The electric kettle thing blows the British mind. It is the first gadget anyone buys when they set up house, and will be packed seperately when moving house so it can be opened first.
Blows my mind as an aussie too and we barely even drink tea (less than the poms anyway). It must be so inconvenient having to boil it on the stove, or god forbid microwaving it (lmao)
No! A cookie is a type of biscuit. So we have custard cremes, bourbons, digestives, hobnobs,cookies ect. Plus fries and chips are different. Chips are fat and fluffy and fries are thin and crispy.
@@Karinagrinchishin we have curly fries and 'French fries' (usually just called fries), for us home fries would just be called fried potatoes and steak fries are similar to chips but slightly flatter
Yes, we have both. As an older person I associate fries with crappy fast food and we didn't have them until the invasion of the likes of Macdonalds. Unless we went to France!
Funny thing is that Max - redhead/ "idk I'm not American!" - apparently lived in the US as a kid (unsure if he was actually born there though) and moved to England as a preteen if I remember correctly. (Even more unexpected: he's a quarter Indian.) Meanwhile Armand (slicked back hair) is actually French, although he also moved to England as a preteen. You can tell that those two accepted all those jokes much easier than the rest of the boys. 😂
@@kemipue true! i do find it funny how the stereotypes we get are either 1800s royalty or not pronouncing half the letters in words😂 like there’s never a middle ground
We say maths as it's a shortened version of mathematics, math implies that you guys do mathematic. Ours definitely makes more sense, I mean if you were studying physics you wouldn't cut off the s.
Funnily in slavic languages those are all used singular. Translated directly „mathematic, physic, etc”. And you know not all names were first used in english, language is more complicated than this. One doesn’t necessarily make more sense than the other.
I wasn't debating the etymology but I think it's safe to say that seeing as both countries aren't Slavic and both share English as a mother tongue I fail to see the validity of your rather conflated reply.
@@themoderntemplar1567 it’s not conflated. US and British english from certain point developed independently from each other and being influenced by different other languages. Just because british say it differently, doesn’t make it more correct
@@beatricemorris6517it is correct through because in both dialects it’s short for mathematics. You can’t have a plural word ‘mathematics’ shortened into a singular word ‘math’ lol that doesn’t make any sense
What you call biscuits are a sort of savoury scone. We do have cookies, they are a type of biscuit. They typically have chocolate chips in. The main brand name is Maryland Cookies. But we have many other types and they are all biscuits. As for fries, chips and crisps. What You call fries, yes they are fried, they are fried chips of potato, they are not French. What you call chips are also fried, so what's the difference? But they are crispy slices of potato, they are not chips. Mind you we have nicked Fries as a name for skinny American style chips. I'm sorry the language is English, we are English so we get to umpire on this. 😂
These guys have an a second channel called Korean Englishman and they just started a new series where they take these boys to enlist in the Korean army - looks amazing
Chips are chipped potatoes which are fried. Crisps are crisp fried thin slices of potatoes. Biscuits comes from the French word meaning twice baked and so have nothing to do with your biscuits.
18c here today and yesterday after the wettest April on record. Feels amazing. I wore a dress with short sleeves and nothing on my legs. Seen loads of people in shorts and T-shirts, even a couple of people in flip flops. Lush.
Biscuits means twice cooked, so biscuits are hard, cookies are soft. But I've definitely been disappointed buying a pack of 'cookies' (like Ahoy chip cookies) and they end up being crunchy like a biscuit 😞
If you take the potato out of the equation and think about what a "chip" is, i.e., a small piece of a hard material (think 'wood chips'), then what we call chips in the UK makes sense. In fact, at one time, you sometimes used to see them on restaurant menus as "chipped potatoes", with "chips" being an abbreviation. What you call chips aren't chips at all, they're slices. We call them crisps because they're 'crisp' fried slices of thinly-cut potatoes. I rest my case. 😁
The tea bag should go in the hot water on its own without the milk. Once the Teabag is out, then the milk goes in ☕️…. And she added wayyyyyy too much milk, that was nearly half a cup of milk that went in there. 🤢
Best way to explain biscuits for both is... to remember that "biscuit" originally was a food item popular on ships. This OG biscuits is the item that both countries version of "biscuit" started as. In the USA where they had all sailed over and thus had used biscuits as an important part of their meal, it therefore makes sense that in America "biscuit" became seen as a core part of a meal, and while the recipe changed you still have it as part of a meal. At the same time the US made a sweet baked snacked called a "cookie". It's also important to note how America often uses the branded name of an item as the name for all items of that type, thus how the US might have a traditional "cookie" (chocolate chip, etc).. but then has a ton of other cookies. In the UK on the other hand, outside of the British Navy people didn't really have a need to eat "biscuits". The rare times at first when a noble person would eat a "biscuit", it wasn't unusual to add things to make the special patch of "biscuits" sweeter. A noble person eating a "biscuit" also wouldn't be doing it as their meal (even if it might of been a meal for those around them). Therefore overtime "biscuits" served to nobles and the upper class became sweeter & flatter and far removed from the "biscuits" that you would eat at sea - leading to "regular biscuits" (for sea) and "sweet biscuits" for the ones nobles ate. In time, "sweet biscuits" dropped the "sweet" and became just "biscuits" as the main type of biscuit eaten in the UK. Also, as countries often describe things in other countries using their own words - the UK did this with the traditional "chocolate chip cookie, etc", matching the description of what the UK calls biscuit.
we dont make tea like that lol, we boil it in a kettle, put teabag first in mug then pour the water from kettle and then add milk and add 1 teaspoon sugar or something
Hilarious. Mostly London/South East accents mind you; Northern English and Scottish accents and sayings would blow your minds! And they speak much faster too.
Bi = 2 so Biscuit means cooked twice. If you cut wood what you get is wood Chips. Cut a potato they are Chips. Therefore if Crisps are sliced how can they be Chips.
The woman making the tea was American! And she did that poor cuppa dirty. We have electric kettles in the uk! Boiled the water, pour into cup, add tea bag and stir. Finish with milk/sugar if you have it….. I drink my black! Her way was an abomination!
Not 100% sure, but maybe they're called chips because you chip away at the potato? French fries comes from pomme frite - fried potatoes, which to me sound more like the whole thing! I'm English, I'm prejudiced 😄
It’s worth mentioning that it looks like they went to a public school (Private School) the students seem a little bit sheltered compared to many British students. It’s not common place to be British and not know how to pronounce things Worcestershire 😛
Virtually all the accent memes were using a stereotypical London accent. Even most Londoners don't talk like that, lol. Most Brits have a completely different accent and there's a LOT of different accents! Drive an hour, from any point in England and the accent will be completely different from the accent at your starting point. In some cases you'd only need to drive half an hour, or less! :)
you doing british accents have me crying. we call ‘chips’ crisps we call ‘fries’ chips and fries as chips are thicker and fries are like the ones you get from mcdonalds. as well a cookie is usally bigger and chewier, and the chunchy ones are biscuits (like digestives) and they dint go w coffee they go w tea. as well chewsday is the superior way. and so is schtupid. as ny brother changes race in the summer and never goes red (i burn but we dint talk abt that) and beans is disgusting, but beans is like top tier breakfast for most people. i gave ny friend a tin of beans fir her birthday. and tea is made: first add tea bag, then add hot water from a kettle or hot water tap, mix, add milk, take tea bag out and then optional: sugar. and its. more maffs then maffimatics. and its SHHHu Uup (or SHHHuT UuP
You call them french fries, but they aren't french as where you are isn't france, so no different really. We call them chips because it comes from the old English word cipp which means a small piece of wood as in chipped piece of wood. French fries were invented in 1775 then introduced to Britain we also referred to them as chips as they were chipped off the potato so has two meanings for the word chip. So you call them fries cause of how they're cooked, we call them chips as it refers to how they are cut into the shape.
Chips are chips because the potatoes are chipped and then fried. Crisps are crisps because they're crispy. French fries are an abomination on the planet, the fact they're French says it all.