degrees celcius in the day and 29 at night?
@Jaede86
@Jaede86 2 года назад
Not sure if this has been mentioned. But in the US plugs that have two prongs, one is sometimes bigger so you can't flip them either way. And there's different three prong plugs, standard one is like the two prong but with a ground prong.
@misseselise3864
@misseselise3864 2 года назад
yeah, some appliances have three prongs. the only example i can think of right now is hairdryers
@lareeseblaque8303
@lareeseblaque8303 2 года назад
Absolutely.
@azmanomar7054
@azmanomar7054 2 года назад
We do have some of these things here in Malaysia, courtesy of the Brits, one that we're truly thankful for is the lingua franca and other is what's Lucy listed in this videos. And yes the toilet flush bothers me too!
@aliciagomezpastor9844
@aliciagomezpastor9844 3 года назад
Your video brought up a lot of memories from my time living in the UK. Although most of the things you mention drove me crazy, I kind of miss them.
@MrFlint51
@MrFlint51 3 года назад
Most bathrooms with separate taps have a plug that goes into the basin so you can mix the water to the desired temperature
@lizbignell7813
@lizbignell7813 3 года назад
I like to think that the plug is an intelligence test for foreigners…. Joke!
@michaelmullin3585
@michaelmullin3585 3 года назад
That is sooooo 1930's.
@zantas-handle
@zantas-handle 3 года назад
@A A Yes, the smooth ceramic basin would be riddled with germs... if only there was some way to wash it! ;)
@zantas-handle
@zantas-handle 3 года назад
@A A Ah yes, great. I use a flame-thrower. Then I smash the basin and have it replaced every day. It's the only way to be REALLY sure! ;)
@gloriaanderson8123
@gloriaanderson8123 3 года назад
We used to cup our hands together, turn on both taps, go to the cold first, then the hot to get the desired temperature.
@lisaspikes4291
@lisaspikes4291 2 года назад
I’ve seen most of these things in the USA. The thing I noticed when I visited my brother in the UK was how odd his kitchen was. The main part of the kitchen looked pretty normal. Cabinets, refrigerator and countertop. But there was no sink. The sink, the stove and the washer were in a separate room off of the kitchen. Odd.
@leftmono1016
@leftmono1016 2 года назад
That’s pretty strange, I’m in the U.K. and have never seen that!
@Mii..
@Mii.. 2 года назад
What? Sounds weird
@greywizard2557
@greywizard2557 2 года назад
That would be a utility room. They went out of fashion quite some time ago. However it's unusual for the cooker (stove) to be fitted there.
@tiki_riot
@tiki_riot 2 года назад
Yeah that’s common in Victorian houses
@evb.4476
@evb.4476 2 года назад
Some house here in USA back in the 80 did have carpet in there bathrooms, at park bathroom sinks still come with sepite hot and cold. And Elementary School also had those types of sinks. I believe in the early 1920 in New York did us those type of toilets. My house in Arizona in USA still has the plug above the mirror. And the other is on the light fixture on the ceiling! Never understood why they put it there.
@karamitroalisa8787
@karamitroalisa8787 3 года назад
I adore those culture.... You brought back memories 😊
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@karamitroalisa8787 3 года назад
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@mccarthykurt9714 3 года назад
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@yashikarathi1176
@yashikarathi1176 3 года назад
"Small flush for small business, big flush for big business😂😂" Oh lucy!! the editing is very interactive too
@judgejudyslover
@judgejudyslover 3 года назад
Too bad it’s wrong, the small flush is for big business and the big button is for small business.it’s bigger because you mostly go for a wee so you’ll need the bigger one more often. Not wasting so much water.
@RaymondHng
@RaymondHng 3 года назад
Big business is "dropping anchor".
@Trish....
@Trish.... 3 года назад
Fyi small children in the US call it a potty, & use that as a verb, ie "I need to go potty."
@judgejudyslover
@judgejudyslover 3 года назад
@@Trish.... a potty is a container toddlers use to potty plain.
@ninatankardina8644
@ninatankardina8644 3 года назад
Yeah, and also you can say "number one" and "number two"))
@FlikkieFloekieFlakkie
@FlikkieFloekieFlakkie 2 года назад
Its funny how I tried to explain my gf from London what a faucet is. And at some point I even started to question myself if I was even right about it. As soon as she understood what I was trying to say, she said: "We're just calling it the sink" And then I was so confused because obviously the sink is the structure that is holding the water for doing dishes. Its the place for the water to flow into. So I asked her where does the water come out from? What do you call the tube-like thing? She said: "yeah I don't know we just call it the sink" I was at the brink of giving up on this but then saw this video and went back to my gf and said very proudly: "It's a tap! The thing where the water flows out of is called a tap in the UK!" She said: "Ohw yeah I know..." Me: 🤨 (why would you call it the sink then?)
@itsallrover6661
@itsallrover6661 2 года назад
She's just an idiot. We know what a faucet is xD
@queenslanddiva
@queenslanddiva 2 года назад
it's a tap. So much easier to say
@blinski1
@blinski1 2 года назад
@@itsallrover6661 She might be an idiot, of course, but she might be simply very atechnical person. If it's not for our apartment renovation and constantly talking about every detail with contructors and technitians, my girlfriend also wouldn't know how to call any specific thing in a house, just like she still cannot recognize any part of the car (she constantly confuses bumper with fender) even though she has her licence for almost 20 years now.
@BedsitBob
@BedsitBob 2 года назад
It's not actually a sink. A sink goes in the kitchen. In the bathroom, it's a Basin.
@belkyhernandez8281
@belkyhernandez8281 2 года назад
Maybe because you said both the hit and cold water mix there and as the video explained that happens in the sink in the UK. Maybe she had never seen a tap with both hot and cold together?
@pianostudy4403
@pianostudy4403 2 года назад
I enjoyed this video immensely. I’ve been to the U.K. (I’m in U.S.) and wondered about the switches on the plugs. Love hearing your accent too. (The summer months here in the humid south-“muggy” is a more descriptive word-is very uncomfortable. Grateful to have A/C 😎.)
@luttenoop2534
@luttenoop2534 3 года назад
I am from Hong Kong . As a UK colony, we usually share the same traditional habits like toilets , tap s , plus, washing machine location with you.
@jamiewulfyr4607
@jamiewulfyr4607 2 года назад
I remember being told not to drink from the hot tap as a child. 😂
@dr.jamesolack8504
@dr.jamesolack8504 2 года назад
I can recall visiting my aunt and uncle 60+ years ago on their farm. No running water. No indoor toilet. Heat provided by a big pot-bellied stove in the kitchen. I think it burned wood. Many things were cooked on that old stove. Well, in a cast iron skillet on the stove. There was a water pump in the front yard and one in the back yard. I think it was high-class to have 2 water pumps! And the telephone was a party-line. If you picked up the phone, you might be listening to a conversation between your neighbors. Wow, how times have changed! Great video, by the way. Really enjoy your content and delivery. Nicely done!🇺🇸. Namaste! Edit: New sub here in good ol’ Columbia, Missouri. Cheers!🍸
@Lilly6982
@Lilly6982 3 года назад
I discover your channel, it's really great!! In France we can find some of the things you described (carpet in bathroom, switches outside, washing-machine in the kitchen (that's my case)...) Thanks a lot for your videos =D
@Anvilbanger
@Anvilbanger 2 года назад
In most places in the US, it is required to have a GFCI (IGround Fault Circuit Interrupter) outlet anywhere, such as in a bathroom or a kitchen, that one might be able to touch a water tap and an electrical outlet at the same time. Also, air conditioning is a MUST here in Arizona where we have 4 seasons: SUMMER, DECEMBER, JANUARY and FEBRUARY!
@paulwatkins2601
@paulwatkins2601 2 года назад
In England a GFCI is called an ELCB (earth leakage circuit breaker) just FYI
@mittfh
@mittfh 2 года назад
@@paulwatkins2601 Or, perhaps more commonly, an RCD (Residual Current Device). Current regulations require the ring main circuits to be protected by RCDs, plus exterior sockets. For those using electrical garden tools plugged into interior sockets, it's common to use a plug-in RCD. The hope is that if there's a fault, the RCD nearest the device will trigger in preference to the one on the ring main, so you don't have half the house lose power simultaneously.
@MrTopcat3333
@MrTopcat3333 2 года назад
Laughing about Ariz. seasons. When I lived in Vermont, we had two seasons: snow and mud!
@james42519
@james42519 2 года назад
@@MrTopcat3333 you have half a house on 1 breaker? Here in the US they usually seperate by room. Stove, hot water heater, ac, dryer have there own breaker.
@eileenmcdonald1599
@eileenmcdonald1599 2 года назад
Depends on where you live.
@kentuckylady2990
@kentuckylady2990 Год назад
Separate taps used to be quite common in the US . I spent my teenage years in a house where the bathroom had a sink with separate taps in addition to a clawfoot bathtub. The house was built in 1912. The bathroom also had a plug socket in the over head light. Without window screens, how do you keep flies and other insects out of the house.
@MagicalAuroraDream
@MagicalAuroraDream 2 года назад
I'm American, and I've never had carpet all the way into the bathroom. However, when I was growing up, my parents had a master bath area where you entered into into the room with the sink, and the door to the walk-in closet to the left. That was carpeted. However, the toilet, tub, and separate shower were in a separate little room, separated by a pocket door, and the floor there was either linoleum or tile. I forgot which. I can't imagine having a toilet overflow like that ... yuck! I've had a small rug in my narrow bathroom for a couple years to go over the cold tile, but it's getting rather dingy, so I've decided to toss it. Not a luxury you'd have with actual carpet; that sounds like such a pain!
@misseselise3864
@misseselise3864 2 года назад
i haven’t had many experiences with overflowing toilets but i’d probably never flush anything besides pee and poop if my bathroom was carpeted
@Nesseight
@Nesseight 2 года назад
She had consumed a large quantity of Taco Bell...
@WreckerR
@WreckerR 2 года назад
Yea, we had a carpeted bathroom when we were growing up. All the way from door to tub...
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