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REAL American Guesses BRITISH Slang/Words! (Funny) // What Does OBNOXIOUS Mean to Brits? 

Girl Gone London
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In this video, I'm joined by my best friend Emily who is a REAL American (read: hasn't lived in the UK for the past 10 years) to see how many British slang phrases and words she knows!
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16 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 650   
@GirlGoneLondonofficial
@GirlGoneLondonofficial 2 года назад
You're missing out on exclusive weekly videos (and the controversy over how I tiered British food...sorry, Yorkshires are the best!) if you haven't checked me out on Patreon! www.patreon.com/girlgonelondon
@seanscanlon9067
@seanscanlon9067 2 года назад
Would it be obnoxious of me to say that Emily reminds me a bit of Monica Lewinsky?
@Edward1312
@Edward1312 2 года назад
Obnoxious in the UK is someone or something that is rude, offensive or arrogant.
@yeahmyrealnameright5967
@yeahmyrealnameright5967 2 года назад
Unpleasant is the definition.
@Nutrient-Gold
@Nutrient-Gold 2 года назад
@@yeahmyrealnameright5967 I think Tony Smith.defined it better. Your reply was quite 'obnoxious' lol.
@cogidubnus1953
@cogidubnus1953 2 года назад
I'd put it as descriptive of behaviour which is downright offensive or approaching poisonous
@corydorastube
@corydorastube 2 года назад
@@yeahmyrealnameright5967 It is a bit stronger than just 12unpeaseant. Odious, abhorrent, loathsome would be better.
@jw3505
@jw3505 2 года назад
To me it’s someone who is self-centred and irritating. Like people playing loud music through a speaker in public.
@tonys1636
@tonys1636 2 года назад
If told to bog off it means go away. also a Bogoff means Buy one, get one for free. Bogged down means overloaded with work or unable to progress. Bog a very versatile word.
@raymondporter2094
@raymondporter2094 2 года назад
Good reply ...!
@trevorgoddard2278
@trevorgoddard2278 2 года назад
You can also say something is bog standard, meaning without any extras.
@cyrus2728
@cyrus2728 2 года назад
Or going on the bog or anyone got any bog roll.
@chriswilson1853
@chriswilson1853 2 года назад
I would say BOGOF (Buy one get one free) since the term "for free" is incorrect UK English, although many people do use the term.
@tonys1636
@tonys1636 2 года назад
@@chriswilson1853 Depends entirely on the area of Britain one spent one's formative years.
@sianchatfield3052
@sianchatfield3052 2 года назад
A paper towel is what you dry your hands on in public bogs if they don't have a hand dryer. You have kitchen roll - for kitchens and Bog roll for bogs
@lexa3210
@lexa3210 2 года назад
"Nicked" is also slang for getting arrested by the police, such as "You're nicked sunshine" or "he got nicked for speeding"
@itsmephil2255
@itsmephil2255 2 года назад
Nick can also mean to put a small cut into something
@stephenlee5929
@stephenlee5929 2 года назад
Nick is also whee you might be taken if you are nicked (police station).
@redf7209
@redf7209 2 года назад
@@itsmephil2255 as in getting caught on barbed wire
@flyingfox7854
@flyingfox7854 2 года назад
Or I’ve just nicked some lead off the church roof ….. or ….. who’s nicked my sandwiches ….
@klaxoncow
@klaxoncow 2 года назад
If you think of "nicked" in the sense of taking something, then you could see the police "nicking" you as being that they've taken you away - arrested you and taken you to the police station. But, yeah, it's different enough that it's probably worth mentioning the usage.
@GaryHayward
@GaryHayward 2 года назад
A "pram", which is short for "perambulator", is basically a cot (US: "crib") on wheels, used for wheeling around a baby outdoors but not the British equivalent of the US "stroller", which we would call a "pushchair".
@teenybabs
@teenybabs 2 года назад
We refer to the pushchair as a buggy. A pram would be more for a newborn.
@adinas6516
@adinas6516 2 года назад
@@teenybabs I remember right up until the 1970s in England when there were only prams and then around the late 1970s early 1980s when pushcairs became the in thing. So, yes, prams (perambulator aka walking cot were huge things) were used for babies of all age, not just newborns. Also, the prams had straps attached to the sides that could be used to strap the baby in so that it could sit up in it.
@teenybabs
@teenybabs 2 года назад
@@adinas6516 Yip
@marcturner2119
@marcturner2119 2 года назад
Prams are the best!!
@beckyallsopp5695
@beckyallsopp5695 Год назад
We also use the word stroller for a 'lightweight' pushchair. One that is easily foldable, small and can fits in your car however I appreciate the new pushchair are much more user friendly than the ones I used 20 odd years ago for my children
@davidrobinson3221
@davidrobinson3221 2 года назад
Pram is a short version of the full (Victorian era) name - perambulator. That name comes from the verb ‘perambulate’ which means ‘to walk around’.
@eviltwin2322
@eviltwin2322 2 года назад
Leg it is usually a bit more specific than that. It's normally used to mean running away, rather than just running generally.
@fredneecher1746
@fredneecher1746 2 года назад
"Leg it, there's a copper coming!"
@eviltwin2322
@eviltwin2322 2 года назад
@@fredneecher1746 For example! 👍🏻
@andrewcharlton4053
@andrewcharlton4053 2 года назад
I've always taken it as absolutely pacing it. So I need to leg it to catch the train, rather than run. Hence why you leg it from the police
@eviltwin2322
@eviltwin2322 2 года назад
@@andrewcharlton4053 Makes sense. Maybe there are regional variations?
@steveray2529
@steveray2529 2 года назад
In the UK, "pants" also means "rubbish/terrible", as in "I watched a new programme on TV last night and it was pants".
@monkeysputum
@monkeysputum 2 года назад
Depending where you are in the UK, it also means trousers, which makes perfect sense, as pants go over your underpants
@steveray2529
@steveray2529 2 года назад
@@monkeysputum Very true. I'm from the North and always call my trousers "pants".
@beckyallsopp5695
@beckyallsopp5695 Год назад
We don't use pants for trousers in the south. It's either underwear or means it's rubbish
@ianz9916
@ianz9916 Год назад
@@steveray2529 I'm from the South and I would say trousers or strides.
@goopguy548
@goopguy548 Год назад
@@steveray2529 nah what are you on about? I don't know a single person who calls trousers pants. We ain't Americans lol
@christophermann2800
@christophermann2800 2 года назад
Legging it comes from people that worked on canal barges. When the barge came to a tunnel they world detach the horse and take it to the other side of the tunnel, then some of the crew, the leggers would leg it through the tunnel, whereby they move the barge by laying on top of it and walking along the side of the tunnel.
@JonathanReynolds1
@JonathanReynolds1 2 года назад
“Quid” for a £ comes from the latin “quid pro quo” which means “this for that”.
@paulhyde1834
@paulhyde1834 2 года назад
Yes, or 'measure for measure'...
@krisjonesuk
@krisjonesuk 2 года назад
Your friend did very well. I think ‘obnoxious’ has the same meaning on both sides of the Pond - objectionable and/or offensive. ‘Gobby’ comes from ‘gob’, which is a slang word for the mouth. “Shut your gob”, is a rude way of demanding someone stop talking. ‘Gob’ gives rise to other slang words, like ‘gobshite’, used as an insult (probably originally someone talking nonsense, but now a general term of abuse), and my favourite, ‘gobsmacked’, meaning astounded.
@redf7209
@redf7209 2 года назад
So America mustn't have gobstoppers
@Hydraas
@Hydraas 2 года назад
@@redf7209 They are called jawbreakers in the US
@andrewdking
@andrewdking 2 года назад
Gobsmacked means rendered speachless, probably but not exclusively as a result of being astounded by something
@redf7209
@redf7209 2 года назад
@@andrewdking kind of like the look on someone's face when they are literally smacked in the mouth
@dviate3242
@dviate3242 2 года назад
And not to forget gobby or gobbie is also slang for oral sex.
@itsmatteh
@itsmatteh 2 года назад
A quick note as well that we do have paper towels, but they are usually ones that come out singularly from a dispenser or the like. Kitchen roll is kitchen roll because we keep it in the kitchen and its a continuous roll you rip sheets from.
@masoncampbell971
@masoncampbell971 2 года назад
Yep paper towel is what you get in a public toilet or at school to dry your hands, kitchen towel is softer and more absorbent, for mopping up spills in the home.
@beckyallsopp5695
@beckyallsopp5695 Год назад
Yep defo always called kitchen roll on my house not kitchen paper
@Jon1950
@Jon1950 2 года назад
I would use obnoxious in respect of a person's behaviour, e.g. they are rude, arrogant, offensive. One step below being vile.
@keneke5162
@keneke5162 2 года назад
Yes I'd define it as arrogant plus another expletive! Us Brits (the majority) hate arrogance in people
@kevoconnor145
@kevoconnor145 2 года назад
@@keneke5162 as a Brit, I'm fine with arrogance. Arrogance is just highly confident in your abilities/knowledge. I hate cockiness & I feel there's a major difference between the 2.
@luckytri9716
@luckytri9716 2 года назад
@@kevoconnor145 I agree 👍 Especially on social multimedia platforms, I feel whenever you highlight your own opinions everyone is eager to swiftly jump on the 'arrogant arse' bandwagon 😑
@kevoconnor145
@kevoconnor145 2 года назад
@@luckytri9716 Agreed, but not just social media. I'm willing to say, I believe few are as good at my job as me & I'm not afraid to admit that. Many would call that arrogant but I have no issues with that. However, if I was obnoxious about it & lauding it over people, or I was chatting big without being able to follow it up, that would be cocky & that's what I hate.
@Joseph_Roffey
@Joseph_Roffey 2 года назад
The best distinction I’ve heard for arrogance vs confidence is that arrogance is confidence (and usually over confidence) without generosity. James Potter trying to hold off Lord Voldemort and immediately dying could be considered overconfident but never arrogant because he was trying to be helpful/supportive. Lord Voldemort expecting to be able to easily kill Harry in the graveyard would be arrogant though, because it is not just overconfident, he is also behaving selfishly and making fun of Harry’s relative weakness. To an extent, I would describe being arrogant as being obnoxiously self-assured rather than arrogance in itself being part of being obnoxious.
@kathydent2116
@kathydent2116 2 года назад
I knew an American who went looking in the bread aisle of the supermarket when his English girlfriend asked him to buy some bog rolls.
@Grumpy-Goblin
@Grumpy-Goblin 2 года назад
"Pants" is also used to say something is rubbish "That's a bit pants"
@toenailandthebedsores6682
@toenailandthebedsores6682 2 года назад
You've actually brought up another one there with rubbish :) I don't think Americans use the word rubbish (Please correct me if I'm wrong). Rubbish means trash, but it is also used to describe something being bad :D
@c2757
@c2757 Год назад
That use of the word 'pants' is a modern idiom. If you had said that in the Uk when I was young no one would have understood what you meant.
@Grumpy-Goblin
@Grumpy-Goblin Год назад
@@c2757 True but we are not talking about when you were young we are talking about slang as used today.
@dicem8977
@dicem8977 2 года назад
You're pal is a lovely person as are you. Both lovely folk who are so endearing.
@sarahhayter7855
@sarahhayter7855 2 года назад
It’s amazing how many differences there are between UK English and US English, my son lives in Chicago and he sent a photo of his dog to his other half and said “look at his face, butter wouldn’t melt” she was well confused. 🤣
@India.H
@India.H 2 года назад
(Don't know where you're from in the UK so it might not make much sense) My boyfriend is half American, half British. He came back from the US today and apparently got a large amount of strange looks from people due to the variations of phrases he's picked up from me. I'm a Northerner, and phrases like "Bloody Nora", "Gordon Bennett", "Christ on a bike", and "Bloody Hell" are well cemented in my vocabulary. Some have ended up in his which, strangely enough, people thought were a bit weird.
@missharry5727
@missharry5727 3 месяца назад
Flaming Norah is I think Australian.
@redf7209
@redf7209 2 года назад
Pants meaning underwear is a southern thing. In the north it just means trousers . - originating from 'pantaloons'. Chuffed comes from pigeon keeping, a happy bird chuffs its feathers up.
@cogidubnus1953
@cogidubnus1953 2 года назад
Though donkeys years ago when visiting Wallasey I was advised that the scouse term at the time was kecks...confusingly I've also more recently heard the term as referring to underwear too...
@redf7209
@redf7209 2 года назад
@@cogidubnus1953 some say kegs and kecks to refer alternatively to underwearr and pants. Wondering if it derives from a mix of knicker and legging. SInce women were not known for wearing trousers in days of yore it makes sense that any leg clothing they referred to would have been about underwear and not pants.
@jofrench2674
@jofrench2674 2 года назад
I’m in north east and pants means underwear. Specifically ladies ‘non fancy’ underwear. Men wear underpants never just pants. 👍🤣
@Lily_The_Pink972
@Lily_The_Pink972 2 года назад
We use the word roll when referring to toilet paper and kitchen paper towels because they come on a roll. Nothing odd about that. In my kitchen I use kitchen roll to mop up small spills or drain greasy food and a Terry towelling kitchen towel to dry my hands. To dry dishes I use a tea towel.
@davidjones332
@davidjones332 2 года назад
Well done that woman! It might be kitchen roll in a kitchen, but it's definitely going to be a paper towel in a lavatory. To my mind, paper towels are usually individual sheets and don't generally come on a roll unless in an industrial setting,
@arthurspils2565
@arthurspils2565 2 года назад
Yeah, I distinguish it this way: A toilet roll is what I buy and store for later use, toilet paper is when it's actually being used in sheets.
@philipcochran1972
@philipcochran1972 2 года назад
'Leg it' is what canal boat people used to do in the UK when they came to a tunnel. They untied the horse that had been pulling their boat and one person takes the horse around the hill to the other end of the tunnel. (no foot paths in a tunnel). The other people lie on their backs on top of the boat and with their feet on the top of the tunnel they propel the boat through the tunnel. This is called legging it.
@Rollers123a
@Rollers123a 2 года назад
Just watched this entertaining episode tonight at home in Melbourne Australia. Many of the British slang terms you featured are in use in many parts of Australia. I do enjoy watching two friends having real fun.
@peckelhaze6934
@peckelhaze6934 2 года назад
Nick also means slight damage. "I nicked the edge of it." Obnoxious would be best described, for Brits, as "intensely irritating". "Bog off" means "go away".
@marksavage1108
@marksavage1108 2 года назад
Nick is also somewhere you go if you get nicked by the police, nicking stuff.
@AntonyMiles
@AntonyMiles 2 года назад
Excellent news that your allowed on a plane and get to visit family and friends. How exciting. Must be nice to start feeling normal again :) Thanks for another entertaining video
@karlmcgowan9375
@karlmcgowan9375 2 года назад
I live in the UK and i've always called them paper towels, i know the word leg it refers to people pushing a canal boat threw a small tunnel lying on your back while pushing on the tunnel roof using your legs.
@brianwhittington5086
@brianwhittington5086 2 года назад
Tunnels were expensive, difficult and dangerous to construct and ventilate. It was often cheaper to make it without, or maybe no room for a towpath for the horse to use..
@jerry2357
@jerry2357 2 года назад
If you said “paper towel” I would think of the sort of paper towel that you find in the public bogs to dry your hands after you’ve washed them. “Kitchen roll” is what you use for mopping up spills, mainly in the kitchen, but also elsewhere.
@Sidistic_Atheist
@Sidistic_Atheist 2 года назад
*Pants* is a colloquial term for trousers/slacks/jeans. What you wear on the outside. *Underpants* are underwear for men. *Knickers* are underwear for women.
@davidbarrass5210
@davidbarrass5210 2 года назад
Depends on where in the UK you are. Yorkshire when I was growing up was underwear.
@gavinreid5387
@gavinreid5387 2 года назад
I must live in a different part of Yorkshire.
@nikkihayes5411
@nikkihayes5411 2 года назад
In 70s Salford i wore pants over underpants....in Devon my wife thinks I'm weird👖😁
@nigelrobson505
@nigelrobson505 2 года назад
Pants generally refers to mens' underwear, as in underpants. Womens' versions are usually called panties, or knickers.
@solentbum
@solentbum 2 года назад
Also 'Its Pants' means something is awful,
@claredawson9531
@claredawson9531 2 года назад
Pants also means trousers in the north
@petertaylor9384
@petertaylor9384 2 года назад
Pants are trousers 👖
@sianchatfield3052
@sianchatfield3052 2 года назад
Panties is an American term for knickers. I have never heard anyone use that term here
@toenailandthebedsores6682
@toenailandthebedsores6682 2 года назад
@@claredawson9531 My wife is from Newcastle and she calls trousers pants. Proper gives me the 'ump, I tell thee!
@andyt8216
@andyt8216 2 года назад
* 7:58 we mostly say "kitchen roll", so you threw away a good example to back up the point you had just made :)
@GirlGoneLondonofficial
@GirlGoneLondonofficial 2 года назад
How do you think Emily did?!
@Bullcutter
@Bullcutter 2 года назад
She did ok.
@Bullcutter
@Bullcutter 2 года назад
Obnoxious appears to have the same meaning, checking with Merriam Webster and Cambridge dictionaries.
@theprophet9429
@theprophet9429 2 года назад
Definitely better than most Americans who try this kind of thing. A lot better. 👏🏻
@gizmo5601
@gizmo5601 2 года назад
Very good…great reaction to bog.
@timempson2146
@timempson2146 2 года назад
But you missed so many good ones. Have a butchers Tell porkies Bairn ginnel Point percy But Emily did well :)
@andrew_koala2974
@andrew_koala2974 Месяц назад
07:10 Leg it - more commonly refers to escaping / running away from Law enforcement ( the correct grammatical legal word is absconding )
@weedle30
@weedle30 2 года назад
The term “Blighty” comes from WW1, from the Indian word Vilatyi - which apparently sounded like Blighty when the troops stationed in India heard the word being said … 🤯👀😵‍💫 a “Blighty One” was a war wound considered serious enough for the soldier to have to return to England for it to be treated. Although no soldier wanted to get hurt, if they did, they wanted it to be a “Blighty One”
@grapeman63
@grapeman63 2 года назад
Good explanation. I suspect it dates to the "Raj" (19th century) though, rather than WWI, since India was not a theatre of war in WWI. That war focused almost exclusively on Europe and was known as the European War until WWII came along. It counts as a world war because soldiers from all over the British Empire, Francophone Africa, Italian Abyssinia and, latterly, the USA served in it.
@jerry2357
@jerry2357 2 года назад
@@grapeman63 Indian troops fought in Flanders in the Great War. It wasn’t just a European war, there was fighting in Africa between German and British Empire troops, and there was a lot of fighting in the Middle East between troops of the British and Ottoman Empires. Of course, there was also the Arab revolt (Lawrence of Arabia etc.) which was encouraged by the British.
@grapeman63
@grapeman63 2 года назад
@@jerry2357 I didn't say that Indian troops didn't fight, only that they didn't fight in India. If you read my post again you'll see that I said troops from all over the British Empire fought in Europe, which was the major theatre of the war. Between the wars the war was known as the "European War". The British Encyclopedia of 1933 devotes over 100 pages to the war under this title. It has zero pages under the title "World War I" as it wasn't called this until after WWII.
@jerry2357
@jerry2357 2 года назад
@@grapeman63 I never said that the Great War was called World War 1 at the time. It was known as the Great War, as you will find if you look at war memorials or books written before WWII.
@grapeman63
@grapeman63 2 года назад
@@jerry2357 I've tried to reply to this with references but RU-vid seems to block these posts. I have found a number of references published between the wars that call it "The European War". However, I have also found just as many calling it "The Great War". There is a piece on the 100th anniversary of the war that discusses the naming of the war. This piece notes that during the conflict the war was known by both names and that both names have their problems. "The European War", of course, soon escalated to include Africa and the Middle East and so that moniker was no longer really relevant. The "Great War" seemed to glorify the conflict which many found to be obscene. Nevertheless, both terms persisted until the late 1930s when "The First World War" gained ground as the threat of a second increased. The problem that using "The First World War" had was that the term had previously been applied to what we now call "The Seven Years' War", 1756 - 1763.
@philash5073
@philash5073 2 года назад
You should try her on Bristolian 😂
@Brummiemartin
@Brummiemartin 2 года назад
Pants (the noun) is "below the waist MALE underwear" (usually "Y-Fronts" or "Boxer Shorts), it will NOT include a vest or similar garment used for the upper torso...so check out the differences in the meaning of "vest" on both sides of the pond. Oh and bear in mind the female versions of the same where we use "knickers" to mean "panties" BUT: Pants (the adjective) means "useless", "bad" "rubbish" etc e.g "The Marlins played pants". or "that was a pants result".
@leesmith9299
@leesmith9299 2 года назад
underpants go under the pants. hence pants = trousers. i'm english and have always used pants to mean trousers. different areas seem to use it differently.
@orangew3988
@orangew3988 2 года назад
Hmm I don't have the gender distinction for pants the noun. For me it is the umbrella term for everyone's underwear on their lower half, and they can be described as boxers, briefs, knickers, etc depending on shape and style.
@rosieposie601
@rosieposie601 2 года назад
the bog thing made me crack up!! we also use it for an actual bog as in a muddy area of land
@andrew_koala2974
@andrew_koala2974 Месяц назад
07:37 a bog is a marshy area -- However the word has a secondary slang usage for Toilet The peasants of olden days resided in a shack as they could not afford what we would recognize and accept as decent housing. In addition - The two smelliest rooms - The Kitchen and Toilette were separate to the residential quarters -- For the peasant classes the marshy land ( Bog ) was used as a Toilette. and the term persists to this day as a slang word.
@eamonquinn5188
@eamonquinn5188 2 года назад
Lovely to see two old friends together x
@davidperrott5098
@davidperrott5098 2 года назад
I like this channel. You Tube recommended it yesterday altho I'm not sure why cos it's not like any stuff I usually watch. But its light hearted and a bit of fun. Emily looks like someone I've seen in a movie or two but I cant think which ones? The word 'obnoxious' contains the word 'noxious' with a bit added on to it. So that's a bit of a clue and works with me if I have to guess at the meaning of a word I dont know. Thanks girls! x
@JarlGrimmToys
@JarlGrimmToys 2 года назад
Paper towels are what you find in some public toilets in the UK. It’s blue paper that you take out of a dispenser to dry your hands after washing them. You don’t see them much now as they’ve been replaced with electric hand dryers.
@jerry2357
@jerry2357 2 года назад
Although they have become slightly more popular again since the COVID pandemic, because they don’t blow viruses around.
@paulWalker-zh7nk
@paulWalker-zh7nk 2 года назад
I was chuffed looking at you two ..nice video 🇬🇧🌹
@LeeRaldar
@LeeRaldar 2 года назад
Leg it is usually used when running away from someone in authority (police/teacher/ticket collector) by people who are doing something they are not supposed to. i.e. The rozzers are coming we'd better leg it. Past tense 'He had it away on his toes'. Gobby is somebody who is verbally loud and overbearing from 'gob' which is another word for mouth in the North of England. i.e. 'Will yer shut yer big gob', often followed in this context by an offer to punch said orifice.
@bobingabout
@bobingabout 2 года назад
7:57 Kitchen Roll. You literally just said that we use Roll for everything, then said Kitchen towel. Also, we do have Paper towels, as used in a public bathroom for drying your hands, where they don't have an electric blow hand drier, but there's also paper roll (where I worked, they called it blue roll, because it was blue) that is a more general purpose paper towel. When I worked at college, in engineering they used it to clean oily machinery, or car parts.
@MillsyLM
@MillsyLM 2 года назад
Kitchen Roll is probably used to describe it because it is stored in the kitchen (in most cases I'd assume). Paper towels are individual sheets that are generally found in public toilets and work places.
@markrichardson3421
@markrichardson3421 2 года назад
Pants isn't underwear all over the UK. Where I'm from pants are trousers. What you wear underneath is underpants or boxers, etc.
@Lancastrian501
@Lancastrian501 2 года назад
Same here in Lancashire
@iankinver1170
@iankinver1170 2 года назад
Enjoyed your show by the way.
@expatexpat6531
@expatexpat6531 2 года назад
"At the picnic, Nick got nicked for nicking knickers," etc....
@maximushaughton2404
@maximushaughton2404 2 года назад
A roll of paper to some one British, would think of paper you write/draw on. And a paper roll is something that is put in to a till so shopping receipt can be printed on to. Whereas a Kitchen roll is quilted and used to wipe up spillages, which mainly happens in the kitchen.
@billmorris8358
@billmorris8358 2 года назад
Some alternatives to bog could be Khazi, crapper, shitter common in Australia, loo, cludgie (more a northern term), lav, lavvy, privvy, W C or Water Closet, head usually naval or boating term, throne. Love the channel, subscribed to see more! xx
@davewebster6945
@davewebster6945 2 года назад
Also old term for an outside loo was "Thunder box" 😊.
@HighWealder
@HighWealder 2 года назад
Crapper is an American term which originated with US soldiers in Britain during WW1 when they saw toilets with the brand Thomas Crapper.
@sirkermy450
@sirkermy450 2 года назад
We say paper towels too. Kitchen towels are just thicker and used to wipe up big spillages, which tend to be in the kitchen.
@hughmuir3063
@hughmuir3063 2 года назад
You're allowed to use a kitchen towel anywhere but it is mainly used in the kitchen hence the term kitchen towel (or roll if you prefer)!!!
@advancedwindowandguttercle685
@advancedwindowandguttercle685 2 года назад
Big regional differences too across the UK. Some areas can't even understand some regional accents never mind sayings. Great channel
@jeremyirish1574
@jeremyirish1574 2 года назад
American in the UK for 15 years here. 👋🏼 I enjoyed that, and also thought the result was impressive. That is a point about 'roll' being everywhere! I would add 'bread roll' and 'sausage roll'.
@GaryHayward
@GaryHayward 2 года назад
That's a new spelling of "brolly", to me.
@Stephen-Fox
@Stephen-Fox 2 года назад
Kitchen roll is the preferable sort of paper towels - back when I was a kid the school had paper towels instead of a hand drier. They were awful, and inevitably was something else for a school toilet to run out of.
@colinmoore7460
@colinmoore7460 Год назад
Paper Towels are used for drying your hands after washing them in a school or public wash room / restroom (that doesn't have hot air hand dryers)
@NickLea
@NickLea 2 года назад
As others have said, the verb "to nick" has more than one meaning and also a related noun. To nick also means to be caught by the police and the nick is also a slang term for a police station. So, it would be possible to say "She nicked some stuff from the shop but the police nicked her for shoplifting and they took her down to the nick". Although I don't think anyone would actually use the word in all three senses within one sentence. Totally useless bit of trivia, a common name for police stations (that had cells) in different parts of the UK was "Bridewell". Cities like Leeds, Bradford, Nottingham, Liverpool, Bristol etc still have police stations called "Bridewell". The name comes from the time of Henry VIII when Cardinal Wolsey built a palace at St Brides Well in London. It was later turned into a prison and Bridewell became a common name for jails in England at that time.
@MartinLong-sh8bn
@MartinLong-sh8bn 2 месяца назад
OMG your friend is an absolute stunner ❤
@GenialHarryGrout
@GenialHarryGrout 2 года назад
Bog is an area of muddy ground so using the word to describe the toilet makes sense, at least to Brits
@JarlGrimmToys
@JarlGrimmToys 2 года назад
The term also originated from before we had indoor toilets. When outhouses were wooden structures over a pit. The job of the “night soil remover” was to dig out the waste and remove it.
@dacutler
@dacutler 2 года назад
'Leg it' comes from the method to get a canal boat through a tunnel in the 18th century. Normally pulled by a horse, which cannot get through the tunnel without the tow path, the boat men had to lie on the roof of the boat with their legs outboard to push against the sides of the tunnel. Thus 'legging it.
@vikingphotoman2285
@vikingphotoman2285 2 года назад
Fabulous video looking forward to seeing another one where you take her to a village
@robertdrinkall8947
@robertdrinkall8947 2 года назад
Good one lady's, your welcome in the UK anytime.👍
@bustedfender
@bustedfender 2 года назад
Yeah, you can use kitchen towels for those other jobs too.
@fredneecher1746
@fredneecher1746 2 года назад
How about 'suspenders'? Or 'vest'? I think 'chuffed' is being pleased with oneself, for having inadvertently or unexpectedly gained some advantage.
@stereoroid
@stereoroid 2 года назад
Another great one is “suspenders”: I know of an American guy who wore them, and went to buy some in the UK. The shopkeeper looked at him funny, since in UK “suspenders” specifically means the things ladies use to hold up stockings in fancy or old-fashioned lingerie. The type men wear are called “braces”.
@gabzie1668
@gabzie1668 2 года назад
I'll never forget saying "He's smart" in front of my gran. Never heard the end of it. He's clever not smart... he can dress smart but he cannot be smart.
@thethe6232
@thethe6232 2 года назад
Chuffed is actually “ one feeling happy or Please with your self about good news news, or something you have done”
@2011pmacz
@2011pmacz 2 года назад
Enjoyed this. Perhaps to let you know though, if you don't already, is that one of the great things about the English language is how 'fluid' it is. Words change constantly and Brits use words in random ways. So for example - I liked your 'plastered' example. BUT most Brits would understand what you meant if you put the letters 'ed' on almost any word, if you intimated it meaning you had got very drunk. I tried this one day with my daughter and her boyfriend; first we went A to Z of common words for 'very drunk'. So arse-oled, bladdered etc etc. But we then invented ones, but between us we knew if someone said it, you would know what they meant. My favourite (looking out the train window) was scaffolded, closely followed by radiatored. Any Brit who said "I was out in town last night - got absolutely scaffolded" would instantly now what you mean! Try it.
@chemicalBR0
@chemicalBR0 2 года назад
minted can also be used to describe something that is very good. "did you have a good time at the concert?" "yeah it was minted"
@powerpointgamer
@powerpointgamer 2 года назад
'Fortnight' is the shortened version of an Old English word meaning 'fourteen nights'. (I didn't know that until I just Googled it!)
@vascocourtney
@vascocourtney 10 месяцев назад
Quid doesn't only mean British Pound(s). If you took a bite of a piece of chewing tobacco for example, that mouthful you bit off is also called a quid. The plural is"quids" in this case, whereas it never has an S at the end when referring to money.
@theprophet9429
@theprophet9429 2 года назад
A bog is a marshy area in the UK, too. It’s a British word. We just ALSO use it as slang for toilet. Same with John for you, John also has the real meaning (a name) as well as the slang meaning (toilet).
@theprophet9429
@theprophet9429 2 года назад
@Martin Cregan Yes, you are correct. I meant it's not an American-English word. Being in the racing industry, I am totally familiar with the term 'yielding'. Basically, it is what Irish courses call "good to soft", is it a word that is used outside of racing in Ireland (with this definition)?
@user-ky6vw5up9m
@user-ky6vw5up9m 2 года назад
Bog is the Irish word for “soft”.
@MrBcsack
@MrBcsack 2 года назад
Bog Snorkeling - y'all must have that in sunny Fl ??
@roastchicken9143
@roastchicken9143 2 года назад
The wonder of the YT algorithm. I don't even really know why I enjoyed this so much, but I so did. Well chuffed.
@cathyvickers9063
@cathyvickers9063 2 года назад
I grew up watching Masterpiece Theater w my folks, Dr Who & Red Dwarf on our local PBS station. (David Lister referring to the bog roll, etc.) Some of these I didn't know, but not many. Tom Baker is my favorite Doctor.
@pauljohnson4871
@pauljohnson4871 2 года назад
Totally brilliant guys
@richardhargrave6082
@richardhargrave6082 2 года назад
You did very well well done!
@smockboy
@smockboy 2 года назад
'Pram' is an abbreviated version of the word 'perambulator' which, essentially, is just a posh way of saying 'stroller'. 'Quid' has a bunch of proposed origins (no one's really sure which is the true one) but I like the one that proposes that its a contraction of 'queen's head' which appears on the reverse of all currency.
@bepolite6961
@bepolite6961 2 года назад
Nicked is also slang for being arrested or being summoned for court. Well done Emily it is obvious you have visited the UK. Hope you enjoyed your stay here.
@peterward1698
@peterward1698 2 года назад
Just so you know fortnight is a contraction of fourteen nights hence 2 weeks. Obvious once you know that right.
@neilgriffiths6427
@neilgriffiths6427 2 года назад
Oh, beware - I called a female colleague "fit" once - that is, she looked healthy and athletic. But I was working with people from northern England, where to describe someone as "fit" means you think they are attractive...I mean, she was attractive...because she was fit. Er...
@teresaqureshi6342
@teresaqureshi6342 2 года назад
Pram is not a stroller. Stroller is a pushchair. Different things
@ricmac954
@ricmac954 2 года назад
"Fortnight" obviously comes from the abbreviation of "fourteen nights". While "Fortnight" is still used by everyone in Britain, they don't use the now archaic "sennight" (derived from seven nights, ie one week), though it can be found in literature from the Middle Ages.
@frederickwoof5785
@frederickwoof5785 2 года назад
Gobby is an extension of Gob, meaning mouth. So someone that is gobby means that are talking to much. Usually offensively.
@philipfoster2864
@philipfoster2864 2 года назад
Too much.
@CamcorderSteve
@CamcorderSteve 2 года назад
I have never heard anyone in Britain call a "kitchen roll" a "kitchen towel". As far as I am concerned a towel is something you dry your hands or face on and nothing else.
@TheRattyBiker
@TheRattyBiker 2 года назад
Obnoxious is generally only applied to peoples attitude and behaviour rather than an object. If you were trying to describe the loudness of the car alarm you would probably describe it along the lines of "that loud it's about to blow the windows out" or describe it as being something far louder than it is eg foghorn, air raid siren.
@GaryHayward
@GaryHayward 2 года назад
Check out "bog snorkelling" (don't worry, it's not like as in "Scotland's Worst Toilet" in the Brit flick "Trainspotting").
@dylandajhharwood5566
@dylandajhharwood5566 2 года назад
On 'plastered', essentially adding -ed to the end of almost any word or item would mean drunk. Carparked, hammered, etc
@joelliott6349
@joelliott6349 2 года назад
trolly'd, bladdered, slaughtered -you're so right!
@thetruth6417
@thetruth6417 2 года назад
Kitchen roll is called that because paper towels are the ultra low quality paper you'd get in schools to dry your hands with so no one says it after you leave because you never see them again...
@OliviaHarrison731
@OliviaHarrison731 2 года назад
In the North of England (Manchester specifically) we use “pants” to be the generic term for any form of bottoms e.g. trousers, leggings, jeans etc. We don’t use it to mean underwear, we say underwear or underpants instead
@EessaTube
@EessaTube 2 года назад
pram was short for perambulator. Perambulate means to go around. You walk the baby around the block in the pram, perhaps to calm the child down and send it off to sleep.
@colinhutchinson1664
@colinhutchinson1664 2 года назад
Also were you're from alters the words and slang you use when speaking. For instance I'm from the North-east of England. Netty=Toilet, Pagga:Fight, Gadgie:Man, Canny:Good, Clamming:Hungry.
@Tessirith
@Tessirith 2 года назад
Obnoxious, usually used if someone is being rude or unpleasant or if something is unpleasant or unappealing .‘don’t be so obnoxious’ is usually what is said. Heard it used describing neon colours before as the persons saying it didn’t like them.
@PeteRoberts1966
@PeteRoberts1966 2 года назад
Well done. Your friend is UK smart (clever & fashionable). She's also super cute. 😉 Loving your 🇬🇧 v 🇺🇸 comparison videos. 👍🏻
@williambound5118
@williambound5118 2 года назад
There is a place in Shropshire called The Bog.
@smd1uk
@smd1uk 2 года назад
Pants also means rubbish in the UK like, “that show that I went to was really pants”
@GaryHayward
@GaryHayward 2 года назад
I've sometimes said "chinwag" to friends as a jovial way of saying "Chinese", as in a "Chinese take-away" ("Chinese take-out") meal, as a phonetic derivation of the French word "Chinoise", pronounced "chinwaz", for "Chinese".
@beckyallsopp5695
@beckyallsopp5695 Год назад
I think you're on your own there Gary
@paulhyde1834
@paulhyde1834 2 года назад
I love this!! It's great to have a smile at how different but the same we are!! 'Blighty' is a word from India, and the days of the 'Raj', meaning 'a distant place'.... "Take me back to dear old Blighty.... put me on the train for London town....." etc... It's interesting how prudish the Americans can be. You wouldn't say (on TV, at least) 'a pair of knickers', a pair of panties'. I believe you'd say 'a pair of underwear', which is grammatically incorrect.
@beckyallsopp5695
@beckyallsopp5695 Год назад
Please never say panties in the UK. It usually conjures up kinky connotations of the unpleasant kind 😂
@beckyallsopp5695
@beckyallsopp5695 Год назад
I feel people in the UK don't say Blighty much. It's more of an expat or Australian saying
@missd2657
@missd2657 2 года назад
I'm British and I do sometimes use the word obnoxious as a noun to describe a thing that is brash and arrogant. But I do think British people mainly use it as a verb.
@justsomeguy5063
@justsomeguy5063 2 года назад
Fortnight derives from old English it basically means fourteen nights, and Pram is short for perambulator which is the original name when it was first invented.
@PhilipWorthington
@PhilipWorthington 2 года назад
Hmm, English is a bit more nuanced than it first appears. For example: 'Chuffed' by itself does mean really happy, but 'Chuffed off' means really angry, while 'chuffing nora' is a mild expletive, and 'chuff off' means vaguely the same as 'p!ss off'. 'Up the chuff' can mean something that has gone really badly wrong, or 'sodomy' depending on context. 'A chuff' would be an anus in that context. You could have a 'chuff of smoke', which is the noise and smoke a steam engine makes, or 'smoke a chuff' meaning smoke weed. Like most English words these all depend on context (what you are talking about), county (where you're from, local dialects) and company (who you are talking to.)
@gavinreid5387
@gavinreid5387 2 года назад
In Britain Pissed is drunk, but pissed off means annoyed.
@gregoryvnicholas
@gregoryvnicholas 2 года назад
Chuffed has an element of self-satisfaction.
@obi-ron
@obi-ron 2 года назад
Chuffed= pleased with yourself (May be like a bird displaying its plumage (as the Chough or Chuff)) 400 year old expression so no-one is sure where it came from.
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