Apr27
Tidbits of the Week - Britain
Here are some things I learned which might perplex Canadians when in Britain.
- When ordering food or drinks, they say "to stay or takeaway" instead of "for here or to go."
I bought a drink the other day, and it look me a long time to actually understand what the server was asking-- and the accent doesn't help.
- "Are you alright?" is the British equivalent to "How's it going?"
The former phrase when used in Canada is commonly used only when a person has a problem, so it definitely feels kind of odd.
- Fries are 'chips', chips are 'crisps', elevators are 'lifts', guys are 'blokes' or 'chaps', paper money are 'notes', lines are 'queues', highways are 'motorways'.
These ones are obvious.
- Divided highways are 'dual carriageways', a cafeteria is 'refectory', sodas are 'fizzies'.
These are less obvious.
- On your keyboard, the '@' sign is where the double-quotes are, the '#' sign is a completely new key to the left of the return key, the return key is smaller on that row.
Typing really pisses me off. For more, see check out Wiki.
That's it for now. Cheerio!
Comments (3)
1
Jason Tsang
i) if you goto France, have fun with the keyboards. If you think the @ symbol is in the wrong place, enjoy having letter keys out of place (they don't use the QWERTY layout).
ii) while you are still in England, don't be offended/surprised if someone wants to 'knock you up in the morning'.
2
elmolulu
hey hk english are like that too...cuz we were ruled by the british government...lol!!
3
tiff
what the fuck matt you're still not up! we have to go to the louvre
from your lovely travel bud, tiff