American Reacts Non Brits, what is your favourite British term? - Ask Reddit

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McJibbin

McJibbin

6 күн бұрын

👉Original Video: • Non Brits, what is you...
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McJibbin
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Hi everyone! I'm an American from the Northeast (New England). I want to create a watering hole for people who want to discuss, learn and teach about history through KZbin videos which you guys recommend to me through the comment section or over on Discord. Let's be respectful but, just as importantly, not be afraid to question any and everything about historical records in order to give us the most accurate representation of the history of our species and of our planet!
Having a diverse perspective is crucial to what I want to achieve here so please don't hold back! I want to learn about all I can! Keep recommending and PLEAESE join my Discord :) ( / discord )
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Пікірлер: 131
@fishfingers8441
@fishfingers8441 5 күн бұрын
Ok but you doing a posh accent over the Yorkshire accent comment was hilarious
@mral8145
@mral8145 5 күн бұрын
The perfect response to “you’re taking the pissl”. Is (well, it is in Scotland); “taking the piss? You’re f**king giving it away!” 😂
@viviennerose6858
@viviennerose6858 4 күн бұрын
Princess Anne's daughter Zara is married to a rugby player, named Mike Tindall, and he famously referred to Prince Harry as a bellend. Almost the entire UK agreed 😂😂😂😂😂
@ianmurphy7974
@ianmurphy7974 5 күн бұрын
Your accent is fine Connor. Although at one point you did wander dangerously close to Mel Gibson in Braveheart.
@williebauld1007
@williebauld1007 5 күн бұрын
Connor having an existential crisis over hating bruh but loving bruv 😂😂
@rasmusn.e.m1064
@rasmusn.e.m1064 5 күн бұрын
You are right that 'innit is a contraction of "isn't it", but 'innit has basically become a word on its own at this point: Proof: You can say "Chips are yellow, innit?" and if you decontract it to "Chips are yellow, isn't it?" then it doesn't make sense anymore. You can use it in all the same places as "right", which is what I tend to use.
@jillstedtenfeldt6799
@jillstedtenfeldt6799 5 күн бұрын
I used to live in England many years ago (outside Manchester) and now, when speaking english, a tend to use "bonkers", "bloody hell", "bleeding hell" and always with a slight Mancunian accent.
@emmahowells8334
@emmahowells8334 5 күн бұрын
Sarny used for a sandwich is used all over the UK, I'm from Wales and I use sarny. For someone saying I'll call you, we say also I'll give you a bell I like that too but no I've never used tinkle in the same sense.
@_Professor_Oak
@_Professor_Oak 2 күн бұрын
I'll bell ya innit
@user-xz6qk9wf9j
@user-xz6qk9wf9j Күн бұрын
Women say "love" to men and women. Men say "love" to women and "mate" to men. But if you say "love" to a European women that speak English then they may take offence as they think it's patronising. In Britain "love" can be patronising but it depends upon context. "Calm down love" for example
@lcako1616
@lcako1616 Күн бұрын
Yh people say love, pet, duck, chick, chicken, lovely, cock/cocker (which can come off badly for a different reason) etc.
@wobaguk
@wobaguk Күн бұрын
Taking the piss has multiple uses. "Dont worry, Im just taking the piss" meaning, dont worry I'm just having fun with you. "Are you taking the piss?" meaning you cannot be serious. As in "I need you to work all weekend"... "Are you taking the piss?" inference being, you know its genuine, but its unaceptable enough to be a joke. "Stop taking the piss" meaning 'stop mocking that person, its not funny'.
@user-xz6qk9wf9j
@user-xz6qk9wf9j Күн бұрын
"You are off your trolley" means you're mad
@OneTrueScotsman
@OneTrueScotsman 5 күн бұрын
Bloody in England is like damn in America. Neither are real swear words, they've just been turned into them... which I suppose is what all swear words are, at the end of the day. Bloody's not a swear word in Scotland. Nor is damn.
@cookingfat1
@cookingfat1 Күн бұрын
"taking the piss" can also mean "taking liberties" as well as "are you joking"
@JanineCrainich-rj6sx
@JanineCrainich-rj6sx 4 күн бұрын
Your British accent isn’t that bad Connor….it is certainly better than some of the other reactors on KZbin 👍🏼😀
@griswald7156
@griswald7156 4 күн бұрын
“ Look at the state of him “
@carolinekofahl8867
@carolinekofahl8867 5 күн бұрын
It's just fun for you - yeah, fun for us too 😊
@OneTrueScotsman
@OneTrueScotsman 5 күн бұрын
I thiiink Americans sometimes say pop on by, but not pop round. I can't hear it. That's definitely said in Britain though.
@johnp8131
@johnp8131 5 күн бұрын
Think of Sean Bean for a Sheffield accent and Hendersons relish is a little similar to Worcester sauce.
@CM-1723
@CM-1723 19 сағат бұрын
The acronym N.O.N.C.E stands for 'not on normal courtyard exercise', Which is what peados and sex offenders would be on in prison
@OneTrueScotsman
@OneTrueScotsman 5 күн бұрын
Laughing all the way to the bank is a saying that originated in a novel written by an American. I also don't think it's used commonly, in Britain. We hear it in (US) media, but I don't think we use it. It's a good one, though. I wish I had more opportunities to say it, myself 🤣
@DiGiDaWgZs
@DiGiDaWgZs 5 күн бұрын
Remember a lot of us Brits are less worried about profanity or blasphemy than many Americans.
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 5 күн бұрын
😅 I quite enjoy the freedom we Brits can feel over the use of swear words. I don't like or use certain words: "bollocks", and "bellend" being my major dislikes words plus of course "nonce" because there's *nothing nice or pleasant or amusing* about that word... I don't mind "tosser" (as a word to use in a suitably descriptive 'conversation') ditto "wanker" though I don't tend to use either of those last two myself, it doesn't offend my ear to hear others use them at all!! The 'f' word and nowadays (long story) the 'c' words are used quite a lot by me - but usually when I'm cross that my Tablet loses it's signal or it stops without warning to reset itself - in the middle of me watching a video etc!! "Bloody" slips out easily (no pun intended - I'm *well past that stage*, at 70 !!) and my daughter says it's not really regarded as swearing these days... It even slips by on radio call-ins and they block the caller for every other kind of "profanity" as the Americans say... The "cussing", the "profanity" and their alternatives: "fricking", "dang" ("oh darn!") etc always make me laugh, as does "faffing" - but I have been known to employ the latter when commenting on YT Royal posts, because it just seems to fit there best!! I doubt I _know_ as many swear words as some / a lot of Brits, but I do tend to get irate, peeved, annoyed, or just "frustratedly amused" (is that an acceptable phrase?!) when some people get _offended_ by swear words. To my mind, the most offensive anyone can be are the ones who perform and / or promote violence upon others, in humans and in animals. That's a form of abuse which offends _me_. The misuse of funds by governments and / or fundraisers, who secrete the monies either given in good faith, or received lawfully & fairly via a reasonable tax system but not put to reasonable and fair use, ie to fund the NHS, road-mending, transport, city-planning, domestic responsibilities as in managing our waterways and sewage etc etc etc. That has the swearing aspect employed gainfully, in my opinion... And... It's better to swear at an inconsiderate driver, whilst sitting in your vehicle, perhaps by use of a dash cam, recording their data (vehicle type, number plate, abusive road activity - dangerous driving etc) to report them if acting so irresponsibly that they could or do damage or harm to other road users, than getting out of your vehicle and _threatening to harm them yourself_ ...ie _guns_ in the hands of irate American drivers...?! Swearing can be cathartic, and is proven by scientific study (apparently) to indicate a wider vocabulary and an ease of use, rather than a sign of diminished verbal conversational skills...if you follow...? Here Endeth my (apparent) "lecture" on the subject of... "Swearing versus Cussing" !! "Comments Welcome" below, if you care to add your own "versions"🤔?!😊 😏🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿♥️🇬🇧🙁🖖
@BiIIyBearHam
@BiIIyBearHam 5 күн бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="620">10:20</a>, I feel like, personally, if you asked someone to spell "Innit" they would definitely spell it like that, as opposed to "Isn't it". Or maybe "Ennit" which is how it's usually pronounced / spelt where I am. And also, people will type innit / ennit when texting or messaging for example. I'd say innit is definitely its own word, not just a pronunciation of isn't it, and is used in in places where "Isn't it" would seem sort of out of place
@pem...
@pem... 5 күн бұрын
In KZbin comments i write innit all the time, though innit was the only way to write innit, innit!
@susymanoosy
@susymanoosy 5 күн бұрын
Same it’s the only way, innit.
@fishfingers8441
@fishfingers8441 4 күн бұрын
Int’it I feel like, for us northerners
@_Professor_Oak
@_Professor_Oak 2 күн бұрын
@@fishfingers8441 nah that's just when you don't want to sound too chavvy
@fishfingers8441
@fishfingers8441 2 күн бұрын
@@_Professor_Oak Lmao innit isn’t used in Yorkshire accents, it’s just not rlly a thing. Always int’it with the middle t
@ChaseOakley-rw2lx
@ChaseOakley-rw2lx 4 күн бұрын
I like "oh, do one, you melt" "Slag" "Dirty old ripper" "Dinlow" "Tart" "Twazzock" "Flid" "Drip" (that's brutal) There's so many.
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 5 күн бұрын
Fortnight: 2 weeks Once: one time Twice: one times two Thrice: three times Quarter: 1/4 Half: 1/2 Threequarters: 3/4 _not_ 1, 2, 3, 4, fourths! Tyre: tire (tyre that rubber wheelcovering, tire, to feel tired. To be Tyred: to remove a tyre from a vehicle to clobber someone with it?!😮 Merriam Webster... 'go figure'?!! Whyyyhy though...? Our words were / are perfect as they are. _Why_ change them, simplify them, abuse & confuse them?😮😠😢😐🤔😏🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿♥️🇬🇧🙂🖖
@Aloh-od3ef
@Aloh-od3ef 5 күн бұрын
Tosspot 😂
@Dan-B
@Dan-B 5 күн бұрын
“Taking the piss” does mean making fun of something, but a person or situation that’s annoying or pushing it too far can also take the piss; in the sense that it’s like you’re being made fun of. (eg. *Actually taking the piss:* Calling someone a mean name in a fun way. *Metaphorically taking the piss:* “it isn’t supposed to be raining today, this weather’s taking the piss”
@easterdeer
@easterdeer 4 күн бұрын
As others have said, you're right about 'taking the piss', it can mean 'making fun of' or 'taking liberties'. If you tell someone they can use your lawnmower whenever they want but they take it and keep it at their house all the time and don't bring it back, that's taking the piss. It's when you give someone an inch but they take a mile 😄Your accent is really getting there! You sound a bit like the Beatles though when you don't do the super posh version 😂Love you Connor ❤
@PhyllisGlassup2TheBrim
@PhyllisGlassup2TheBrim 2 күн бұрын
I'm English and I use terms which confuse other people. Like for example, 'scrimmed up'. Meaning hidden from view. "I found one of the hens scrimmed up behind a bush, sitting on a pile of eggs". Or M.O. "I can't meet you for lunch as I have an appointment to see the M.O. (Medical Officer = doctor) and a priest or vicar is always called Padre. Anyone who was in the forces will know these words. I was born into the army and then married a squaddie so I grew up with those words as part of my language.
@viviennerose6858
@viviennerose6858 3 күн бұрын
'Steady on' kind of means 'whoa, take it easy, you're going a bit far there' or 'hold on a minute'. Used regularly, trust me
@sarahowen1945
@sarahowen1945 5 күн бұрын
Nonce not on normal courtyard exercise.
@squirepraggerstope3591
@squirepraggerstope3591 4 күн бұрын
For classical Brit (and Aussie) army slang look up a very old song originally sung in WW2's North African theatre by 'pongos' on leave in Cairo taking in a movie at one or another cinema. At the end of the evening's show, the then 'Gyppo' national anthem would be played. Thus providing the alternative ditty's tune, while the words of an ever increasing number of verses were supplied by the troops themselves. It's a heartfelt tribute to the then king of Egypt, Farouk and his gracious consort Queen Farida. The opening stanza, iirc, is "King Farouk, King Farouk, Hang your bollocks on a hook!" The last time I recall ever hearing it was in a pub, c1990 when about 20 verses were sung with great verve by a blissfully happy and monumentally tanked-up Suez (and apparently also Malaya) Vet.😁
@sweeneytodd011
@sweeneytodd011 5 күн бұрын
Your interpretations and understanding is pretty spot on Connor mate 👍
@joshcrawford4076
@joshcrawford4076 5 күн бұрын
Connor when you say "innit" it actually sounds right!
@hardywatkins7737
@hardywatkins7737 Күн бұрын
My favourite British term is 'Embuggerance' ... it's basically a stubborn object that is hard to remove. Not many people know about it because someone i know made it up. 🙂
@mancuniangamecat8288
@mancuniangamecat8288 5 күн бұрын
Thanks love
@helenwood8482
@helenwood8482 5 күн бұрын
You are right and he is wrong about taking the piss. Evan doesn't understand many British expressions.
@christinestromberg4057
@christinestromberg4057 4 күн бұрын
The word 'nonce' - a British slang word for paedophile actually originated in the Wakefield prison and comes from an acronym used by staff there.The acronym N.O.N.C.E was marked on the cell card of any prisoner who may have been in danger of violence from other prisoners. It meant staff would not open their doors when other prisoners were out. The acronym NONCE stands for 'not on normal courtyard exercise' and apparently was first coined at the jail in Yorkshire. Innit came from the street talk of brown or black youth, Innit tho? is another one. It was taken up by a lot of young people.
@sashacoe25
@sashacoe25 4 күн бұрын
As a Yorkshire man I think you'll find "innit" is how we speak, it wasn't made up by the youths of today they just stole it from us folk that don't pronounce our T's and abbreviate everything so no one can understand us.
@lcako1616
@lcako1616 Күн бұрын
Shagstain is an insult like calling someone a wanker😂
@OneTrueScotsman
@OneTrueScotsman 5 күн бұрын
"Chuffing hell" I have a pal from Yorkshire, in England. He lives up here in the Scottish Highlands. He uses "chuffing hell", all the time. I don't know if it's a Yorkshire thing, or a wider British expression too. But I'm thinking it's more local because I never see "chuffing hell" brought up in examples in videos like this.
@sue8203
@sue8203 4 күн бұрын
Yeah think it may just be a Yorkshire saying, as a Yorkshire lass it’s something I use and hear it often lol
@wallywombat164
@wallywombat164 5 күн бұрын
HAIRY Potter?
@rjart4
@rjart4 Күн бұрын
Bob's your uncle Fanny's your aunt used to be the full phrase.
@jokeogh9939
@jokeogh9939 4 күн бұрын
I was cracking up at your reaction to a man calling you love. Don't worry Connor, they wouldn't. 😂 Sweet potatoes are the devil's food btw.
@garethm3242
@garethm3242 4 күн бұрын
I'm from northern Ireland, and when I spent a year in Yorkshire, England, my work colleagues would get me to tell them to "fuck off", as they loved how it sounded in my accent. they said it sounded incredibly scary 😆(picture Liam Neeson perhaps - though his voice is much cooler than mine)
@_Professor_Oak
@_Professor_Oak 2 күн бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="230">3:50</a> it would be great in a Boston accent, or a typical New York accent, as there's definitely some similarities to cockney in those.
@duntalkin
@duntalkin 5 күн бұрын
Our answer to being told off for saying bloody was to say bloodys in the Bible bloodys in the book 😊
@Scaleyback317
@Scaleyback317 19 сағат бұрын
Just asked my foreign born wife. She reckons there are two which deserve to be more widespread. The concept of, "Bollocks" closely followed by the descriptive, "Wanker" both of which can mean just about anything the the word wielder wishes them to.
@lewismantle3887
@lewismantle3887 5 күн бұрын
I think a lot of these rely on the fact that the majority of accents in the UK will drop some consonant sounds - and this does t sound quite ‘right’ in a non-native accent. (yes, I know we’re speaking the same language - but I mean a non-native British accent). For example, the word ‘knobhead’ - the ‘H’ in ‘-head’ would never be pronounced, it loses its punchy effect if it’s pronounced anyway other than ‘Nob’Ed!’ Another would be ‘Prick!’ which I love - (Wait… Not like that…) - But the first syllable is said similar to how you’d say ‘Brrrrrr’ if you were cold and shivering - so you almost spit out the ‘Prick!’. (This is getting worse and worse, even with context, but I’m rolling with it.) The same with ‘Bellend!’ - the ‘B’ is made by drawing the lips further back into the mouth over the teeth before spitting it out again. (As truthful as this is, I’m ready for all kinds of ‘inappropriate comment’ warnings…) Obviously, never actually spit anything at anyone - that’s the only offence in the UK that is still (rightly so) punishable by being publicly flogged, hung, drawn and quartered. Disgusting behaviour. Only pricks, knobheads and bellends do that.
@robertcooper3133
@robertcooper3133 4 күн бұрын
You have to remember us Brits can come across as passive aggressive to many foreigners but it is just the way we speak to each other and nothing is meant by it
@jolloyd1247
@jolloyd1247 5 күн бұрын
The word Init or innit is street slang. It's often used by a sad idiot trying to sound cool or down with the kids.
@101steel4
@101steel4 4 күн бұрын
Exactly, it's not an English thing at all and 99% of the country doesn't say it.
@Rocky19577
@Rocky19577 5 күн бұрын
Does he hold the world record for the most words spoken in 30 minutes? God he can rabbit on.
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 5 күн бұрын
I am not always sure if Evan is rabbiting at full speed or if I've _held the top of my Tablet in the wrong place so that it speeds up the audio_ ... (The latter annoys me) But on this video. I think it was "pure _Evan_speed_speak_" ?!😮
@rjart4
@rjart4 Күн бұрын
Never Mind The Bollocks the Sex Pistols album came from the guitarist Steve Jones father, apparently he would say it a lot.
@griswald7156
@griswald7156 4 күн бұрын
You can say balls a polite way of saying bollocks…
@user-qj7et4wv3q
@user-qj7et4wv3q 5 күн бұрын
Connor try using the word YAMPY also means the same as numpty. NONCE:= NOT On Normal Courtyard Exercise, a prison term for child sex offenders.
@helenwood8482
@helenwood8482 5 күн бұрын
Do you call a month four weeks?
@McJibbin
@McJibbin 5 күн бұрын
good point...
@CM-1723
@CM-1723 19 сағат бұрын
Bollox and the dogs bollox is in a film called the 51st state with Samuel L Jackson in it
@richardshillam7075
@richardshillam7075 5 күн бұрын
Innit is a change of guard, isn't it is where we were. It probably started with "I believe that's right ". I don't really care if the sentence before was worth listening to.
@julianbarber4708
@julianbarber4708 2 күн бұрын
I always think 'numpty' is Scottish.
@_Professor_Oak
@_Professor_Oak 2 күн бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="1714">28:34</a> you can't say "taking the piss" without indicating who is taking the piss. E.g. "he's taking the piss!", or "are you taking the piss?" which is often shortened to "you taking the piss?" but it's NEVER used on it's own as "taking the piss?" as that's just grammatically incomplete and sounds kinda silly... 😂😂
@squirepraggerstope3591
@squirepraggerstope3591 4 күн бұрын
Bell end; also referred to by my tail end boomer generation brought up on WW2 related material as one's "German Helmet"
@stephenkorky1014
@stephenkorky1014 2 күн бұрын
Instead of saying F***k O**. Say this. "Go forth and multiply". KorkytheKat UK
@joannedwyer-bc5py
@joannedwyer-bc5py 4 күн бұрын
Haha brilliant lad. We love it when americans try to do our accent or as it changes in different areas especially if they TRY to take the piss. Notice try in capitals 😅😅😅😅😅.. lately we've been saying..what a "ball ache" meaning like, oh this again, what a nusiance i cba with this. Cba as in cant be arsed, can't be bothered its a ball ache.
@aroemaliuged4776
@aroemaliuged4776 5 күн бұрын
I bet he doesn’t tell any Brit too piss off He has heard it but he won’t say it😂
@K8E666
@K8E666 2 күн бұрын
Do as many accents as you like - everyone in the UK does 😂😂 We all try to do a London/Northern/Scottish or Irish accent - I’m Welsh so I have that covered 😂😂 And yes Connor sweet potatoes are OVERRATED !! If someone walks into a room with a face like a slapped arse they look noticeably annoyed.. My favourite expressions are : Bloody Hell - a staple for shocking Twat - a complete arsehole F**king bollocks ! - perfect for when you stub your toe Wanker - again a complete arsehole Alright - meaning hello, you okay etc Chuffed - really pleased Love/babe - I’m Welsh and we say it to everyone “alright love ?” just means we like you but not romantically 😂😂 (a term of endearment). The C word is a favourite either as a term of endearment or in anger specifically when used in combination with F**k
@_Professor_Oak
@_Professor_Oak 2 күн бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="1210">20:10</a> bro why are you trying to sound like the queen 😂😂
@paulharvey9149
@paulharvey9149 Күн бұрын
If anybody's ringing his bellend, I'd say he's got a little health issue...😁 I agree with you, Connor, about piss being a milder word than f**k, especially when combined with 'off'. In many respects you have the same problem as I have in that you speak very phonetically, pronouncing all the letters - and don't tend to drift into what I've always considered as the rather lazy and improper habit of dropping final t's, and suchlike! That said, I do speak very differently in different contexts and company - so, the words I use will be much more individually pronounced in formal situations than those I use with most Scottish friends and family, for example - where I'm much more likely to abbreviate, and string words together... Of course, we have to make allowances for the fact that most of the words and expressions he's using are informal London accents. Interestingly, many of them have emerged from immigrant communities - innit and bro' for example, coming from Black African English - which of course, I was taught were wrong, when I went to school in the 1970s... That said, one of the features of the indigenous Glasgow accent is a tendency to say 'but' at the end of statements - to which I always expect a counter-argument, and get frustrated because none comes: "It disnae really matter, but." being quite an appropriate thing to say about all of this!! Many others will doutless remember the rhyme from their school playgrounds, "Bloody's in the bible, bloody's in the book; if you don't believe me, take a bloody look!" and so, yes, bloody does seem like a softer swear word (when used in such contexts); but it wasn't until very recently that I discovered that some people regard 'twat' as a swear word! I thought it was just one of those modern words that had emerged from London (and possibly, from another Ethnic community)...!! And at the other extreme, you rarely hear bugger used as a swear word these days - even though "bugger off" also has quite a playful ring to it; also bastard seems to have gone out of fashion in Southern England (along with the C-word), which might well be related to greater social awareness of just how offensive the definitions are to some people... Hence, our language(s) are living, evolving and changing all the time.
@shelleyjackson8793
@shelleyjackson8793 5 күн бұрын
Hello Fresh are so entrenched in KZbin channels it makes me not want to buy into it.
@user-xz6qk9wf9j
@user-xz6qk9wf9j Күн бұрын
Trollied means drunk.
@kevingriffin6199
@kevingriffin6199 5 күн бұрын
Well, you made me laugh, mate Wicked init 😂
@SgtSteel1
@SgtSteel1 Күн бұрын
As a Brit I hate the word innit. I say isn't it. Rest of the examples I use all the time though. It's also worth bearing in mind that a lot of these are regional. Oh and I HATE bruv. A man would never ever call another man "love" well, unless you're taking the piss (with a little hand gesture) I'll give you a tinkle is a shortened version of I'll give you a tinkle on the blower (telephone call)
@LearnTheHorizon
@LearnTheHorizon 4 күн бұрын
Yes but "innit" is like the most British way of saying it. It's like saying "Nomeen" or "Dja no meen" for "Do you know what I mean?". Brah is like dude bro, but Bruv is like Hell yea bruvva "Takin the piss" is the same are "are u avin a laugh / are u avin a giggle" in other words, "are you making fun of me"
@jokeogh9939
@jokeogh9939 4 күн бұрын
Sod off or sod that for a game of soldiers.
@valeriedavidson2785
@valeriedavidson2785 4 күн бұрын
As a British person I would say that a lot of these terms are very offensive. I would say piss off is not very different from f..... off.
@christineschmidt8501
@christineschmidt8501 2 күн бұрын
THANK YOU! Sweet potatoes are horrid and should be outlawed!
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 5 күн бұрын
Connor... You still keep saying Acaster wrong!! 🙁 It's _A_ pronounced the _name_ of the letter: 'A' ... Caster to rhyme with fast, cast, mast, the first part of _nast_y, last, past, all said the 'American way'... "A_caster" ... _NOT_ "acaster" like _you_ say it. (Grr !!!!! 😮😢😊😅😂) Oh dear!! 🤔♥️🖖
@razor1uk610
@razor1uk610 4 күн бұрын
Conner you sound better using your normal voice, but your own impersonational accents are also getting better too - but can hear they feel a bit more forced & nervous, especially when you occasionally sound Australian, when overdoing the strength of your London Cockney/Essex versions Knob - Wang ..childish/kids term. Brits find Wang sounds/feels wrong to say to us, since it not a cultural norm gor us over 'ere.
@benlee6158
@benlee6158 Күн бұрын
I fully agree with the sweet potatoe fries btw! Codswallop! I'm bloody knackered! Fancy a chinwag?
@helenwood8482
@helenwood8482 5 күн бұрын
Laughing all the way to the bank s American.
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 5 күн бұрын
We had banks before Americans did so that indicates a British origin... Of course, the American fondness for getting as rich as Croesus as quickly as possible is more American than British - unless born rich in Britain, then you want to increase your riches asap and hang on to them whilst increasing them... Hence the off-shore banking facilities - islands flying the 🇬🇧 flag where _your riches_ may avoid / evade the clasping fingers of the His Majesty's Tax Office minions...?!! 🤔😏🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿😊🇬🇧☺️🖖
@_Professor_Oak
@_Professor_Oak 2 күн бұрын
<a href="#" class="seekto" data-time="266">4:26</a> it's less rude, a mild version of f*** off, but depending on the tone of your voice I guess it can be worse? Idk what he means by that...
@101steel4
@101steel4 4 күн бұрын
Innit isn't a native saying
@JasonRogers-vb4vh
@JasonRogers-vb4vh 4 күн бұрын
_ank stain 😂😂
@steveallen3434
@steveallen3434 Күн бұрын
Is it not funny that so many of these have to do with bodily functions and organs and sex. And can be used in jest or as a real mean insult. And how did the F word become so offensive as it is used to mean sex? Like saying sex off. Or when you stub your toe and say sex that hurts. Same with the C word. Most offensive words make no logical sense
@JasonRogers-vb4vh
@JasonRogers-vb4vh 4 күн бұрын
F___ sake!
@productjoe4069
@productjoe4069 5 күн бұрын
‘Innit’ has become lexicalised (turned into its own word) with that spelling. As often happens, it’s developed a few connotations beyond simply ‘isn’t it?’. With rising tone it’s a tag question explicitly looking for confirmation of the statement (same as ‘isn’t it?’). With a flat tone it can not only mean a *rhetorical* request for confirmation but also act as an intensifier expletive to indicate the listener should pay a lot of attention to the statement which is so obviously true that it’s amazing the speaker even had to bother using their oxygen and mouth hole. In the latter case, the pronunciation has drifted a bit to be extremely fast (British, and Australian, English has distinct long and short vowels unlike US English so syllables can take a much bigger range of times to say which makes reading poetry with the wrong dialect fun) and with the vowels more unstressed (less distinct from schwa) and the consonants only vaguely hinted at.
@PhyllisGlassup2TheBrim
@PhyllisGlassup2TheBrim 2 күн бұрын
The British term for someone saying they will telephone you is actually "I'll give you a bell". And your English accent isn't too shabby love. There's another term for you.
@helenwood8482
@helenwood8482 5 күн бұрын
We don't say yeah much. That's Australians.
@patriciakeogh5008
@patriciakeogh5008 5 күн бұрын
Fuckity bollocks is my favourite go to swear 🇬🇧
@markwolstenholme3354
@markwolstenholme3354 5 күн бұрын
P Off is more vulgar than F off or the F word. F is used all the time in conversation.
@c_n_b
@c_n_b 5 күн бұрын
Lol what?? No it's not 😂
@markwolstenholme3354
@markwolstenholme3354 5 күн бұрын
@@c_n_b tiss 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@stephenlee5929
@stephenlee5929 5 күн бұрын
@@markwolstenholme3354 Init?, Nah, 'tain't.🤔
@markwolstenholme3354
@markwolstenholme3354 5 күн бұрын
@@stephenlee5929 Tha gets mi drift though. 🤣🤣🤣. Hearing the F word in conversation is almost natural nowadays init 🤣🤣 I say intit.
@helenroberts1107
@helenroberts1107 5 күн бұрын
I don’t find your British accent quite as annoying as others. I think it’s ok so don’t worry. I think with F off, it’s how you say it, aggressive or funny. I like oi mush. It might be a Northern thing as Evan says. I think’love’ is mainly said by the opposite sex.
@101steel4
@101steel4 4 күн бұрын
English accent
@razor1uk610
@razor1uk610 4 күн бұрын
Cringey accents.. oh come on, you carry on Connor, the videos you watch, I find those other impersonation accents, when being closer to real, but saying wrong style of logics and imperfections of mannerisms related to the accent's own regional stereotype(s), ...affects me more negatively than a just attempt of an accent itself - if your get the gist of what I mean? We viewers,andI get you, understand, of similar minds and self questionibgs.. ...secretly almost everybody does them of orabout something or someone, to blow off anger/steam 'venting' or for comedic self need..
@JoeeyTheeKangaroo
@JoeeyTheeKangaroo 4 күн бұрын
Please stop doing the accent
@Delicious_J
@Delicious_J 5 күн бұрын
Connor, your definition of chuffed is called 'fatman's rub' here - a sign one should start at the gym again!
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