Nope, people out West standing up when using regular ass toilets.
heh heh ahahahaha. Just imagine the blobs and splashes and shit spraying everywhere. Wtf.
Nope, people out West standing up when using regular ass toilets.
Serious question:
If British people call this:
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biscuits
Then what do they call this?
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Only the campfire and spit is fit for codeblue
Peanut butter and 'jelly' always confused me as a kid. We call it 'jam'. Jelly is a dessert that wobbles and is kinda fun to eat.
Sloppy joes.. Is that just beef mince on a roll? Sounds gross, but looks delicious
Maybe I've been watching too much curb your enthusiasm, but are people in the USA usually rude to service staff?
I was eating a meal with an American guy in rural Thailand and he made a massive scene because his rice was too cold. He was absolutely horrified - mouth agape. Stood up. Threw his napkin onto the table etc.. It was fucking embarrassing. The restaurant staff had no idea what to do and probably spat in his food.
Another American guy I used to work with in Taiwan had a huge meltdown in a 7/11 because the ATM displayed his account balance on the screen. He was almost frothing at the mouth.. Demanding an explanation from the poor underpaid checkout girl. Umm.. Dude, she doesn't speak English, doesn't give a shit and you are scaring her.
I've yet to meet an American that I get on well with. There's just something cocky and patronising about the ones I've met. Brits on the other hand usually know how to laugh at themselves, and seem more laid back.
Therefore: +15 pts for old blighty
Peanut butter and 'jelly' always confused me as a kid. We call it 'jam'. Jelly is a dessert that wobbles and is kinda fun to eat.
Sloppy joes.. Is that just beef mince on a roll? Sounds gross, but looks delicious
Maybe I've been watching too much curb your enthusiasm, but are people in the USA usually rude to service staff?
I was eating a meal with an American guy in rural Thailand and he made a massive scene because his rice was too cold. He was absolutely horrified - mouth agape. Stood up. Threw his napkin onto the table etc.. It was fucking embarrassing. The restaurant staff had no idea what to do and probably spat in his food.
Another American guy I used to work with in Taiwan had a huge meltdown in a 7/11 because the ATM displayed his account balance on the screen. He was almost frothing at the mouth.. Demanding an explanation from the poor underpaid checkout girl. Umm.. Dude, she doesn't speak English, doesn't give a shit and you are scaring her.
I've yet to meet an American that I get on well with. There's just something cocky and patronising about the ones I've met. Brits on the other hand usually know how to laugh at themselves, and seem more laid back.
Therefore: +15 pts for old blighty
Fahrenheit has way more granularity, making it far superior for communicating weather/temperature outside.
Peanut butter and 'jelly' always confused me as a kid. We call it 'jam'. Jelly is a dessert that wobbles and is kinda fun to eat.
Sloppy joes.. Is that just beef mince on a roll? Sounds gross, but looks delicious
Maybe I've been watching too much curb your enthusiasm, but are people in the USA usually rude to service staff?
I was eating a meal with an American guy in rural Thailand and he made a massive scene because his rice was too cold. He was absolutely horrified - mouth agape. Stood up. Threw his napkin onto the table etc.. It was fucking embarrassing. The restaurant staff had no idea what to do and probably spat in his food.
Another American guy I used to work with in Taiwan had a huge meltdown in a 7/11 because the ATM displayed his account balance on the screen. He was almost frothing at the mouth.. Demanding an explanation from the poor underpaid checkout girl. Umm.. Dude, she doesn't speak English, doesn't give a shit and you are scaring her.
I've yet to meet an American that I get on well with. There's just something cocky and patronising about the ones I've met. Brits on the other hand usually know how to laugh at themselves, and seem more laid back.
Therefore: +15 pts for old blighty
Scones if outside a stew. Dumplings, if they are in a stew.
I was eating a meal with an American guy in rural Thailand and he made a massive scene because his rice was too cold. He was absolutely horrified - mouth agape. Stood up. Threw his napkin onto the table etc.. It was fucking embarrassing. The restaurant staff had no idea what to do and probably spat in his food.
Another American guy I used to work with in Taiwan had a huge meltdown in a 7/11 because the ATM displayed his account balance on the screen. He was almost frothing at the mouth.. Demanding an explanation from the poor underpaid checkout girl. Umm.. Dude, she doesn't speak English, doesn't give a shit and you are scaring her.
I've yet to meet an American that I get on well with. There's just something cocky and patronising about the ones I've met. Brits on the other hand usually know how to laugh at themselves, and seem more laid back.
Therefore: +15 pts for old blighty
Peanut butter and 'jelly' always confused me as a kid. We call it 'jam'. Jelly is a dessert that wobbles and is kinda fun to eat.
Peanut butter and 'jelly' always confused me as a kid. We call it 'jam'. Jelly is a dessert that wobbles and is kinda fun to eat.
Sloppy joes.. Is that just beef mince on a roll? Sounds gross, but looks delicious
Scones if outside a stew. Dumplings, if they are in a stew.
American's also say "Sodder", while the rest of the world says Solder.
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What about America's obsession with beautiful lawns? I feel like we are alone in that weird desire to have the perfect front yard.
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I even feel it. If I have a lot of dandelions in my yard, I feel like the neighbors think less of me. It's so weird.
What about America's obsession with beautiful lawns? I feel like we are alone in that weird desire to have the perfect front yard.
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I even feel it. If I have a lot of dandelions in my yard, I feel like the neighbors think less of me. It's so weird.
Nah, it's fucking cold half the time and fucking hot the other half. Spring and Autumn last like 3 weeks each and are rather schizophrenic about the "transition" of the weather.
lol probably some wuss from socal paradise weather
I don't do any of those things...lol. I'll tip at restaurants but that's about it.A spin off from the cinema thread. It seems to me that there are a ton of crazy/weird things our friends across the ocean are doing, such as:
Boiling water in the microwave
Tipping everyone for any service
Shouting, applauding, and hollering in the theatre
Aside from them mixing up biscuits with whatever, can you guys think of any other weird Americanisms?
American's also say "Sodder", while the rest of the world says Solder.
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What about America's obsession with beautiful lawns? I feel like we are alone in that weird desire to have the perfect front yard.
I even feel it. If I have a lot of dandelions in my yard, I feel like the neighbors think less of me. It's so weird.
I spent about 3 hours today mowing the lawn and only got half of it done.
your city will send someone to maw the lawn for your for free in the Netherlands, if you neglect it
in america they will just hit you with fines until you do, either from your neighborhood association or your townyour city will send someone to maw the lawn for your for free in the Netherlands, if you neglect it
What about America's obsession with beautiful lawns? I feel like we are alone in that weird desire to have the perfect front yard.
![]()
I even feel it. If I have a lot of dandelions in my yard, I feel like the neighbors think less of me. It's so weird.
Remember, when stating "Americans say A, the rest of the world say B," you're really saying "The majority of native English speakers say A, while a minority of them say B."
Wow, must be nice. I could be wrong, but here if you neglect your yard you can be fined by the city.
in america they will just hit you with fines until you do, either from your neighborhood association or your town
fuckin crazy ass uppity nanny state bullshit america
I would guess Hinglish is bigger than either.
Nope, Maryland. We get terrible winters and sweltering summers along with horrible humidity. I'm just a wuss when it comes to cold.
The worst of the worst- Brits inventing a ridiculous language with no consistency in spelling and pronunciation, bastardizing it over the centuries to the point of being unrecognizable and then complaining that Americans are butchering it by leaving out superfluous U's.
america's attempt at clotted cream is a sad, deflated joke.
pretty bizarre for you guys to be bad at anything with clotted in the name.
My neighborhood doesn't but my city does.Only if you live in hoity-toity planned communities. My neighborhood couldn't give a shit.
In Australia the lawn is yellow for half the year
I've always been irrationally annoyed by Americans talking about the 'British' accent. Like, which one?? There's a different one in every town for fuck sake.
My neighborhood doesn't but my city does.
The British parliament is embarrassing imho.Ok so, in the British Parliament (for example)
are they saying "yeaaaaaaaah.." or "ehhhhh" or "meeeeeeeh" or is it just any random noise you can make to sound your disapproval?
I've heard Americans are fantastic at making clotted organs.
How? Cutting it with scissors?
I used to mow a fairly standard suburban lawn (1/3 acre lot minus garden) in 45 minutes if I was efficient. An hour if I trimmed.
I agree that a lot of Americans think of only one British accent. It's the same as them thinking all of us sound like rednecks or that we all have the "general american midwestern accent."
Americans are only allowed three accents. New Yorker, Southerner and California surfer dude.
UKer here
The problem with defending the purity of the English language is that English is about as pure as a cribhouse whore. We don't just borrow words; on occasion, English has pursued other languages down alleyways to beat them unconscious and rifle their pockets for new vocabulary.
James D. Nicoll (1990-05-15). "The King's English".
I've always been irrationally annoyed by Americans talking about the 'British' accent. Like, which one?? There's a different one in every town for fuck sake.
You forgot the best one: BAAAAAAAAAAAAHSTAN.
English is already pretty inconsistent, but British English takes inconsistency to a whole new level.
Americans are only allowed three accents. New Yorker, Southerner and California surfer dude.
WHY NOT USE THE KETTLE?!
What about mid-Atlantic? You know, the one people say is the American accent?
A Kettle? Was is this, the middle ages?