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American Reacts to Really UNIQUE Aspects of British Daily Life

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Tyler Rumple

Tyler Rumple

Жыл бұрын

As an American there are so many things about normal British life that I have no idea about. That is why I am excited today to learn about this list of unique things about British daily life from the point of view of someone who moved to Britain later in life. If you enjoyed the video feel free to leave a comment, like, or subscribe for more!

Пікірлер: 824
@VaughanCockell
@VaughanCockell Жыл бұрын
We would find the term "Military Time" equally bizarre. We just call it the "24 hour clock".
@BabyTommyDL
@BabyTommyDL Жыл бұрын
Also, I'm pretty sure the vasy majority of brits prefer a 12 hour clcok
@TomGodson95
@TomGodson95 Жыл бұрын
​@BabyTommyDL Only if they can't tell the time 😂 all jokes aside, everyone I know uses 24 hour clock
@oscardawson2502
@oscardawson2502 Жыл бұрын
@@BabyTommyDLwhen speaking yes, but I don’t know anyone who doesn’t use it on their phone and when writing emails and message I also switch to military time too as it’s just a lot easier to make plans with
@_Professor_Oak
@_Professor_Oak Жыл бұрын
@@BabyTommyDL in dialogue obviously, but we can do simple maths so we understand the 24 hour clock. Like, come on, how hard is it to subtract 12?
@ed_ward_1430
@ed_ward_1430 Жыл бұрын
@@BabyTommyDL Analogue clocks and watches (like mine) may have a twelve-hour display, but (like it or not) the twenty-four-hour clock is unavoidable - bus and rail timetables, etc., and even your TV programme guide all work on it. Check the supermarket opening hours? Displayed in 24-hour format.
@c_n_b
@c_n_b Жыл бұрын
My parents taught me to LOOK BOTH WAYS when crossing the road.
@AndrewJonesMcGuire
@AndrewJonesMcGuire Жыл бұрын
exactly! The road safety videos we had as a kid with the hedgehog in them, taught us to look both ways. In fact we are often taught to look left, then right, then left again.
@VaughanCockell
@VaughanCockell Жыл бұрын
I grew up with the Green Cross Code, and the short information films featuring the Green Cross Code Man! kzfaq.info/get/bejne/ebKVfpR9sMCvmX0.html&feature=share7
@billspencer9430
@billspencer9430 Жыл бұрын
@@AndrewJonesMcGuire And keep looking from side to side as you cross. You never know when an American will be driving on the wrong side.
@robertmcconnell1009
@robertmcconnell1009 Жыл бұрын
Yes, it's not rocket science...
@robertmcconnell1009
@robertmcconnell1009 Жыл бұрын
@@billspencer9430 Definitely haha..
@daz3743
@daz3743 Жыл бұрын
Sandwiches are a total part of daily life. In regards to tuna and sweetcorn being strange, I've always felt the whole peanut butter and jam sandwiches which seems a staple in the US is incredibly weird haha
@robbeaman3542
@robbeaman3542 Жыл бұрын
And fried chicken for breakfast 😂 with waffles??
@Andreaod73
@Andreaod73 Жыл бұрын
Agree about peanut butter and jam but I also hate tuna, so no tuna and sweetcorn for me
@Maugirl2
@Maugirl2 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely, the first time i heard that they eat peanut butter and jelly … first it took me while to find out that their jelly is not our jelly, but instead, is really jam, and then to imagine that combo…. Ewww😂
@TomGodson95
@TomGodson95 Жыл бұрын
​@Maugirl2 even thought it sounds had I bad it on toast once and it actually weren't that bad 😂 dunno about a sandwich though
@Madders23
@Madders23 Жыл бұрын
As a Brit I was brought up having jam sandwiches and still love them.
@judithrowe8065
@judithrowe8065 Жыл бұрын
Most Europeans have no problem with the 24 hour clock. It's essential in using public transport, booking plane tickets, etc. I suppose if Americans don't travel except by car, they don't need it!
@andrewlaw
@andrewlaw Жыл бұрын
Tuna, sweetcorn and mayo are a staple in the UK. Great in sandwiches and with a jacket spud (baked potato)
@margaretflounders8510
@margaretflounders8510 Жыл бұрын
I like a little grated raw onion as well
@Nite300
@Nite300 Жыл бұрын
Yup, that is one of my favorites, I use salad cream though.
@Thurgosh_OG
@Thurgosh_OG Жыл бұрын
Horrible stuff, Tuna and Sweetcorn. I much prefer a BLT or Beans and grated cheese on a spud.
@djlads
@djlads Жыл бұрын
Ew no, maybe for you, but I can't stand the combo or tuna and corn, but I'm not a corn fan.
@andrewlaw
@andrewlaw Жыл бұрын
@Nite300 So do I but they don't have Salad Cream in the US because they're barbarians. 😉🤣
@roberttewnion1690
@roberttewnion1690 Жыл бұрын
Generally we never have difficulty understanding the American accents because we hear it on TV so much.
@dib000
@dib000 Жыл бұрын
I struggle to understand a lot of American accents, the TV Midwest accent is ok as we are regularly exposed to it.
@dasy2k1
@dasy2k1 Жыл бұрын
Some American accents are hard for us to understand, others we have no problem with. New Orleans cajun I might struggle to understand. Similar with inner city Bronx... Your accent just sounds regular American to me however. Easy to understand but clearly American. In terms of strong American accents that we notice but don't struggle to understand much Texan most be the most common. Unless you are using very southern slang we understand it fine
@darrenj.griffiths9507
@darrenj.griffiths9507 8 ай бұрын
Well... I don't watch TV. I understand them perfectly because... well I speak English lol
@tobybartholomew366
@tobybartholomew366 Жыл бұрын
You mentioned apple pie, that's British too 😅 not invented in the US
@truxton1000
@truxton1000 Жыл бұрын
It’s not online American or British but in most countries that actually grow apples so a LOT of countries.
@Aloh-od3ef
@Aloh-od3ef Жыл бұрын
Apple pie is not American. The British was eating apple pie before America was discovered….. You can have the apple pie. Just stay away from sticky toffee pudding, that’s ours 😂😉
@kathryndunn9142
@kathryndunn9142 Жыл бұрын
Well said
@kathryndunn9142
@kathryndunn9142 Жыл бұрын
The difference that they think make apple pie there's is adding the cinnamon to it making it a whole new pie in there eyes
@dfor8763
@dfor8763 Жыл бұрын
But the sponge pudding and toffee sauce was made in Britain. So technically it is British.
@lindagarczynski2415
@lindagarczynski2415 Жыл бұрын
We got the idea of the apple pie from the middle east, way back in time.
@FahadAyaz
@FahadAyaz Жыл бұрын
Discovered? I thought America was invented 😅
@carolineskipper6976
@carolineskipper6976 Жыл бұрын
I am always surprised to hear that servers in US restaurants take your card away to process it. In the UK this would NEVER happen. For security reasons they bring a mobile card readr to the table (or you pay at the till) and at all times you are the only one who touches your card. We don't call the 24 hour clock 'Military Time' because it is not something used specifically by the military. When I was at school it was still more usual to use am/pm times in the UK, but since the advent of the digital age it just makes NO sense to do this! Interestingly, we read and write in 24 hour time, but still say it in 12 hour time. For example, in the video he shows a phone saying 22.10. If asked what the time was, I'd read this out as 'ten past ten'. Tuna and sweetcorn is a very popular sandwich filling, or a filling for a baked potato, or to eat with salad. It is usually mixed with mayonnaise. Try it!!!!
@andy0liver
@andy0liver Жыл бұрын
"The till" is another thing Americans don't understand, they call it the register or cash register.
@0utcastAussie
@0utcastAussie Жыл бұрын
Indeed. If an American "Server" tried to take my card away they'd get rugby tackled to the floor !
@billyhills9933
@billyhills9933 Жыл бұрын
The British use of 'Military Time' (24 hour clock) is quite weird. We will still say '4 o'clock in the afternoon' and would never say 'sixteen hundred hours' but a digital clock will still show 16:00. The calculation is automatic. It's like we write the 24 hour clock for accuracy but use the morning/afternoon designation for conversation.
@texbankuk
@texbankuk Жыл бұрын
I have just got some local bus timetables for helping a friend who's Philippino born and speaks reads fluent English as well as Tagalog and other dialects and they also don't mind the 24 hour clock. And they phone their relatives about at least 8 to 10 time zones ahead of GMT. Or in most of the UK we have to cope with +3 or - 3 GMT zones which is a matter of no difference when you're surfing the Web. As for me I was in a continental shift job where logging times in 24 hour format had to be precise. And it became second nature.
@Jenny.C1978
@Jenny.C1978 Жыл бұрын
In the uk our plugs and sockets (Outlets) are a lot safer. The sockets have a little shutter that goes down so you can't stick anything in the live or neutral holes . The shutter goes up when the earth pin from the plug (which is slightly longer than the live and neutral pins) is plugged in. They are coated with plastic half way so there's no way you could accidentally touch them when they're half plugged in. The switch allows you to disconnect the appliance from the power without having to unplug the appliance each time.
@Michael-yq2ut
@Michael-yq2ut Жыл бұрын
Military time really confused me until I realised he was taking the about 24 hour clock lol
@shmuelparzal
@shmuelparzal Жыл бұрын
In Britain, we're used to hearing so many different accents, that understanding them is not a problem, even Scottish or Welsh accents - your brain simply adjusts your comprehension to the person you're listening to. We also hear American accents so much on TV, that we have no problem understanding them (only difficulty is when Americans use strange words that aren't normally used on TV). We also hear Asian-English accents, Afro-Caribbean accents, Australian accents, it's just normal. Because such a huge variety of accents is what we've been brought up with from childhood, it's not that hard
@hypsyzygy506
@hypsyzygy506 Жыл бұрын
Glaswegian can be tricky.
@Philippakis52
@Philippakis52 Жыл бұрын
Military time is Railway time, it comes from the start of the railway system in Britain and the need of different companies to co operate
@richardwaddington2038
@richardwaddington2038 Жыл бұрын
The accents thing is something Im really wierdly proud of as a Brit. Not olnly do you have country accents i.e England,Scotland,Wales N. Ireland but then regional accents or county accents then town accents within those counties . Im 50 and my Grandad used to be able to tell accents apart from village to village a mile or 2 apart within those towns.
@zaphodbeeblebrox6627
@zaphodbeeblebrox6627 Жыл бұрын
It’s actually Tuna,Mayo and sweetcorn. Small tin of tuna, a good squirts or spoon of Mayo, mix them up then ad tinned sweetcorn (approx the same ratio of tuna to sweetcorn) Again, mix it together and fill a sandwich. If you like both tuna and sweetcorn, you’ll love them together… as an added bonus, you can also add finely chopped red onion. Just experiment. You might surprise yourself.
@Mugtree
@Mugtree Жыл бұрын
The best sandwich filling ever ♥️
@robh_uk
@robh_uk Жыл бұрын
Same ratio? That's too much sweetcorn!
@sallymclachlan357
@sallymclachlan357 Жыл бұрын
Black pepper too
@Mugtree
@Mugtree Жыл бұрын
@@sallymclachlan357 ground back pepper too. It’s the law 😉
@ronburden7236
@ronburden7236 Жыл бұрын
thanks for the laborious recipe-next could you kindly explain how to obtain a glass of water??????
@timglennon6814
@timglennon6814 Жыл бұрын
Apple Pie isn’t American. Scotch Eggs. They are hard boiled eggs wrapped in Sausage meat and bread crumbs, then it’s deep fried. Mainly eaten cold.
@KidarWolf
@KidarWolf Жыл бұрын
Fun thing, the traffic flow trap is in fact, a thing. I am from the UK, but lived in the US for nearly 12 years - I've been back in the UK for years now, and I still catch myself being weirded out by traffic being on the "wrong side", or catch myself looking the wrong way when I cross the street. I have seen, more than once, American military personnel and their families, driving on the wrong side of the road, since my horse was kept at a livery yard not too far from a cluster of American airbases. You've got a lot more than apple pie, and I'd even go as far as challenging the quote about apple pie being quintessentially American, and say that pumpkin pie is far more so. After all, we have apple pie throughout the UK and Europe. Military time is logical, but I would say it's not as commonplace in the UK as that video suggests. Cellphones and other electronics default to military time, but I would say even then, the vast majority of people won't use it vocally, they do understand it, but don't really use it. You won't hear people saying "meet me at 1530" for example (except me, I've done it from time to time, but there's other factors in that habit for me). Strange American foods... your hash browns aren't patties, your breakfast sausages are patties as often as links, country fried steak and chicken fried steak are confusing, but delicious, sausage gravy is white wtf?, and chocolate covered peanut butter is as weird to Brits as chococolate covered orange jelly is to Americans, but just as delicious. Some American accents are more easy to understand than others. Those frequently encountered in movies, such as those found in New York and California, and the Chicago newsreader accent are pretty easy to understand, and for the most part Brits will understand Texan accents decently, but anything outside of that is a challenge. Moving from the UK to Pittsburgh, I was not only jumping into a strange accent I'd never heard before, but into a whole dialect (Pixburghese) that I'd never encountered before. I still throw in Pixburghese as part of my speech patterns without realizing, and have to backtrack in my sentences and translate. Peckish isn't quite the same as hungry - it's a level of hunger where you might snack or graze, but you wouldn't eat a whole meal. For example, it's almost afternoon here, and I would say at this point I'm peckish - I'm anticipating lunch, but not yet hungry enough to eat lunch. If I had a bag of potato chips, I might go attack a bag of chips at this point, but I wouldn't go get a sandwich just yet.
@andrewlaw
@andrewlaw Жыл бұрын
Apple pie was taken to America by the settlers.
@Thurgosh_OG
@Thurgosh_OG Жыл бұрын
Tyler - Traffic Lights were invented and first used in the UK. The 24hr clock or 'Military Time' to US Americans is the normal method of time telling across the planet. A bit like Metric, the US is one of the few still mainly using 12 hour times (like Imperial, we use both in the UK but less and less often over time).
@brianbonner7128
@brianbonner7128 Жыл бұрын
Liverpool is about 35 miles from Manchester and the accents are completely different. Liverpool is about 40 to Wrexham in wales and again, totally different accents. Most people in the uk will know where someone comes from by their accents
@Lily_The_Pink972
@Lily_The_Pink972 Жыл бұрын
Accents change approximately every 15 miles! So Skelmersdale, Wigan, St Helens, Bolton etc have different accents to both Liverpool and Manchester.
@audiocoffee
@audiocoffee Жыл бұрын
and then the confusing buggers like myself who don't have a specific 'local' accent. worse: the louder I talk, the posher my voice gets. even the drama school I went to said I'm lacking in a regional dialect. however, my dads sisters, two of which went to live in Australia, have accents so Aussie you'd swear they were born there. one other sister went to Scotland - and her accent is way more pronounced than her husbands - who was born there! my other aunt thinks she's posh, she isn't - she was last seen living on the south coast here - her husband is from Bristol and his accent is so apple cider and countryside, he's almost difficult to understand. however, one family meal a long time ago, sealed the deal on how he felt about the royal family, 'par-uz-oyts' 🤣
@0utcastAussie
@0utcastAussie Жыл бұрын
@@audiocoffee That's exactly what happened to my accent. I'm from the south side of Peterborough so we traditionally have a "Norfolk-n-good" accent (kind of Norwichy) but we emigrated to Western Australia when I was 13. We came back in 1983 and I've lost nearly all my Aussie strine. Our proper local "Stanground" accent was brought home to me when I heard my mates sister *Hayley speak one day and I'm like "DANNNG, THAT'S what I'm supposed to sound like" !! *RIP Hayley, Such a lovely girl. She made the (Fatal) mistake of believing a horsebox's indicator and pulled out. The driver forgot that it was on. 😭
@pabmusic1
@pabmusic1 Жыл бұрын
The word meat' originally meant 'food' ("It's all meat and drink to me") and 'pudding' meant a sausage - something boiled in a skin - and later something boiled in a cloth (Christmas pudding).
@jgreen2015
@jgreen2015 Жыл бұрын
Though mince (meat) pies did used to have meat in them
@_Professor_Oak
@_Professor_Oak Жыл бұрын
In our house pudding was just another word for dessert, whatever it may be. Never heard anybody refer to a sausage as pudding, that's really weird.
@jgreen2015
@jgreen2015 Жыл бұрын
@@_Professor_Oak yeh. He's talking about the etymology of the word not it's use now-a-days
@peterjackson4763
@peterjackson4763 Жыл бұрын
@@jgreen2015 My mother used to make a steak pudding by putting the ingredients in a cloth and boiling it. Black pudding is a sausage and is current usage.
@jgreen2015
@jgreen2015 Жыл бұрын
@@peterjackson4763 that doesnt change the fact that the original commenter is speaking of the etymology 'pudding MEANT sausage' The fact that there is one remnant of that usage didn't change the fact that pudding is not used synonymously with sausage these days Like the deserts as in 'he got his just deserts' (thats right the phrase is not desserts as in puddings) Its an old way of saying 'what someone deserves' but the word 'deserts' as 'what someone deserves' is not used now. But remains in that one instance as an archaic word. But you would not suggest that the word 'deserts' means 'what someone deserves' now-a-days. Now-a-days 'deserts' means 'the second person present tense of the abandon' eg 'he deserts his position.
@emmahowells8334
@emmahowells8334 Жыл бұрын
The UK has 240v electric, where as America has like 110v, plus our plugs have a lot of safety features which is why they're bigger. A scotch egg is a boiled egg in pork meat then covered in breadcrumbs, delicious. We find peanut butter and jelly or jam as we call it, now that's strange lol. ☺️👌
@rhisands2063
@rhisands2063 Жыл бұрын
Standard 12hr time is used when spoken ("four in the afternoon", "half two this morning") although usually with a qualifier, but most commonly the 24hr ("military" time) is used for written stuff. It isn't an absolute, this being the internet someone will be along to scream they always write in 12hr time but speak in 24hr time-I'm sure, but it is pretty common. Same with metric, it is most common (pause for internet screamer) to use metric for most things except pints of alcohol and miles for distances. But seriously though, just look both ways before crossing the street. It is good practice, even if it is a nominally one way street.
@diannegreenshields7421
@diannegreenshields7421 Жыл бұрын
Scotch eggs basically consists of a hard boiled egg which is wrapped in sausage meat covered in breadcrumbs. U can then deep fry or bake till it's crispy. I'm very fussy with food but scotch eggs are AMAZING!
@cbjones82
@cbjones82 Жыл бұрын
In the UK and have been a pedestrian here for 4 decades. Driving for well over 20 years. When i went on holiday and walked or driven in the US or anywhere else in Europe, I have experienced zero issues with the difference, aside from a couple of times where i went to find the gearstick in my left-hand door!
@storemymusic
@storemymusic Жыл бұрын
9 times out of ten, "pudding" is usually the sweet part of a meal. It's a course, like appetizer/starter, dinner. Similar to using the word "dessert". 🍨 Plugs are large because safety is a big thing with UK plugs and sockets. It's all very interesting. In the UK, if we say pie, most of the time, we mean with a meat filling of some kind. Although the occasional fruit pie is nice too. Generally speaking, if we can stick it in a pastry case, we probably have. 😁 Also, if we can put something in a sandwich we've probably done that too. 🤣 Scotch egg - boiled egg, wrapped in sausage meat, coated in breadcrumbs, deep fried. Tasty. 🤤 Everybody uses 24-hour clock. Nobody calls 24-hour clock "military time. 😏
@robertcreighton4635
@robertcreighton4635 Жыл бұрын
Some puddings are savoury like Yorkshire pudding and black pudding English is an odd language 😂
@simonbutterfield4860
@simonbutterfield4860 Жыл бұрын
@@robertcreighton4635 pudding meant savoury fillings going back in time, minced pies did have actual meat in them for example.
@ronburden7236
@ronburden7236 Жыл бұрын
@@robertcreighton4635 english is indeed odd- invented by our lords and masters americunts...we thank you holy ones (they also invented God) to look down on...you never hear Canadians,australians etc. moaning about how we speak OUR LANGUAGE.....
@pathopewell1814
@pathopewell1814 Жыл бұрын
A friend and I were lucky enough to have afternoon tea at The Ritz. To our astonishment Anericans ordered Yorkshire pudding!
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 7 ай бұрын
​@@robertcreighton4635 I was going to say English is the best language but didn't want to offend anyone so... Instead I'll just say, I love *our* English language.😊❤🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🖖
@donaldb1
@donaldb1 Жыл бұрын
In older English, "meat" was a general word for food, as in the phrase "meat and drink", not just for animal flesh. So mincemeat, just meant finely chopped food. The "meat" of mince pies is dried fruit and spices. But otherwise, in modern English, "mince" is always animal meat.
@johnbyrondick7248
@johnbyrondick7248 Жыл бұрын
Mince pies did contain animal meat at first alongside dried fruits, citrus peel and spices. But this went out of fashion, though some 'mincemeat' recipes do still contain animal suet or hardened fat.
@Charlie1875
@Charlie1875 11 ай бұрын
Our mains voltage is 240V. The standard US voltage is 120V. Also our plugs are that much bigger mainly because of all of the extra safety features we have in them. The front prong is longer cos it has to push something down and open up the socket for the rest 2 first. that one is usually plastic because it doesn’t actually have any power flowing through it. Also if you look, the rear 2 have plastic tops to even further prevent electric shocks. We also have different wires linked directly to the fuse so that we rarely have overloads as the plugs just shut themselves off once the fuse trips.
@marklee6516
@marklee6516 Жыл бұрын
The time thing is interesting as we don’t typically use the 24hr clock (we don’t use the term “military time”) when speaking, but we do use it when writing or in digital formats. Likewise he’s right that we tend to have our phones set to display the 24 hour clock. Things like train timetables are so much clearer when using the 24hr clock, same goes for any calendar allocation really - restaurant bookings, tv schedules.
@gavinhall6040
@gavinhall6040 Жыл бұрын
Depends what you do for a living sometimes, lots of my family working in the baking industry and always use 12/hr timings, whereas I worked in criminal investigations and then security and therefore I run on a 24/hr clock.
@cmcculloch1
@cmcculloch1 Жыл бұрын
you basically wrote the comment I was going to haha
@richardwaddington2038
@richardwaddington2038 Жыл бұрын
Ive been using the 24 hour clock for as long as I can remember . Office paper work and then as a nurse was all 24 hour.
@DebraElias-uc6yz
@DebraElias-uc6yz Жыл бұрын
I use the 24 hour clock on a daily basis as all my household clocks are digital 24 hour clocks
@linglingtindell5538
@linglingtindell5538 Жыл бұрын
Sandwiches invented in 1762 by John Montague the 4th Earl of Sandwich. He did not want to leave the gaming table to eat, looking for something that can be eaten by hands. Hence.. The sandwich is born. 👏👏
@AndrewJonesMcGuire
@AndrewJonesMcGuire Жыл бұрын
Just as well we use military time, you'd be surprised how many people (British and otherwise) are convinced that 12pm is midnight and 12am is midday (which I get, because obviously 11:59:59am becomes 12:00:00pm - but a lot of people think it doesn't switch to pm until 12:00:01pm )
@AndrewJonesMcGuire
@AndrewJonesMcGuire Жыл бұрын
@@OneTrueScotsman you'd be surprised, you will see it all the time online. Same with what time the clocks are supposed to change, which is another really easy one, they always change at 1am GMT. So when changing to summer time they change at 1am to become 2am BST, and when going back they change at 2am BST to become 1am GMT
@r.brooks5287
@r.brooks5287 Жыл бұрын
@@OneTrueScotsman I am one of those confused people. It's not a case of not knowing it, it's a case of not being sure quickly at the right moment. My education was good, thanks.
@christinegorst3893
@christinegorst3893 Жыл бұрын
The 24 hour clock is used on train and bus timetables etc. Usually we read it then convert it to speak it. I read 14,30 on the timetable and then say to who is with me " the bus is due at 2.30 ".This is commonplace.
@MortonCammar
@MortonCammar Жыл бұрын
I was confused when you said military time, we usually just call it the 24 hour clock. I'm pretty sure it's not only us who use it as well, most of Europe does as well I think.
@sueflynn9886
@sueflynn9886 Жыл бұрын
British plugs are amazing, there are quite a few videos on You Tube explaining all the safety measures incorporated into them!x
@mumo9413
@mumo9413 Жыл бұрын
Tuna & corn sandwich. Drain tinned tuna, drain tinned sweetcorn, mix with mayonnaise, splash of salad cream, salt & pepper. Can add lettuce, cucumber & tomato. Yummy!
@audiocoffee
@audiocoffee Жыл бұрын
1. we were taught to look BOTH ways before crossing a road. see 'green cross code'. 2. our parking is not chaotic. however, if you park on double yellow lines, prepare to be given a ticket or fixed penalty notice containing a fine. depends on where you are and when you need to park your vehicle during any one given 24 hour period. 3. traffic lights - underneath the push button at a pedestrian crossing, is a little gadget that allows for blind/partially sighted people to cross the road. it looks like an upside down pen top. it rotates when it is safe to cross the road. 4. plastic notes. ever notice how paper money gets tatty so quickly? that. that's why we opted for plastic notes - it means they last longer and need not-so-many reprints. I've seen £10 notes held together with selotape more often than I can remember. same for other notes too. pound notes were hellishly messy. Australia has used plastic money for some considerable years. 5. leave our plugs alone!! at least you know where they are. and you can't forget them! 6. pies = our national thing. kind of. depends. however, not everybody drinks tea, so not everything can be paired up with tea. there's nowt like a sausage roll from greggs with a bottle of cola to wash it down. mince pies are traditionally eaten at Christmas - they are fruit filled. as with a lot of our foods, you actually have to eat it to understand it better. watching videos is not the be all and end all. you have to try it. to not to do so betrays your need to learn about things that make up the British Isles. 7. tap and go payments - it's just easier. be it an app or card. it's less fuss than fighting through coins and notes and coming up short. 8. time - yeah, we use 24 hour clock. it's easier. our bus/train timetables are in 24hr time. 9. sandwiches are life. however, I prefer my tuna and sweetcorn minus the tuna. don't knock our bread eating habits until you've spent a week eating our food. 10. we pride ourselves on our accents and dialects - it's what makes us what we are. however, in Wales, Welsh is the language of choice, in some parts of Scotland, Scots gaelic is the way. same for Irish gaelic. and not forgetting some parts of the country have their own unique dialect, Birmingham (the black country), and Cornish (Cornwall) to name but two.
@neilmcdonald9164
@neilmcdonald9164 Жыл бұрын
Mincemeat pies originally DID contain meat,but the meat nowadays is dried currants and candied peel🎩
@DavidDoyleOutdoors
@DavidDoyleOutdoors Жыл бұрын
UK plugs are bigger, but they sit flush to the wall with the cord hanging downwards, so they do not protrude from the wall like US plugs.
@bblair2627
@bblair2627 Жыл бұрын
As Brits we often drive in Europe on "the wrong side" you pick it up pretty quick
@joannebedford8571
@joannebedford8571 Жыл бұрын
Petrol pumps have different shape nozzles so you can't make a mistake filling your car, they don't fit into the petrol tank Plugs are big as they have fuses in, which cut the electric off if the equipment is faulty, to reduce the risk of fire. Workplace equipment is tested every year for safety, it's a legal requirement. Most people who work, will more than likely have a sandwich or a pie for their dinner ( lunch),
@danhudson4614
@danhudson4614 Жыл бұрын
Pasta ,Tuna and sweetcorn makes a good dish.
@owenbradley726
@owenbradley726 Жыл бұрын
Telling the time in 24 hour clocks is something we are taught at 5 years old, it’s worry grown adults can’t tell the time in america
@seanmc1351
@seanmc1351 Жыл бұрын
taking your card away in resturant is a big no no here, it does happen, but the rule of thumb, your card does not leave your sight, you pay on leaving, but most places have the hand held card machines
@KernowWarrior
@KernowWarrior Жыл бұрын
sight? Doesn't leave my hand if I can help it. lol
@seanmc1351
@seanmc1351 Жыл бұрын
@@KernowWarrior I agree, better way of saying it, im the same,
@corringhamdepot4434
@corringhamdepot4434 Жыл бұрын
I remember back when garage cashiers were infamous for taking your card "out back" and swiping of a number of extra credit card slips.
@seanmc1351
@seanmc1351 Жыл бұрын
@@corringhamdepot4434 your probably going back to about the 2000's or before, thats when they used to take your card, and run it across the slammer, hand writen and in the days of the cheque gurantee cards, from around 2000's the swile and sign on the till system came in, which was done in front of you, and was linked to the banks to make sure you have funds, then the chip and pin came in later
@seanmc1351
@seanmc1351 Жыл бұрын
i have a great story about that time, as i worked in petrol stations nightshift, it was my last shift. when the swipe cards came in, earned myself a few quid that night. i will add it as seperate comment, legaly i might add lol,
@nicolefindlay9890
@nicolefindlay9890 Жыл бұрын
This is coming from a brit, and I will say that the tuna and sweet corn sandwich is delicious, healthy and definitely recommended. 10/10. Also in regards to the plug, the reason it's so large is to fit in the third pin which prevents you from getting an electric shock and the switches limit wasted electricity. Your videos are great 😃 👍. Have a nice day 😊.
@wallythewondercorncake8657
@wallythewondercorncake8657 Жыл бұрын
"healthy"? It's loaded with mayonnaise which is near enough just pure fat.
@ajrwilde14
@ajrwilde14 Жыл бұрын
The plastic prevents electric shock not the third pin
@coraliemoller3896
@coraliemoller3896 Жыл бұрын
Electrical outlets in some countries use 240 volts so there is a higher risk. The plugs are earthed and have switches to reduce risks.
@slightlymaddog
@slightlymaddog Жыл бұрын
18:00 to be fair we tend to use hungry and peckish interchangeably or as peckish being hungry but on a small scale, maybe you just want a quick snack or something.
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
We use the 24 hour clock ("military time") because we use a lot of trains. It doesn't do to be 12 hours late or early for your rail connection.
@jenniebeann
@jenniebeann Жыл бұрын
My partner has been to the US many times from the UK and has driven every time. He says you get used to driving on the other side quite quickly as it also helps being on the other side of the car to drive and this helps make it a lot easier to figure out. So I imagine coming here to the UK and driving may be similar.
@Bogmore1
@Bogmore1 Жыл бұрын
One thing most Americans do in the UK is go through a red light when turning left, in the UK red lights means always stop and turns have filters. The UK use 240 volts. Mince pies have minced fruit in them. I think the problem with US sandwiches is that they aren't stored in fridges. In the UK a lot of people don't move around the country so accents become very localised. Peckish is more like you want a snack not a full meal.
@tamibenz6626
@tamibenz6626 Жыл бұрын
⁠thank you for commenting, there’s a lot of people that don’t think you read your comments. I Watch 3 of your channels (the ones that I know of) and I enjoy all of them, so thank you have a great day & I’ll see you on your next Tyler Bucket video 💕
@Bogmore1
@Bogmore1 Жыл бұрын
@@tamibenz6626 That's a scammer not the video maker.
@mumo9413
@mumo9413 Жыл бұрын
We have both biscuits & cookies. Biscuits are twice baked. Cookies softer once baked.
@BRIDINC1972
@BRIDINC1972 Жыл бұрын
Saw the post on my yuotube feed, am now sitting having a Tuna and corn sandwich and tea while watching, thanks for the reminder. Haven't had Tuna and corn in absolutely ages. Yum!!!
@lynwratten9857
@lynwratten9857 Жыл бұрын
There is a video about UK plugs they are really safe compared to the USA. We butter both bits of bread in our sandwiches, I have seen a few American people making chip or bacon sandwiches with no butter. We also find it odd that you have a knife and fork yet use your fork to break up food rather than the knife.
@billyo54
@billyo54 Жыл бұрын
Tyler has to be pretending not to know this stuff. Most of these British terms have been covered by him before, some many times. He never reads the comments. No doubt he'll never go to the UK and keep going on like this forever. 😂
@whitecompany18
@whitecompany18 Жыл бұрын
Yeah😄 next video "what is this black pudding?" Marmite what's that? " 😄👌
@rogerjenkinson7979
@rogerjenkinson7979 Жыл бұрын
He is a typical ignorant 'american' who ' reacts' to videos not by learning from them but by talking over them, asking Why? when they're already giving the answer or telling you what americans would or wouldn't do. IE- a Total Waste of Time. A TwoT.
@beverleyringe7014
@beverleyringe7014 Жыл бұрын
Yes he knew about our plugs a while ago. He had a video on it I remember,, no Apple pie is British not American !!!
@beverleyringe7014
@beverleyringe7014 Жыл бұрын
I m certain Tyler never reads the comments, he has covered a lot of this before, including mince pies and scotch eggs,
@audiocoffee
@audiocoffee Жыл бұрын
I di hope that one day, he's drop kicked into the UK, and we get our chance to point at him and laugh as realisation kicks in. talks the talk, but nothing on the walk the walk part.
@badboy2kxxx
@badboy2kxxx Жыл бұрын
in the UK our Plugs are made to handel upto 3,120W being 240V @ 13A per recepticle so we can plug any Appliance into any Socket.
@Rionnagan
@Rionnagan Жыл бұрын
I grew up in a military family in Australia, so have always used the 24 hour clock system; however, when I emigrated to the UK, it was much more common in every day life in terms of writing, though speech used "o' clock" and a.m. and p.m. That said, I have noticed the 24 hour clock sneaking into speech now, too. As for tuna and (sweet)corn, we also have my sister's favourite, chicken and (sweet)corn sandwiches. It's one of the staples you will find in any supermarket's sandwich section. In terms of accents, sometimes you only need to travel 0.5 mile in London to encounter a different accent.
@TheJaxxT
@TheJaxxT Жыл бұрын
Tuna mayo and sweetcorn sandwiches (butties) are the best… and I’ll blow your mind here too… we butter our bread when making sandwiches. But talking about sandwiches, the PB &J sandwiches you guys love so much over there, is a very strange concept for me to process. And I really have no intention of trying it either. Just the thought of it sets my teeth on edge
@solaccursio
@solaccursio Жыл бұрын
...and being neither American nor English (I am italian) I can testify that both kinds of sandwiches are delicious 😋😋
@antonymugford6863
@antonymugford6863 Жыл бұрын
Tyler, even English people can find other English accents difficult to understand
@robcrossgrove7927
@robcrossgrove7927 Жыл бұрын
Particularly a Geordie accent.
@antonymugford6863
@antonymugford6863 Жыл бұрын
@@robcrossgrove7927 I lived in Newcastle for nine years. I once sat for 10 minutes listening to 4 workmen talking. I didn't understand a word! I think they came from the East of the City Totally unintelligible! Lovely people though. My youngest son still lives there.
@audiocoffee
@audiocoffee Жыл бұрын
@@robcrossgrove7927 a Polish friend took volunteer work in the NE. he'd been quiet, so we assumed he was enjoying it. then we got a phonecall. apparently, he couldn't understand the accent and he'd been asking folk to explain what they'd just said, in English! 🤣
@solaccursio
@solaccursio Жыл бұрын
I am italian, and I usually have no particolar problem with english accents but.... (insert here a BUT big as a house) when I am in Glasgow I probably look plain dumb. I ask people to repeat what they said 3-4 times, then I nod and pretend to understand 😁which of course I didn't...
@DoomsdayR3sistance
@DoomsdayR3sistance Жыл бұрын
Scoted Eggs are boiled eggs (soft or hard), wrapped in pork and breadcrumbs which are then fried. They are a convenience food item, can find them in most supermarkets, great on the go, in a picnic or with a salad.
@ianm42yt
@ianm42yt Жыл бұрын
Many UK restaurant chains now have a phone App which allows you to pay for your meal by just entering the table number instead of waiting for the bill to arrive and then waiting for the payment machine to be found.
@BlackLiger788
@BlackLiger788 Жыл бұрын
Peckish is more accurately "very mildly hungry", hungry is "I could go for a decent meal", starving is "I am about to eat you if we don't find somewhere soon!"
@Brannas86
@Brannas86 Жыл бұрын
Look both ways before crossing UK roads. That was what I was always told growing up here so I use that in all countries I visit.
@shininglightphotos1044
@shininglightphotos1044 Жыл бұрын
Look right, look left, look right again. If it's all clear, quick march.
@Beedo_Sookcool
@Beedo_Sookcool Жыл бұрын
A couple of things about those "gigantic" plugs: The cords always point down instead of sticking straight out, so you're not running into or tripping over them. Also, they're that big to allow the installation of a separate fuse. Electrical systems in the UK are built around multiple safety layers, including wall sockets you have to switch on, fused plugs, partially insulated plug prongs, etc. Much safer than the US system. Personally, I can't stand tuna & sweetcorn. Gimme salmon & cucumber, any day. One of the things that weirded me out when I returned to the USA after an 18-year absence was the proliferation of "birthday cake"-flavoured things. For any non-Americans unfamiliar with it, it's a very, very SPECIFIC kind of birthday cake: the kind of huge, rectangular party cake (called a sheet cake) acquired from a supermarket bakery, enough to portion out to up to 30 kids / office co-workers. The cake itself is either vanilla-flavoured yellow cake or very, very dry devil's food chocolate. It is then covered with an industrial-grade, ever-so-slightly oily layer of soft white frosting that is vanilla-flavoured and so intensely sugary that it's slightly crunchy. With rainbow sprinkles on top. It's the flavour of nostalgia and "maximum cake for minimum cost," and it's EVERYWHERE, these days.
@Joanna-il2ur
@Joanna-il2ur Жыл бұрын
In Britain, driving on the left, someone before stepping off the kerb needs to look right first, because that’s where the traffic is coming from, then left, in case a vehicle is reversing, then right again, in case a new vehicle is coming.
@rubberduck3y6
@rubberduck3y6 Жыл бұрын
The yellow (or amber as it's called over here) traffic light comes on briefly while the red is still on as a kind of "get ready" signal.
@kiyahvanhaas2722
@kiyahvanhaas2722 11 ай бұрын
How much energy goes through plugs: about twice as much as in the USA. There's a fuse in each one for safety reasons, so they gotta be large.
@robertofraser101
@robertofraser101 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Tyler enjoyed and you made me happy this Saturday night watching it thank you good weekend 2u
@Charlie1875
@Charlie1875 11 ай бұрын
We just call it the 24hr clock. Not military time. Most of us use it as it’s just so much easier. I used to use it all the time, but the only reason I changed my phone to 12hr was because my gf is dyslexic and struggles with 24hr. Having mine on 12hr let’s her use my phone to check the time too. Whenever she buys a train ticket, we can’t figure out how to change her trainline app so she’ll come to me for that which is fine.
@petejones7878
@petejones7878 Жыл бұрын
the traffic light sequence , It goes as follows: Red light: Stop. Red & amber lights: Prepare to go. Green light: Go, if the way is clear. then green , amber ,and then red
@Jamie_D
@Jamie_D Жыл бұрын
On our crossings, if a person has used the lights they will also flash amber rather than solid amber so you can determine the difference between switching to red next and green next.
@EmilyCheetham
@EmilyCheetham Жыл бұрын
UK electrical voltage is 240volts where as USA is only 110 volts. That is part of the reason why out plugs are bigger - so we can make them safer. They stay in the wall and if the cables are pulled the earth pin wire is last to be pulled out meaning electricity is grounded & you are highly unlike to get a shock from a uk plug. Out wall sockets also have shutters so that little ones cannot shove things into the holes and cause an electrical shock.
@mbwoods2001
@mbwoods2001 Жыл бұрын
Regarding traffic lights, when we're stationary at the red signal, normally we have the gears in neutral with the handbrake on, and once the lights change to amber, we then select 1st gear and hand on the handbrake lever ready to set off once it changes to green as u would during the driving lessons and the driving test, which a lot of drivers dont bother nowadays! With Americans having a majority of automatic cars, i gather the traffic lights going straight from red to green signal that going from brakes to gas is almost instantaneously with no faffing about changing gears and releasing handbrake to move off! No wonder a lot of people stands on the brakes for so long at the traffic lights and blinding the drivers behind with their high intensity brake lights!
@andrewlaw
@andrewlaw Жыл бұрын
You know if lights are changing to green or red by the sequence. They go red, red/amber then green to go. To stop they go green, amber then red So if you approach a junction and the amber light is showing you know its going to go red.
@KernowWella
@KernowWella Жыл бұрын
There was a big public service campaign in the UK against moving through amber traffic lights called "Don't be an Amber Gambler" for the very reason you say Americans would see amber as "Go" We tend to name our traditional foods based on how they are traditionally cooked. Pies are generally baked in a full crust. Puddings are usually steamed or boiled. That applies to both savoury and sweet foods, so a Steak & Kidney pie is baked, so is an Apple pie. Black Pudding (Blood pudding to you) is boiled, as is Christmas pudding (a sweet dessert, nothing like a cake or sponge). Real chocolate pudding, which is like a mousse, was traditioanlly made by using boiling water as the heat source (hence it was a"pudding"). Todays commercial ones are not made that way but still get called pudding. Military Time is just called Time here. It can be said many ways so 3:25 pm (15:25) can be said as "fifteen Twenty Five", "twenty five past three", "three twenty five", or less commonly "five and twenty past Three". Most people in the UK would understand any of those ways.
@sharonhull8981
@sharonhull8981 11 күн бұрын
Our voltage is a lot higher than yours, so things power up quicker. Pluss, the plug has a second safety meganisum, a fews, small cilender battery that will fews the plug and cut off the power if the electricity over loads , so, all you do is to replace the fews. No shoks or fires.
@Justabitnosey
@Justabitnosey Жыл бұрын
Love tuna and mayo i put spring onion in for a sarnie. Sometimes add sweetcorn or peppers if having on a baked tattie or in a pasta salad.😋 Love scones butter first then jam then cream and another blob of jam. Strawberries on the side. Scotch eggs are gorgeous.
@therealroadie5623
@therealroadie5623 Жыл бұрын
I would like to mention that the UK has several safety features built into our plugs and our power comes through at twice the wattage as the US. ElectroBoom has a really interesting video on the the difference in UK to US plugs "power outlets in the UK" that would be cool for you to check out.
@laurenmatthews2678
@laurenmatthews2678 Жыл бұрын
I had a tuna sweetcorn sandwich for my lunch today (and yesterday, and at least once a week lol) and so it was really weird to hear that its not a thing in the us! Also i think our beans taste different to yours so they go well with toast where yours might not!
@johnnykidd3657
@johnnykidd3657 Жыл бұрын
There are not just a “handful” of countries that drive on the left but some 73 inc. Japan for instance. I believe it goes back to the Romans who marched on the left .
@andyt8216
@andyt8216 Жыл бұрын
Our plugs are the same as those in Republic of Ireland, Malta and Cyprus - albeit due to our influence.
@Lunabracco
@Lunabracco Жыл бұрын
Did you know Tyler that apple pieIn fact, the first recorded recipe for apple pie was written in 1381 in England, and called for figs, raisins, pears, and saffron in addition to apples,”
@FioLolo-fi5jy
@FioLolo-fi5jy 6 ай бұрын
I currently work in car rental by edinburgh airport and usually our customers, american and otherwise, joke about staying on the left if they're first time drivers on that side but more often than not, vast majority of people are absolutely fine and say it only takes a day or two getting used to the left . However there have been a handful of occasions where i've seen a driver go the wrong way around the roundabout outside of our office, or see people driving away from the airport and veering into the right lane for a bit before they see an oncoming car to remind them. Scary sometimes!
@sputukgmail
@sputukgmail Жыл бұрын
Peckish ≠ Hungry They are not the same. Peckish means “yeah, I could convince myself it’s time to eat if it suits everyone else, but I’m fine to wait a bit longer too if you prefer” It’s almost always preceded by ‘bit’. “Hmm, I’m starting to get a bit peckish, what about you?” Translation: “I’m getting hungry and we haven’t agreed what we’re doing for food so, let’s talk about the options so by the time we decide, I’m not getting too hungry” That kinda thing. In a similar context, hungry would be ‘crass’, or even selfish and rude: “I’m hungry” Translation: look, we should have decided what to eat hours ago, and now I’m frickin’ starving, and if I don’t eat soon, I’m gonna start gnawing on your arm because this is your fault! See the subtle difference? ;)
@peterlloyd2310
@peterlloyd2310 Жыл бұрын
Plugs in Australia also have an OFF/ON switch. Our foods in Australia are similar to those in the UK. The one difference is that we use mixer taps in our kitchen and bathroom.
@laserman9566
@laserman9566 Жыл бұрын
With the petrol pumps you will also find that the diesel spout is bigger than the unleaded so a diesel pump will not fit in to a car that runs on unleaded
@GethStar
@GethStar 15 күн бұрын
The three point plug should be an international MUST because an EARTH is an ultimate safety feature as electrical charge can build up, but with an earth, it allows that charge to return to earth safely, grounding the electrical device. Without it, electrical fires or electrocution can occur as the electrical charge would use your body to ground itself to earth.
@nadeansimmons226
@nadeansimmons226 Жыл бұрын
Pies and puddings are common in Australia and New Zealand too, as are switches for plugs
@emmabailey-wright7501
@emmabailey-wright7501 Жыл бұрын
It's only when trying to teach a child how to tell the time that you realise how complicated it can be! We have three ways to describe the same time: 20.45, 8.45pm and quarter to nine
@hypsyzygy506
@hypsyzygy506 Жыл бұрын
A quarter to nine in the evening. (To distinguish it from 'a quarter to nine in the morning')
@ajrwilde14
@ajrwilde14 Жыл бұрын
Tuna and sweetcorn is mainly used as a filling for Jacket potatoes, it's not often used in sandwiches
@GethStar
@GethStar 15 күн бұрын
I don't understand why manufacturers didn't agree with fuel companies to make fuel tanks with different shapes for different fuels which would mean the fuel would have the corresponding shape nozzle for the fuel pump. Like round for petrol, square for diesel. This would reduce fuelling errors as the wrong pump wouldn't fit in the opposite tank.
@anitaherbert1037
@anitaherbert1037 Жыл бұрын
Tuna and sweetcorn is a pretty usual combo great with jacket potatoes also. My husband mixes tuna sweetcorn and a lite during onion adds a little vinegar back pepper and crushed salt and vinegar cridps on top and sticks in the oven. Great late night dipper with some toast.
@EmilyCheetham
@EmilyCheetham Жыл бұрын
Mince meat in mince pies gets it’s name because if you go back to Victorian times in uk dried fruits, spices and sugar were HELL EXPENSIVE. So mince pies back then really did contain meat along with the fruit and spices. However now sugar is cheep and dried fruit is affordable to most. So the name mince meat stuck but the actual meat was removed.
@tracyholliday2200
@tracyholliday2200 Жыл бұрын
When we British are abroad we have no difficulty in driving on the "wrong" side of the road, comes down to awareness and common sense. Driving in France is a doddle as is most of europe and Australia.
@dianeknight4839
@dianeknight4839 9 ай бұрын
If you are going to try beans on toast, you really need someone from over here to send you some beans or if you have an English supermarket you might find them there. Scotch eggs are boiled eggs covered in pork sausage meat, then rolled in bread crumbs and deep fried until golden. Tuna & Sweetcorn. You will need a small can of tuna and same of sweetcorn, some mayo, salt and pepper. Drain tuna and tip into a bowl, add half of drained can of corn, a good tablespoon of mayo, pinch of salt and pepper, then mix together, spread on buttered brown bread, add a top of bread and apply to face. You can substitiute ave if you do not like Tuna. Apart from driving on the left side of the road. The drivers seat is where your passenger seat is, also the majority of UK cars are stick shift so when hiring a vehicle you must ask for an automatic. Mince pies contain a mixture of fruits soaked in brandy with a little suet. A teaspoon full in a pastry case is a mince pie. (f.f. mince pie did originally have meat in. Back in the 15thC people used to use up old meat by mincing in and mixing with sweetened brandy soaked fruit) Christmas pudding (yes its a dessert, it contains currants,sultanas,raisins, candied orange peel, ground nuts (usually Almonds), flour, milk, black treacle and brandy. It is steamed in a muslin cloth for several hours. It keeps very well, like Christmas cake (similar ingredients but baked in the oven). Christmas centuries back was a way to use up all your meat and fruit before it was spoiled. I though what is he talking about Military time, we just call it the 24hr clock. My sister has two different accents in one house, we are all from Yorkshire and my sisters husband is from Newcastle (so he is what we call a Geordie and has a Geordie accent) Newcastle is only about one and a half hours drive from their home in Yorkshire. Even our Yorkshire accent changes depending whether you are from North,South,East or West.
@Kat-po3mn
@Kat-po3mn Жыл бұрын
24 hour time is historically common due to public transportation infrastructure; leaves no ambiguity of 01:30 v 1330 hrs when looking at the timetable boards at stations.
@vickytaylor9155
@vickytaylor9155 Жыл бұрын
We brits literally invented the word sandwich named after the Earl of Sandwich. Butter going on the bread then things like mayo then filling then butter the top slice.
@mickpattison8290
@mickpattison8290 Жыл бұрын
We display the time in the 24 hour clock format "military time" but say it in the regular format.
@shininglightphotos1044
@shininglightphotos1044 Жыл бұрын
The amber (yellow) traffic lightvtells you if the traffic is about to stop, or getting ready to move again. By its sequence. Red (stop, obviously), red & amber (about to turn green to go), green (go), amber on its own (about to stop), red (stop). Technically, everything except green means stop, but the other states twll you where in the cycle of stopping you are.
@jackaubrey8614
@jackaubrey8614 Жыл бұрын
"Mince Pies" - he means Sweet Mince pies (containing raisons, sultanas and mixed fruit) which are normally only available around Christmas (sadly). We certainly DO have "mince pies" which contain minced meat. As for tuna and corn sandwiches we'd normally expect there to be mayonnaise in the mix - otherwise they'd be horribly dry. With the addition of the mayo they're delicious!
@siloPIRATE
@siloPIRATE Жыл бұрын
Watch the video explaining British plugs. You’ll see why they are the size they are. Also, power here is 230 - 240 volts at 60Hz
@soultraveller5027
@soultraveller5027 Жыл бұрын
Tyler sorry to inform you but apple pie was invented in the uk lol, also petrol and diesel pumps in the uk have different size nozzles so you cant mix them up black is diesel green is petrol
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