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Why Foreigners Think Brits Are Weird 

Adventures and Naps
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Are British people weird?? Some foreigners seem to think so! Here's weird things British people do that they think are normal, from the perceptive of non-Brits!
I love learning about British culture and how weird we can all be. Have a weird UK quirk you want to share? Make sure to leave a comment!
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Hey! I'm Alanna - a thirty-something documenting my life as a Canadian living in England.
I share the ups and downs of an expat living abroad and what it's really like living in the UK. It's not always easy, but there's been so many wonderful experiences, too. I post a RU-vid video every Tuesday plus an additional video every Saturday on my Patreon account. I also livestream every Wednesday and Sunday at 5:30pm GMT/BST on Twitch.
Alanna x

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26 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 1 тыс.   
@sammic7492
@sammic7492 Год назад
It's not us Brits who are weird, it's everyone else that is. 🤣
@stephemmurphy2554
@stephemmurphy2554 Год назад
Indeed.
@simonsmith8974
@simonsmith8974 Год назад
@@stephemmurphy2554 right!
@firmbutton6485
@firmbutton6485 Год назад
I agree.
@kathryndunn9142
@kathryndunn9142 Год назад
Perfectly said
@anthonycraig1458
@anthonycraig1458 Год назад
Anyone who goes abroad thinks things are weird anywhere else. The UK is no weirder than any other country
@CrazyInsanelikeafox
@CrazyInsanelikeafox Год назад
We don't judge people based on where they are from..., we take the piss out of people based on where they are from and we love it.😊
@mikepxg6406
@mikepxg6406 11 месяцев назад
Definately if someone is from UP North. (im from Kent)
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 4 месяца назад
@@mikepxg6406 Or who can't spell definitely ... 🙂
@Red5x5x5
@Red5x5x5 Месяц назад
This is an important point. It's not judgement as such, we're not gonna stone them to death or anything, but we do love a stereotype. We've been crammed on to this little island together for almost 1,000 years, so obviously there's some history between certain areas. Generally we're just taking the piss, and we expect to get as good as we give. Our real hatred is reserved for people from the next village/town. And of course (strictly on a national level) the French, who (strictly on a national level) hate us right back.
@Clayton-S.
@Clayton-S. Год назад
I should hope everyone thinks we're weird...if not, we're clearly not doing it right!😂 Many thanks for another fun video Alanna😆👍
@mothmagic1
@mothmagic1 Год назад
That's much along the lines as I was going to say
@AdventuresAndNaps
@AdventuresAndNaps Год назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@Clayton-S.
@Clayton-S. Год назад
@@AdventuresAndNaps always!😆👍
@Clayton-S.
@Clayton-S. Год назад
@@mothmagic1 it's kinda our thing! 😆
@stevenclarke5606
@stevenclarke5606 Год назад
We are proud to be Weird , it’s our thing!
@MillsyLM
@MillsyLM Год назад
I've spent almost 53 years perfecting my weirdness so i should bloody well hope that they find us weird! 😂😂
@chrissaltmarsh6777
@chrissaltmarsh6777 Год назад
Ha! I have twenty years on you, I'm in the Scottish National Weirditude squad.
@MillsyLM
@MillsyLM Год назад
@@chrissaltmarsh6777 I doff my hat to you sir
@grahamdhudson
@grahamdhudson Год назад
It hasn't stopped them visiting yet so we need to up our game. 😂
@grahamdhudson
@grahamdhudson Год назад
Right, I'm going g away to work on my weirdness.
@wilwilliamson8831
@wilwilliamson8831 Год назад
Such a beautiful comment, woop woop I am 54 and 22 in the army and 14 in nuclear industry yeah fook I am weird and I am so proud of it 😂😂😂😂
@MichaelJames-g5v
@MichaelJames-g5v Год назад
The British are great fantastic history culture and sence of humour, ive been here since the age of 13 from my native American Choctaw nation and i love it ❤
@angelavara4097
@angelavara4097 Год назад
Hope you are as weird as us other brits.
@grahamdhudson
@grahamdhudson Год назад
And you are very welcome. I hope everyone has been good to you!
@eddieclitheroe4827
@eddieclitheroe4827 17 дней назад
Thank you for saying❤
@TheYopogo
@TheYopogo Год назад
One of my coworkers is German, and she says they have a saying: If you're not weird, you're not normal.
@andywilliams7323
@andywilliams7323 Год назад
We complain about our public transport in the UK, because while it's massively better than the USA and Canada, overall we know it could be and should be much better and we know that it's not as good as public transport in other European and Asian countries.
@neilbiggs1353
@neilbiggs1353 Год назад
Part of the problem is that some of our systems predate good practice! Most underground systems for example were built after London had started to learn some of the things it should have done better and it's really hard to retrofit
@timpullen4941
@timpullen4941 Год назад
Public transport is massively expensive. I live in Manchester and it is more expensive for me to go to London by train than it is to Fly to many European cities. It's disgraceful.
@markfrancis5164
@markfrancis5164 Год назад
Have you been on German roads and railways lately. Far worse than uk for the past 20 years now. Mind you their National spending on infrastructure is a lot less as is their national debt.
@solidflyer286
@solidflyer286 Год назад
@@timpullen4941I live in Manchester and it costs my family of four £12 to go a three mile round journey.
@HistoritorJimaldus
@HistoritorJimaldus Год назад
@@timpullen4941that’s due to privatisation - or Tories in other words!
@andywilliams7323
@andywilliams7323 Год назад
The reason security and Police Officers exist inside some McDonalds at night is because of the UK's strong late-night clubbing alcohol culture. The police and security guards are there to prevent any drunk customers from becoming disorderly.
@kevindarkstar
@kevindarkstar Год назад
Or a complete break down of morality and individual responsible 😳
@MrSandancer
@MrSandancer Год назад
Looking for people like me presumably.
@portlyoldman
@portlyoldman Год назад
@@kevindarkstar-Jeez! I bet you’re fun to be with 🧐
@kevindarkstar
@kevindarkstar Год назад
@@portlyoldman actually, yeah, but that's irrelevant to the fact 😜
@aguywithaview
@aguywithaview Год назад
Police station's dont have canteens so policexwill often be in fast food joints They are not based there.
@grantparman4705
@grantparman4705 Год назад
As a US American, I can see how some people would say that Brits are weird, but US Americans are even weirder, and not always in good ways!
@CrazyInsanelikeafox
@CrazyInsanelikeafox Год назад
Floridians and New Yorkers spring to mind😂😂
@SweetLotusDreams
@SweetLotusDreams Год назад
I've just watched a bunch of videos of Trump supporters jumping through insane mental hoops to justify their idiotic beliefs. if you want weird, start there.
@mikepxg6406
@mikepxg6406 11 месяцев назад
I have visited USA many times. Yes some US Americans are weird but they all seem fascinated with our accent its so funny but a great talking point. and Most US Americans are extremely friendly and easy to talk to.
@tonyrobson4681
@tonyrobson4681 8 месяцев назад
I saw a programme on PBS America last week about the anti-disco movement in the 1970's. Very strange.
@hgilbert
@hgilbert 6 месяцев назад
In America, you are not allowed to loiter in public libraries, so you spot some clearly homeless people or destitute, browsing books then reading them, or pretending to. Nobody told or explained me anything, at that very moment I sussed out what was going on.
@mccpcorn2000
@mccpcorn2000 Год назад
The weird thing is, Brits know they're weird. The weirder thing is that we don't realise just HOW weird!
@lizbignell7813
@lizbignell7813 Год назад
We are weird, and proud of it!
@rachelpenny5165
@rachelpenny5165 Год назад
I would rather be weird than normal.
@stephenjones6500
@stephenjones6500 Год назад
You forgot to add We dont care !
@Oooo-bi7bi
@Oooo-bi7bi Год назад
I don’t think we care
@carpediem3391
@carpediem3391 Год назад
What foreigners should learn is London isn’t England or Britain
@Red5x5x5
@Red5x5x5 Месяц назад
That's a good point. London and Londoners are no more reflective of the UK than Paris and Parisiens(?) are of France. Capital or even general big city life and attitudes don't really reflect how most of us live or think.
@timothykeech7394
@timothykeech7394 Год назад
Love the humour. This gave me a chuckle or two. One of the most endearing things about the British is their ability to laugh at themselves. I love that you can see how ridiculous we are.
@tomsenior7405
@tomsenior7405 Год назад
"The Posh voice" when answering the telephone. My mother could be shouting at the top of her voice when we were children. Swearing, yelling and cursing at us for some reason. The phone rings and in the strangest, calm, patois my mother would answer : "Hellow. This is Missus Harold Senior speaking. To Hoom ham eye having the pleasure of speaking with today?"... hangs up and immediately reverts back to yelling at us in Broad-Yorkshire.
@rundmk00
@rundmk00 5 месяцев назад
Mrs Bucket lady of the house speaking!
@MarshalPalmer
@MarshalPalmer Год назад
We are not weird. We are correct.
@TRPGpilot
@TRPGpilot 4 месяца назад
Of course the British are correct. It's everyone else that's the problem . . .
@pampoovey6722
@pampoovey6722 Год назад
The bye thing is so true. It's so bad, we'll often restart conversations because we spent so much time saying bye.
@keithbird8910
@keithbird8910 Год назад
Speak for yourself. It's not something I ever hear blokes do. Must be a woman thing.
@andybaker2456
@andybaker2456 Год назад
I remember watching US TV programmes when I was a kid, and being totally confused by how Americans often seemed to finish what they were saying on the phone, then they would just hang up. No "bye", no "see ya", nothing! Not only did it seem strange, but also so insanely rude!!
@numanuma20
@numanuma20 Год назад
What shows? We usually say bye, talk to you later, got to go etc.
@betagombar9022
@betagombar9022 Год назад
I noticed the same, maybe it's just for effect 🤔
@BooBaddyBig
@BooBaddyBig Год назад
That's just TV magic though.
@AdventuresAndNaps
@AdventuresAndNaps Год назад
That's just for TV - I notice it, too 😂 I'd be so offended if someone just hung up!
@Elwaves2925
@Elwaves2925 Год назад
@@AdventuresAndNaps I know that hanging up is a just for TV thing but it still seems really odd. Same goes for when two people on phones say they'll meet up but rarely state when AND where. Would it be worth doing a video on what Canadian and American TV/movies get completely wrong? Have you done that already?
@ThatAngloSaxonBloke
@ThatAngloSaxonBloke Год назад
Strange thing Brits find about foreigners, especially Americans - They think the whole of the UK starts and finishes in London.
@damonwilliams5033
@damonwilliams5033 Год назад
Mind you,most Londoners think the same thing.
@stevehaddon151
@stevehaddon151 Год назад
As Londoner it does 🤣
@JupiterThunder
@JupiterThunder 7 месяцев назад
And London is always foggy, because that's how it is in Jack The Ripper movies.
@gregoriancatmonk6904
@gregoriancatmonk6904 6 месяцев назад
To be fair it's kind of the same with Brits, New York City and LA and sometimes Florida are generally the main places that exists....the rest of America not so much.
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 4 месяца назад
@@gregoriancatmonk6904 With good reason. 🙂
@tinaunderhill5412
@tinaunderhill5412 Год назад
And this is why I’m so proud to be British 😊
@barrygower6733
@barrygower6733 Год назад
I remember being able to work out which part of London people came from by their accent. My Clapham Junction accent is different from Wimbledon, Plaistow, Tottenham etc. But now that the number of Londoners has declined over the years, this is much more difficult.
@andybaker2456
@andybaker2456 Год назад
True. It's funny, but growing up in Battersea myself, I knew the local accent was different from other parts of London, I just couldn't describe what those differences were! But even though I don't live in Battersea any more, I can always pick a Batterseaite out in a crowd as soon as I hear them speak. 😄
@jamesportrais3946
@jamesportrais3946 Год назад
Ahah Barry, you must be an artifact; beyond ancient, fossilised or soup! Around 2004 I was trying to find a destination in Vauxhall. I couldn't even find anyone who spoke English, let alone knew the way. Finally I found a grand old pair of Paddies (I can say this term as my ancestory can be traced back to 1820's Ireland on my maternal side) digging up the road who pointed me in the right direction. I'm directed to my destination in 2004 by a pair of Irish workers, the only English speaking duo in Vauxhall. Diversity is our strength! Then I took the train back to Manxester & got p!ssed with my then half Bengali GF who was 17 years older than me. White intellegent Gen X male - no kids, no sh!t. DIVERSITY!!!!!!!!!!!
@jamesportrais3946
@jamesportrais3946 Год назад
@@andybaker2456 NowI live in Thailand with lovely wife who's only 3 years older than me. I suspect she's fvcking around, but hey - she's a soup model; shtill winning eh? Too many "n"'s in winning. Thank God for cannabisssssssssss...
@AnnFBug
@AnnFBug Год назад
My grandmother lived in Lambeth Walk, with a real cockney accent, like a toned down version of Barbara Windsor. You don’t hear that in London any more. They even had their own distinctive way of singing, with a little high pitched swoop down to the beginning of each line. I think all the Cockneys got pushed out to Essex a few decades ago. A shame.
@SnowyAspenHills
@SnowyAspenHills Год назад
Now London accents are from lands far far away.
@janetstorey416
@janetstorey416 Год назад
I live in the North East of England, in a country town, I have seen snow drifts of 15 feet deep when out with my husband delivering feed to farms, people from the south panic when they see an inch of snow and their whole world grinds to a halt. I have even helped dig out sheep buried in snow here.
@jaynespring8097
@jaynespring8097 Год назад
@janetstorey416 as a born and bred southener I disagree with you. As a child we also had snow with the drifts. We still walked to school through it (challenging) and hoped the school was open. We sat in our wet clothes and laughed and didn't complain. How would the youngsters of the South or North cope today I wonder !
@Caer-lv6sl
@Caer-lv6sl 5 месяцев назад
@@jaynespring8097 i think the point is; our northern winters are much harsher than yours down there. It's not a huge distance but, eg, my city is on the same lattitude is copenhagen or nunavut
@clivemortimore8203
@clivemortimore8203 Год назад
I live in the middle of nowhere Lincolnshire and my village has 3 buses a week, so not all the UK has good public transport.
@snapdragon2441
@snapdragon2441 4 месяца назад
I love Lincolnshire, plan to retire there eventually, we visit whenever we can. X
@michaels640
@michaels640 Год назад
I once got home from Bradford to Holmfirth at 2am, but it was so beautiful! on a main double-deck bus route road, the trees were full of snow and brushed the top of the car. It was like driving through a snow magic-tunnel in the woods.
@Immortal-Headcase
@Immortal-Headcase Год назад
Over the accents, people don't realise, just England alone is made up of several ancient kingdoms and the citizens tended to never wander far from towns and villages. Things are changing now as more people get cosmopolitan and one of the most famous accents is starting to die out, the cockney accent, because white people are a minority in London these days, and the accent is dying because new cockneys from far and wide are changing it.
@bahijarhafiri
@bahijarhafiri 11 месяцев назад
We are currently experiencing a significant economic downturn, with inflation reaching catastrophic levels. The recent CPI report reflects a massive failure in managing the situation. To stabilize the housing market, the FED will have to take extreme measures, although this action negatively impacts other markets. Maintaining a green portfolio requires extensive diversification, and I have managed to achieve a 14% increase while exercising caution. This approach is far more favorable than leaving funds in accounts with negligible 0-1 percent interest rates......
@GhanYt
@GhanYt 11 месяцев назад
Inflation is becoming ingrained in our economic landscape, eroding the value of cash or funds kept in low-interest accounts annually. Investing is essential for growing wealth, especially considering that for most individuals, it's the only viable path to a secure retirement, given the absence of exceedingly high incomes.
@GhanYt
@GhanYt 11 месяцев назад
My advisor is Jenny Pamogas Canaya. She boasts a high level of qualification and extensive experience in the financial market. Her expertise in portfolio diversification is notable, making her a recognized authority in the field. I recommend delving deeper into her credentials. With many years of hands-on experience, she is a valuable asset for anyone navigating the complexities of the financial market.
@gemmascholes8359
@gemmascholes8359 Год назад
So funny! As a Brit living in Canada it’s the Canadians I find weird 😂 I miss the British sense of humour ❤
@waldorfstatler3129
@waldorfstatler3129 Год назад
The snow thing is fairly recent (last 40 years or so) thing. Back in the 1950s,60s and 70s, we had more snowy freezing winters in the UK and life went on as normal in most areas. I can remember back in the early 1960s walking to school in freezing fog, snow and rain wearing short trousers and blazer only. No parents driving or escorting us from about 7 years old onwards. A few of us friends met outside and waded through the snow to primary school. Well, that's how it was in my area of south central London.
@andybaker2456
@andybaker2456 Год назад
I remember a few snowy winters back in the early 80s when I was at school in Battersea. The problem wasn't that us kids couldn't get to school as most of us lived close enough to walk there anyway (a lift to or from school was a very rare treat, and only ever happened if your dad had a day off or finished work early!), the problem was with the teachers getting to school as most of them drove. Not that it bothered us, though. Whenever that happened, they would just close the school early (usually by dinnertime), so we'd have a massive snowball fight in the street before going home to watch telly in the warm. Happy days! 😁
@KorkytheKat-h3c
@KorkytheKat-h3c Год назад
Yes I remember that too, two or three feet of snow, and wearing short trousers until I was in big school. I was eleven when I got my first long trousers. KorkytheKat From the midlands
@barrymiller3385
@barrymiller3385 Год назад
If someone says "alright" to you, unless you have just been stabbed, the answer is "fine"!
@Scaleyback317
@Scaleyback317 6 месяцев назад
Helps to put thanks after the fine or you might get stabbed!
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 4 месяца назад
"Nah, half left" was a popular reply when I was a lad.
@Scaleyback317
@Scaleyback317 4 месяца назад
Ticketyf-----gboo! is readily understood.
@Brian3989
@Brian3989 Год назад
During my lifetime there have been only a few years in England when we've had enough snow to really bring everything to a standstill. We just do not have enough snow each year to need to have all the equipment siting un-used for many years. Of course if London has half inch or two centimetres of snow the world will come to an end.
@t.a.k.palfrey3882
@t.a.k.palfrey3882 Год назад
PS: the "you all right" greeting is simply an updated version of how polite introductions were made in the past, and how I was instructed to do at school, when introduced to adults or strangers. The etiquette was to offer one's hand and say, "How do you do?".
@chrisrickards1087
@chrisrickards1087 Год назад
You alright,,, I normally answer “not so bad how’s you” or fair to middling.
@wessexdruid7598
@wessexdruid7598 Год назад
It means _exactly_ the same thing as what they frequently say in N.America - some variation of 'How you doing?'
@AnnFBug
@AnnFBug Год назад
I think it is more a north western thing, the people who might call you, ‘love-a-duck’!
@wessexdruid7598
@wessexdruid7598 Год назад
@@AnnFBug 'Me duck' is common in the E.Midlands.IME in Yorkshire, it's often 'love'. But never heard 'love-a-duck' on Teeside? Where do you mean by NE?
@SnowyAspenHills
@SnowyAspenHills Год назад
“Alright”, nobody I know says “you all alright” unless they have tripped and fallen or obviously hurt themselves.
@jonathanmills5747
@jonathanmills5747 Год назад
Right... I just saw this on my RU-vid feed. I have a tendency to be defensive about our Britishness when a non-Brit posts a critique on our culture, (perhaps because Alanna is Canadian and not an American I was disarmed) so I thought I'd watch her blog to the End, ready to take offence. She has completely won me over as an admirer of her work. This charming young lady is 100% spot on with her assessment and because of it, also very funny and original. I wasn't expecting that but found myself laughing at the idiosyncratic observations. She nailed it from start to finish, very refreshing, clever and humorously accurate. The snow, the Public transport, in fact the whole fifteen minute piece really well constructed. She wasn't rude or condescending, quite the opposite as a matter of fact. Bravo for the flawless post 👏👏👏😊 Thank you for entertaining me I guess (slapping my knees) I will be off now, so, Bye, bye, bye, see you soon x
@tiggerwood8899
@tiggerwood8899 Год назад
When I was growing up, way back when😁 snow was a lot more common and it wasn't just 3 inches. It was 2 or 3 feet, sometimes more. The world didn't stop. The roads were nearly always clear as the gritters had been out. Schools didn't close. If by some chance the buses didn't run, you put your wellies on and walked to school or work. Too soft these days, health and safety gone mad.😁 Fun video Alana, thank you
@nforne
@nforne Год назад
My primary school was one of the highest in England and it never closed, not unless the boiler broke. I lived a mile away and walked to school in all weathers, often wading through deep snow. Missing school was unheard of. Fast forward 30 years... I had to collect my daughter from school early because snow had been forecast. Not a single snowflake had fallen.
@andrewgarner2224
@andrewgarner2224 Год назад
But 30 years ago the world was generally a lot closer. You could walk to school, work, the shops and managed. Now a lot of people travel 30 miles to work, we use out of town supermarkets and schools close because the teachers also travel to work.
@angelavara4097
@angelavara4097 Год назад
I grew up in those times too and I loved it.
@Sonofdonald2024
@Sonofdonald2024 Год назад
With regards to accents people forget that the UK has been around for thousands of years. And until 150 years ago or so widespread travel was not really a thing so many people would've grown up in a small community that they rarely travelled far from it. And so accents would naturally vary
@billybunter6659
@billybunter6659 Год назад
When we say right in that way it's an exclamation of something final or a change in direction "Right,i'm off" or "Right are we going" adding the leg slapping exaggerates the meaning which is handy sometimes when you're stuck in a conversation you don't really want to be in and saying right and leg slapping put's an end to it unless you get someone who completely ignores it and carries on talking in that case other tactics have to be used 🤔.
@Mohegan13
@Mohegan13 Год назад
The snow thing is basically because our winter is so short in terms of 'heavy' snow that it's actually cheaper to shut down for a few days/week than it is to implement cold weather solutions. Hi, my washing machine is in the utility room. Now you know someone in the UK that doesn't have it in a kitchen. 😛
@natalielang6209
@natalielang6209 Год назад
I had to pause it at the Tube bit to comment. It is very easy to forget that the London Underground is a piece of living history. The first underground railway. The reason contactless is a thing. There is a river running to the Thames over a station platform and people don't even realise. It is also one of the most accessible public transport systems. Having lived in London my whole life, I absolutely love the Tube.
@allenmontrasio8962
@allenmontrasio8962 Год назад
To be fair, public tranport is good in London, but in small towns it's abysmal.
@jackx4311
@jackx4311 Год назад
Why are our houses so small? Perspective. About 95% of the UK's population lives in England, so that's: England: about *60* million people living in *50,000* square miles. Arizona: about *6* million people living in *100,000* square miles. For Arizona to be as crowded as England, about 114 million people would have to move there.
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 4 месяца назад
Good point, but Arizona isn't in Canada. 🙂
@EtherealSunset
@EtherealSunset Год назад
"Fine, thanks. You?" is a good response.
@-Pol-
@-Pol- Год назад
I haven't watched the video all the way through yet so here's a couple of speculations - When I lived in Germany it was interesting to learn the things they thought was weird about the UK... 1. Traffic cones - why are UK motorway lanes coned off for miles and miles for a tiny little stretch of roadworks? [Edit - yup! there it is!] 2. Those taps in motorway service stations where you have to hold in a plunger with one hand but as soon as you let go to try and wash both hands together, the flow just snaps off! - Since then we have invented magic taps where you wave your hands around hoping to trigger some sort of sensor until the water deigns to appear - then proceed to a similar performance in front of the hand dryer.
@roberttaylor5997
@roberttaylor5997 Год назад
Those taps are the result of the clowns who installed them not knowing (or not caring) that you're supposed to adjust them so that the button comes up slowly, giving you enough time to wash your hands before it shuts off.
@hippopotoftea
@hippopotoftea Год назад
We British aren't weird, no, it's the rest of the world that's weird!
@philstraintravels9281
@philstraintravels9281 Год назад
English person here and I have to say that while public transport is very good in London, parts of the south east and some cities across the nations, it's an absolute joke oop here in north Derbyshire. I alternate AM and PM shifts (06 - 14 and 14 - 22) and to get to work by car it is 21 minutes (9 miles) by bus it's over 90 minutes and to start at 05:50 I would actually arrive 1.5 miles away at 07:45 and finally arrive at work sometime after 08:15. A 22:00 finish requires a 9 mile walk.
@IanYuill
@IanYuill Год назад
It’s not all Brits who can’t cope with snow, just those in the south of England.
@chrisinnes2128
@chrisinnes2128 Год назад
Also at least where I'm live the beast from the east was much worse than what she shows we had nearly 3 foot(one metre)of snow in less that an hour
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 4 месяца назад
Taking a day off work seems an excellent way to cope! That wouldn't occur to those non-thinking northerners! 🙂
@rgoonewardene380
@rgoonewardene380 Год назад
I know quite a few people in the UK who have their washing machines in a separate room. I use the tube often. I also have used public transport in a couple of dozen countries, and they are cheaper, and more reliable. That said however, we do better than a lot of other countries.
@01bigtrev
@01bigtrev Год назад
The line on the pint glasses is to make sure you are not getting short changed by having a huge frothy head on the pint. The liquid needs to be at minimum there.
@mk1aquatic739
@mk1aquatic739 Год назад
I couldn't care less if anyone thinks we're weird or not. We literally couldn't give a toss what anyone thinks of us. That's what other nationalities don't realise!
@HerrCron
@HerrCron Год назад
Coping and seething is the Brits natural state.
@davec4955
@davec4955 Год назад
Financially it's not worth preparing to keep things moving when you have one day of heavy snow in 10 years 😂
@haroldpearson6025
@haroldpearson6025 Год назад
Get someone to tell you about 1940s and 1960s winters in UK.
@gomezthechimp1116
@gomezthechimp1116 Год назад
To be fair, you're talking about two entire decades, when it was only 2 winters that were really severe: 1947 and 1962/3. In 1947 there were drifts reported that were over 20 feet deep and temperatures below -21 C. A similar temperature was recorded in Braemar in 1963.
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 4 месяца назад
@@gomezthechimp1116 I remember the 1962/3 winter - I was doing a paper round and I used to park my bike at each house by just riding into the snowdrifts at the side of the roads. Nowadays we have so little snow it's not worth investing in any infrastructure or equipment to deal with it, which is why "a little snow" grinds us to a halt. Countries that frequently have lots of snow have a much stronger incentive to prepare for it.
@tobeytransport2802
@tobeytransport2802 Год назад
My house has a utility room for washing machine and tumble dryer... but it’s part of an extension which my dad built.
@delhog6161
@delhog6161 4 месяца назад
The UK & Snow is a new thing that started in the 90s before then things just carried on. I remember taking my wife to work in very deep snow it was great fun. I had a peaceful day at home in the duvet😂 I phoned in to work saying I was blocked in by the snow.🇬🇧👍
@kevinturner3997
@kevinturner3997 4 месяца назад
I remember walking to school in at least a foot of snow when I was at infant school 5 to 10 years old, I had my wellies, duffle coat, and balaclava. That was 50+ years ago. We did have snow in those days. Everyone made it to school, including all the teachers, everyone made it to work, and the public transport system didn't grind to a halt. People have gotten soft.
@cubeaceuk9034
@cubeaceuk9034 Год назад
We had a laundry room. I turned it into my work studio. My wife does not want the washing machine in another room away from the kitchen. Road works. No-one understands why the road is repaired one week and then the next week dug up by a utility company.
@nealjroberts4050
@nealjroberts4050 Год назад
The washing machine thing is a result of how kitchens were typically the most connected up with both plumbing and electricity sockets.
@mauricefrost8900
@mauricefrost8900 Год назад
Re British accents, we are from the south of England, in fact you can’t get much further south Some years ago we were staying in a hotel in the Black Country (the area outside of Birmingham) We realised that of the four people having dinner at the table next to us in the hotel, two had distinct Birmingham accents while the other two were from the Black Country Yes the accents really do change in a matter of a few miles
@trickygoose2
@trickygoose2 Год назад
The north-east is similar. Some years ago I was staying in Newcastle and took the Metro to the coast. There were some people in my carriage speaking with the strongest, most impenetrable Geordie accents I've ever heard who all got off at the same station. The next day at my hotel I was chatting to a waitress at breakfast and mentioned this to her, she immediately guessed which station they got off at. The Metro stations tend to be about a mile apart.
@Canalcoholic
@Canalcoholic Год назад
Yes, it upsets us Black Country folk when we are mistaken for Brummies, and the accent can vary from town to town.
@tiggerwood8899
@tiggerwood8899 Год назад
There are 400+ roundabouts in Canada. More being built, too.
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 4 месяца назад
There's 400 in Basingstoke and Milton Keynes!
@terrystewart1973
@terrystewart1973 Год назад
Watching this makes me wish we hadn't decimalized our currency. I'd love to have seen you navigating shillings, half-crowns, pennies, six penny and thru’penny bits. How many pennies in a shilling!? How many shillings in a pound!? Why!?
@ynot6473
@ynot6473 Год назад
that' needlessly cruel. LOL.
@dasy2k1
@dasy2k1 Год назад
The thing I can never understand is why it wasn't the other way round with the 20 and 12 which would at least mean that it would match the Troy weight system with a shilling being 1oz and a penny being 1 pennyweight of sterling silver
@johnteeling4679
@johnteeling4679 Год назад
The factors of a shilling, 2,3,4,6, easier to divide into parts
@AnnFBug
@AnnFBug Год назад
To say nothing of guineas that were common currency when I was small!
@patriciachirgwin3238
@patriciachirgwin3238 Год назад
You obviously haven’t been to Oxfordshire - our roads are awful! Kent could teach us a lesson in road maintenance! And as a fellow Canadian living in the U.K., I love roundabouts! And I still find British people’s reaction to snow is hysterical! Three flakes and they close the country! TTFN- that’s a famous 1980s ‘English’ radio presenter’s phrase - ‘Ta ta for now’ - instead of Bye Bye!
@stephentaylor1476
@stephentaylor1476 Год назад
As I keep telling people the last few years of winters have been very warm. I am an older guy and therefore can remember cold winters when we still went to work or school even when there was no heating. The younger people don't remember this and seem to find warm winters cold. Also the way health and safety has gone, a few years ago I walked three miles to work in a snow storm and my workplace wouldn't let me in on an account of health and safety.
@peterjackson4763
@peterjackson4763 Год назад
About 20 years ago there was a day when I couldn't get my car out of the carpark, so I walked to work. Only about 1.5 miles. I was one of just three people who made it in. In the 60s my school closed one day because of snow. I didn't have tuppence to phone home, so I walked home, just over 3 miles. Well I tried. My mother found me about 300 yards before I got there. I was 8 or 9, in short trousers.
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 4 месяца назад
In the 1950s and 1960s I remember getting out of bed on a cold morning and my feet touching the freezing lino! Happy days?
@mongoose621
@mongoose621 Год назад
"Alright mate" = "Hello. How are you? But don't tell me because i don't care and don't want to prolong this conversation longer than i have to."
@davetdowell
@davetdowell Год назад
What do you mean "Foreigners"? I think we're weird and I'm English. I love that we're weird, it's a characteristic we need to encourage. Remember that cave rescue in Thailand? Our weirdness meant we had men who could 'step into the breach', and not just men, but an entire organisation dedicated to cave rescues (BCRC I think), no doubt full of weird people with skills we all hope we never need to be a recipient of. I mean I'd heard of cave diving, but never given it much thought. Turns out some of our weird people are experts in it, thankfully. More harmless weirdness can be a good thing.
@jackx4311
@jackx4311 Год назад
I'm not sure about wines and spirits, but it's ILLEGAL to sell either draft beer or cider in any other measure but Imperial pints and half pints. And for the benefit of Americans who might think "That looks a *lot* more than a pint?"; a US pint = 16 fluid ounces, but an Imperial pint is *20* fluid ounces. *Cheers!*
@BobbieRockyBuster1415
@BobbieRockyBuster1415 Год назад
Ive never thought this before but after watching numerous Canadian/American RU-vid channels i now realise i live in "the best country in the world",im a 58yr old Englishman and ive taken for granted the good things this country has to offer.
@johnross2924
@johnross2924 Год назад
That's why the whole world wants to live in England, they still hate us though 😂
@jackwalker4874
@jackwalker4874 Год назад
​@@johnross2924it's envy
@kb5509
@kb5509 Год назад
​@@johnross2924come off it mate.
@johnross2924
@johnross2924 Год назад
@@kb5509 come off which bit?
@vijay-c
@vijay-c Год назад
Calling it the "best country in the world" isn't very British though. Ironically enough, it's my 1st gen immigrant dad who came up with the best description I've heard when I asked him why he continually complained about living here, despite our family having actually chosen it - "it's slightly less shit than everywhere else" came the reply. At that point, I knew he had been well and truly integrated. 😂
@_Mentat
@_Mentat Год назад
In the UK we have this thing called "Chucking out time" which is 11pm when all the pubs close at exactly the same time and all the drunk people are on the street at the same time. They all feel hungry and go to McD's or other fast food place. The police are needed to keep order: not so much because the drunks are violent, just chaotic: jay walking; cannot walk at all; need hospital, etc.
@SteveGouldinSpain
@SteveGouldinSpain Год назад
In Spain, they have a similar thing to saying 'right' when they want to leave. They end a conversation with 'pues nade' which translates as 'well nothing'. I thought it sounded quite rude at first but now I use it all the time - comes naturally to a Brit!
@JohnJackson-mn4ts
@JohnJackson-mn4ts Год назад
Look at the difference between, for example, someone from Birmingham (a Brummie) and Manchester, or more extreme, someone from Liverpool (a Scouser)! Geologically not that distant from each other, but very different accent wise. For a linguistic adventure, go further north to Tyne and Wear, the Geordies. Think Ant and Dev after an all night bender, it’s almost another language.
@sedd1234
@sedd1234 Год назад
I've never thought about the "byebyeBYE" thing before... but I realise i do it a lot now you mentioned it and I'm not sure what else I am doing without realising.
@denismorgan9742
@denismorgan9742 Год назад
Some pint glasses do not have a pint lines, that's because they are Lager glasses. Bitter and Stout glasses have a line and the head or as you would call it froth is meant to reach the top of the glass if it doesn't there's not enough gas in your beer.
@John-wj6kg
@John-wj6kg Год назад
I think you'll find that Britishness is the very definition of "Not weird" lol
@wessexdruid7598
@wessexdruid7598 Год назад
'English' and 'eccentric' have always been a pairing - don't pretend the Welsh or Scots are any better?
@Greenwood4727
@Greenwood4727 Год назад
we are Eccentric, to balance out our stability
@wessexdruid7598
@wessexdruid7598 Год назад
@@Greenwood4727We don't have the only claim... The Irish, the Dutch, the Poles - all can do eccentricity really well.
@Wayland444
@Wayland444 Год назад
I am a 68 yr old Yorkshireman and have never slapped my knee at all whether saying "right" or any other word or phrase. Neither have I heard /heard of anyone else doing it.
@nicolad8822
@nicolad8822 Год назад
Well I’m from Yorkshire too and I’ve seen it.
@shaggybaggums
@shaggybaggums Год назад
Used to see it a fair bit in Nottinghamshire.
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 4 месяца назад
@@nicolad8822 Some Yorkshiremen are so insular! 🙂
@PixelsAtDawn
@PixelsAtDawn Год назад
It's OK to not love roundabouts Alanna. I will never not feel like some kind of heinous criminal as a Brit visiting the US or Canada when I drive through a RED LIGHT just because I'm turning right at an intersection. It feels so wrong!
@wilmaknickersfit
@wilmaknickersfit Год назад
I got really stressed about doing it and I was always convinced that I was going to have an accident! 😂
@Sea0fTime
@Sea0fTime Год назад
If you drove straight through it WAS wrong. You're supposed to come to a complete stop, then if it's clear you can make the turn. If you don't stop (many people don't) it's called a rolling stop, or sometimes a California stop, but it's illegal.
@inigoromon1937
@inigoromon1937 Год назад
In Spain washing machines are also in the kitchen.
@alistairthorn1122
@alistairthorn1122 Год назад
There are all sorts of weights and measures restrictions in UK law. I had to study them when I was at uni. Some have been repealed and others have been updated. But there used to be a prescribed quantity/measurement for most things. The Weights and Measures (Specified Quantities) (Unwrapped Bread and Intoxicating Liquor) Order 2011 covers the specified quantity/weight for bread loafs (400g, 800g or multiples thereof). The Meat Products and Spreadable Fish Products Regulations 1984 used to specify the legal minimum amount of lean pork that had to be in a pork sausage. The legal minimums were truly horrifyingly low.
@caw25sha
@caw25sha Год назад
Pulp is a horrible word for something you drink. To me it's mashed up wood mixed with water used to make paper.
@shed66215
@shed66215 Год назад
As a Yorkshireman can honestly say that snow never stopped owt from getting done, maybe a little slower than normal - snow down south and in London, whole lot grinds to a halt yet it always makes the news headlines...in Yorkshire, a jumper or jacket may need to be worn and people get on with it. As for that 'Beast from the East', it may have tried to kill me but I still cycled the 16miles to get to work.
@Ionabrodie69
@Ionabrodie69 Год назад
Quite agree that goes for further North too.. ( Upper Teesdale ) just these soft southern lot that can’t cope with a bit of snow.. 😂👍
@windsorSJ
@windsorSJ Год назад
My Chinese wife says I'm weird. I relish being weird, means I'm a true Brit.
@rthompsn2007
@rthompsn2007 Год назад
As a Canadian, the term "juicy bits" for pulp sounds very strange. Do I have a dirty mind? It just makes me think "naughty bits".😂
@alanmills9492
@alanmills9492 Год назад
Hi Alanna, thanks for accepting that Marmite is no longer weird. Regarding the panic buy during the snow - once they announced the Covid lockdown, you should have seen the young hipster in my local Sainsburys climbing up the pallet full of sealed toilet rolls when they wheeled it in, trying to rip off the packaging. And that's true about the elongated farewell on the phone. Though a friend I used to phone at work would suddenly say "Out" and I'd continue talking to myself and realise he meant "Over and out" like he was so busy on the Starship Enterprise or something ? Bye, see ya, bye.
@paulguise698
@paulguise698 Год назад
Marmite is nice in Casseroles, Glen and Friends cooking show, Glen always has a jar of Marmite
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 4 месяца назад
"Over and out" is nonsense - "over" means the conversation shifts to the other party, "out" means leaving the conversation. Only bad playwrights use "over and out", which is wny so many people think it's right.
@24WESJULY
@24WESJULY Год назад
Brits love to eat soap. I lived in Britton for 3 years, granted this was in the 1980s, so things may have changed. Who am I kidding? Nothing ever changes in Britton. All the time I was there, I never saw a dishwasher. There is quite a ritual about "washing up." Who's turn is it, do I offer to help, if they say no do I insist? Anyway, the procedure is to fill the sink with as much hot water as it can possibly hold (elbow deep is good) with a giant mound of soap on top. The dishes are then washed as slowly as possible with either rapid incomprehensible conversion or awkward silence. Suddenly the hostess pulls the plug, drys her hands and says "There, all done ". I stand looking at the great gobs of soap sliding down the plates and ask,"Don't we need to give them a rinse?" She gives me a puzzled glance and says, "Why? They are nice and clean."
@ericrabinowitz6390
@ericrabinowitz6390 Год назад
I think the exception in Canada might be the accent / speech patterns of Cape Breton and Newfoundland. I love them both!
@BOABModels
@BOABModels Год назад
Orange juice comes with 'juicy bits' as every time you use 'pulp', you have to pay Jarvis Cocker 50p.
@Byfleetboy
@Byfleetboy Год назад
Being English, I am not aware of Right being used at the start of sentences or to leave a conversation. What I have noticed over the last few years is "So" at the start of sentences, particularly from younger people though it is spreading! I have never knowingly slapped my knee in my life!
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 4 месяца назад
John Finnemore did a great sketch about the abuse of the introductory "so" - checkout episode 6 of series 7 of his excellent Souvenir programme. Another annoying habit Brits have is ending a question with "or ..." as if they are about to give another alternative, but then stop talking. I just wait until they finish, which they had no intention of doing, so they get quite embarrassed!
@diaxus388
@diaxus388 Год назад
there is a reason we show our hands when leaving a pub, it shows you have no weapons in your hands when you leave so are friendly, not that you can't wait outside with one, its similar to the handshake, you shake with your right hand to show you can't draw your sword, also why we drive on the left, its so we can draw our sword on the right to defend or attack
@MichaelPunter
@MichaelPunter Год назад
You only ended with one 'Byeee'! I am traumatised, sitting here stunned! 😳 😉
@wearsider
@wearsider Год назад
I am 71 and never heard or seen someone slapping there leg or thigh so they could get away, that is weird that you should mention that. In my younger years going to school and crossing the fields full of snow in normal shoes and socks and short trousers. Not everyday but often. The schools weren't closed when its too hot or when it's cold and snow on the ground. I come from the north east of England. We never had school cancelled in any weather unless there was flooding. Buses still were in service although perhaps late.
@RogersRamblings
@RogersRamblings Год назад
There was a time that the British dealt with snow in the same way that other northern latitude countries do. Then "health and safety" became a thing and everyone became terrified. I think much of the risk avoidance that now blights the country comes from the insurance industry and which means that schools, businesses etc have to cover their backsides. The easiest way to do that is to close, that way no one needs to travel and no one is at risk of an accident and getting hurt. In the winter of 1962/3 there was snow on the ground in London and much of the rest of the country from Christmas until early April and I and my contemporaries were going to school in short trousers.
@trickygoose2
@trickygoose2 Год назад
My late father walked from Ilford to Walthamstow (about 4 or 5 miles away) and back every day for work that winter.
@Sofasurfa
@Sofasurfa Год назад
My mum built me an igloo 😊
@gomezthechimp1116
@gomezthechimp1116 Год назад
Yeah, I was 5 that winter. I can remember walking to school with my mother and looking up at the snow drifts much higher than me. I lived.
@stevemawer848
@stevemawer848 4 месяца назад
Nothing to do with health and safety - it's because snow happens so rarely it's not worth wasting money investing in equpiment to cope with it - far cheaper and more cost-effective to shut down for a few days until it clears. I was doing my paper round during that winter you mentioned - we coped back then because, although that was excessive, it wasn't unheard of to have snow every year back then.
@RogersRamblings
@RogersRamblings 4 месяца назад
@@stevemawer848 That doesn't account for schools and businesses closing. It's backside covering by those in charge so they can't be blamed.
@shaggybaggums
@shaggybaggums Год назад
If a crew at some road works is standing around doing nothing they're either on break, or more commonly waiting for something that's late and holding them up. Could be a surveyor or materials or any number of things to do with utilities. There are lots of parts to even the simplest looking jobs and you only need one of them to go wrong to mess everything up. Then the job has to get left for a few days because the crew is due on another job.
@thewidowmaker4037
@thewidowmaker4037 Год назад
Well us Brit folk think Americans are backwards, imagine getting arrested for crossing the road, Why do i think Americans are like the Cletus family in the Simpsons. Why do Americans call each other Dude and Blud, why don't American kids wear school uniforms? I've got so many questions.
@mothmagic1
@mothmagic1 Год назад
I think the Americans can be forgiven for not being able to pronounce foreign words correctly as they can't even speak English properly.
@jaimiepotts
@jaimiepotts Год назад
calm down mate
@Reubinv
@Reubinv Год назад
What do Americans have to do with anything, Alanna's Canadian!
@newtron1
@newtron1 Год назад
​@ReubenR. Unfortunately too many Brits think Americans are the same as Canadians. Which is not the case.
@thewidowmaker4037
@thewidowmaker4037 Год назад
I'm fully aware Alanah is a Canadian, she literally says I'm a Canadian living in the UK at the start of every video so yes i'm fully aware of where she is from.🤣 And as for "what do Americans have to do with anything" well Alanah references America throughout the video.😁@@Reubinv
@FranzBieberkopf
@FranzBieberkopf 10 месяцев назад
The Roman occupiers called us Brittunculai (little Brits). Foreigners have thought us weird ever since😊😊
@ProgressiveRoxx
@ProgressiveRoxx Год назад
I have a family gathering coming up this week. I think about halfway through I'm going to do the knee slap "Right!" move, even though I have no intention of leaving. I want to see if people get confused thinking I'm leaving early. I am concerned that the Home Office may revoke my citizenship for Tomfoolery, but science demands sacrifice.
@andyleighton6969
@andyleighton6969 Год назад
Careful, someone will get your coat and then you'll have to style it out and leave.
@ImWithBigRed
@ImWithBigRed Год назад
We normally say “alright?” when greeting people and respond with “alright?” Perfectly acceptable.
@dinger40
@dinger40 Год назад
Left the North as a kid 58 years ago, my accent and some words I use still gives away my origins even now.
@donmurray3638
@donmurray3638 Год назад
As a Scot who has worked in England most of my life I find you subconsciously adapt your speech to make yourself understood, then on return to your homeland your "English " accent is commented on!
@dinger40
@dinger40 Год назад
@@donmurray3638 When I joined the Navy in the early 70's talking to someone from a different area was difficult, for a week or 2. For someone from Cornwall (Padstow) to talk to Scotty it had to be translated to Bristol to Brummie toTyke (Yorkshire) to Geordie and vic versa. In the 90's had a work colleague from Southampton who went to meet her Scouce fiance's family. I said she'd need a translater, She laughted, when she came back she admitted she couldn't understand them and had to get him to repeat nearly everything
@cruachan1191
@cruachan1191 Год назад
The washing machine in the kitchen (although mine is in my garage!) is a safety issue as much as anything else, UK law doesn't allow 240V appliances in the bathroom for example, which is where a lot of European countries have their washing machines. Some larger houses have utility rooms, basically a sectioned off area of the kitchen with their washing machine, tumble drier (if they have one) and maybe some other appliances.
@Xenon0000000000001
@Xenon0000000000001 Год назад
I still don't understand why anyone would want the washing machine in a bathroom. A utility room is great if you've got space for it, but if it's a choice between putting it in the kitchen or bathroom, I'd prefer the kitchen.
@NorthernMonkeeUK
@NorthernMonkeeUK Год назад
There's no law against having a washing machine in your bathroom (although, why would you), as long as it's rated for the zone it's in, or outside of the zones (i.e. the socket is >3m away from the bath/shower). Just a lot of people don't have bathrooms that big.
@EtherealSunset
@EtherealSunset Год назад
I lived in a flat where the washing machine was in the bathroom. The socket wasn't, but the machine was.
@carolineskipper6976
@carolineskipper6976 Год назад
As I know you are aware, our reaction to snow is due to the rarety of such an event. We never have appropriate clothing, our vehicles don't have snow tyres or chains, and it always catches us unawares! It must seem hilarious to a Canadian! One of the sad things for kids post pandemic is that we will never get a 'snow day' again, because as we all now know we can do it all by Zoom. Those who can work from home, however, will definitely do so on snowy days.
@enyaq_gorm
@enyaq_gorm Год назад
Ummm we get snow all the time, sometimes even as late as easter. Been using winter tyres for the last 20 years too. The car dealership offers a tyre hotel service to store your summer tyres 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
@Mykst
@Mykst Год назад
@@enyaq_gorm Depends where you are. In my area I am lucky to see a single flake if at all.
@enyaq_gorm
@enyaq_gorm Год назад
@@Mykst quite, which is why these comments that Britain doesn't really do snow and no one has winter tyres are such nonsense
@Mykst
@Mykst Год назад
@@enyaq_gorm But again it depends on your location. Some locations that are more susceptible to snow are more likely to be better at dealing with it and these tend to be in pockets of the country. Down here in Cornwall snow is almost "unheard of". I say that with quotes because although it can snow down here there are consecutive years where it doesn't.
@enyaq_gorm
@enyaq_gorm Год назад
@@Mykst I'd say the upper 33% of the UK is used to it. Not really pockets 😂
@jonhelmer8591
@jonhelmer8591 Год назад
The band Pulp was originally called Jucy Bits.
@Jamie_D
@Jamie_D Год назад
Until you do the knee slap and they don't take the hint, and instead start more conversations 😅😂
@lizbignell7813
@lizbignell7813 Год назад
Winston Churchill said something like “Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the rest.” That is how l see roundabouts!
@juliansmith1888
@juliansmith1888 Год назад
And I'm very proud of being weird!!!!!
@jackx4311
@jackx4311 Год назад
Weird, though? Who, *us???* Never! We just march to the beat of a different drum . . .
@crazygeorgelincoln
@crazygeorgelincoln 10 месяцев назад
The correct response to alright , is hi. Try ordering a quadruple vodka. If you don't prewarn of exiting the gathering, people will think you were offended or think you were rude for leavind abruptly and not saying bye
@michaels640
@michaels640 Год назад
This is so strange, because we British know that it’s the foreigners who are weird.
@stevelknievel4183
@stevelknievel4183 Год назад
What's a subdivision and how does one end up living in one?
@cdeford
@cdeford Год назад
Area? Suburb? Estate? No clue.
@mothmagic1
@mothmagic1 Год назад
@@cdeford Nor has anyone else it's a silly Americanism
@cdeford
@cdeford Год назад
@@mothmagic1 Canadianism?
@robertbrennan2268
@robertbrennan2268 Год назад
Wikipedia on the London Underground: "The Underground has its origins in the Metropolitan Railway, opening on 10 January 1863 as the world's first underground passenger railway.[6] It is now part of the Circle, District, Hammersmith & City and Metropolitan lines. The first line to operate underground electric traction trains, the City & South London Railway in 1890, is now part of the Northern line.[7] The network has expanded to 11 lines with 250 miles (400 km) of track.[8] However, the Underground does not cover most southern parts of Greater London; there are only 33 Underground stations south of the River Thames.[9] The system's 272 stations collectively accommodate up to 5 million passenger journeys a day.[10] In 2020/21 it was used for 296 million passenger journeys,[11] making it one of the world's busiest metro systems." THAT MAKES THIS "SUBWAY" SYSTEM NOW 160 YEARS OLD. The first and possibly the most extensve.
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