American Reacts to WEIRD Facts About the UK

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Tyler Rumple

Tyler Rumple

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 661
@Shoomer1988
@Shoomer1988 Жыл бұрын
It's worse than you realise Tyler. Beer a glass - Pints, Beer in a can - Litres. Milk in a glass bottle - pints, Milk in a plastic bottle - Litres.
@vickytaylor9155
@vickytaylor9155 2 күн бұрын
Plus a British pint is not the same size as an American one.
@WyndStryke
@WyndStryke Жыл бұрын
17:40 The "drinking over the age of 5" thing is normally a small glass of wine at Christmas, New Year, or similar, and I'd say around 10 years old.
@JarlGrimmToys
@JarlGrimmToys Жыл бұрын
Tyler you must know that the Imperial system started in Britain. The clue is in the name. Imperial means something relating to an empire, in this case the British Empire. So it shouldn’t surprise you too much that we use both the Imperial and metric. We use both and it’s not hard to learn both. It’s much easier than learning a 2nd language. What is surprising is that America still exclusively uses the British imperial system. Despite it not being as accurate as metric. If you go to a university in the US and study science. The first thing they have to do is teach American students the metric system.
@melissareohorn7436
@melissareohorn7436 Жыл бұрын
I thought most Imperial units predate the British empire
@JarlGrimmToys
@JarlGrimmToys Жыл бұрын
@@melissareohorn7436 Yes and no. Imperial units replaced English units in the 1800’s and the name came from the British Empire. English units was the system for centuries and were influenced by the Romans and Anglo-Saxons. Imperial units and English units were similar but not the same. But you can certainly say Imperial was based on English units.
@B-A-L
@B-A-L Жыл бұрын
It's weird how Americans struggle to use the decimal based metric system but have no problem with using a decimal currency.
@elemar5
@elemar5 11 ай бұрын
America doesn't use the imperial system, otherwise their pints would be 20 fluid ounces and not 16.6.
@Les-i7e
@Les-i7e 9 ай бұрын
He takes nothing in. Ignorant or rude.
@windzswept
@windzswept Жыл бұрын
Taps: There is a plug in the sink, use it, and fill the sink with water using the taps appropriately to get the water the temperature you want. It saves water. Two taps are incredibly common although mixer taps are becoming more common. The main reason is because of how hot water used to be stored in a hot water tank rather than being warmed as needed and water could be standing for a long period of time waiting to be heated so the water wasn't considered suitable for drinking whereas the cold tap wasn't standing so could be drank. With heating systems now heating on demand the need for separate taps is becoming less.
@markwolstenholme3354
@markwolstenholme3354 Жыл бұрын
Yes, and it's not "boiling hot" as the narrator exentuated from the hot tap.
@robheyes6470
@robheyes6470 Жыл бұрын
Not just that it would sit in the hot tank, but in areas with low water pressure there'd be a cold feeder tank in the loft/attic to ensure that the water heater never ran dry. This tank was often a galvanised tank that quite often didn't have a cover of any kind. It wouldn't be uncommon for spiders, insects, mice, rats and the occasional pigeon to have drowned in the feeder tank. Having a mixer tap would allow this often contaminated water to mix with the cold supply making it unsafe to drink.
@jamesdignanmusic2765
@jamesdignanmusic2765 Жыл бұрын
Hence the idea of rinsing cuts and burns under the cold tap. The water was safer.
@billspencer9430
@billspencer9430 Жыл бұрын
Yes. I've had a mixer tap in the kitchen for fifteen years or so. I've only ever used it as either hot or cold not both. I set my hot water temperature to hand hot. Using the mixer seem as though it would waste water.
@WookieWarriorz
@WookieWarriorz Жыл бұрын
its weird you say 2 taps is commong because in all my life in the uk ive never seen 2 taps in anyones home, just like old hotels and buildings.
@Burglar-King
@Burglar-King Жыл бұрын
Im from U.K. and know the drink law. On New Year’s Eve my grandmother always gave us a tiny bit of port & lemon or advocate and lemonade I was about six. None of us four kids grew up to drink alcohol excessively. Only at dinners or a pint in the evening social occasions.
@blondebrandy
@blondebrandy Жыл бұрын
My family similar to yours, special occasions and going out. None of the 4 of us drink except on special occasions. I very rarely drink having gone 5 years without through choice. But I am thinking of having a wee drink the next get together. My cupboard is full of all sorts of alcohol might have gone off did have to get rid of a full bottle of Baileys as it had sat there over 6 years.....
@JumboSeventyNine
@JumboSeventyNine Жыл бұрын
At Christmas as a kid i would have a small wine with dinner. At BBQs or similar i would always be offered a small beer or more often shandy. Nothing excessive and it meant drink wasn't some crazy illicit substance growing up.
@robheyes6470
@robheyes6470 Жыл бұрын
@@blondebrandy Baileys is one of the few alcoholic drinks that can go off (although I suspect that beer and cider may also do the same - but I've never kept either for long enough to find out).
@solaccursio
@solaccursio Жыл бұрын
@@robheyes6470 It can't go off. (if I am around, I mean) 😁😁
@jamessanderson9258
@jamessanderson9258 Жыл бұрын
My parents had a similar approach to drink, and I haven't drunk since 2 Christmases ago. This one will be 3, or maybe I will have a pint. Who knows.
@BillCameronWC
@BillCameronWC Жыл бұрын
Where do think the Imperial system originated? Having said that, traditional Imperial measurements in the UK often differ from America’s version of Imperial. For example a US gallon is only 4/5 of a British gallon, so whilst petrol/gas is still genuinely a lot cheaper in the US than UK, it’s not quite such a huge difference as it might first appear.
@henryblunt8503
@henryblunt8503 Жыл бұрын
The USA chose to make their pint 4 fluid ounces smaller than the Imperial one. This is obviously a bad thing.
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
Fluid ounces confuse me because we use them to measure shrimps and nails.
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
A US pint is about 450cc, a UK pint is about 550cc. "A litre of water's a pint and three quarters."
@c_n_b
@c_n_b Жыл бұрын
It's funny how Americans use the 'imperial' system which gets its name from the British 'Empire' 😁
@manueltapia1859
@manueltapia1859 Жыл бұрын
What one expect about if some US people think english was invented in US 😅😅
@66crowie
@66crowie Жыл бұрын
America, here is a lesson on using a two faucet basin. 1. Put a plug in the basin. 2. Run both faucets, mixing the water to a satisfactory temperature. 3. Wash with the water in the basin. 4. Remove plug. It isn't rocket science.
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 Жыл бұрын
😊 It is for Tyler Rumple, though?!! He can't even recall having already learned these facts several times before, apparently!!😅😂😊😮🇺🇸🥺🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🖖
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
And soap, hopefully.
@ewan8947
@ewan8947 Жыл бұрын
66crowie That’s like saying UK, here is a lesson in using public toilets 1. Open the stall and close the door 2. Cover all the gaps using toilet paper 3. Do your business 4. Remove all the toilet paper It’s not rocket science
@stephaniehamilton6217
@stephaniehamilton6217 Жыл бұрын
​@@ewan8947in the UK there are no gaps in the toilet stalls!
@ewan8947
@ewan8947 Жыл бұрын
@@stephaniehamilton6217That’s right, and in the US they don’t have two taps!
@gazinessex2
@gazinessex2 Жыл бұрын
Tyler, your memory is worse than mine! You have reacted to these topics multiple times.
@carltaylor6452
@carltaylor6452 Жыл бұрын
Watching Tyler's videos is like having deja vu on groundhog day.
@davers1953
@davers1953 Жыл бұрын
Personally I think Tyler is an entertainer and just making his videos fun to watch. On the other hand he could be just a forgetful git! :)
@mrrajsingh
@mrrajsingh Жыл бұрын
Agreed, he must be pretending not to have heard these things in the 100s of videos he has posted. He is always like wot!?!pudding isn’t just chocolate pudding?!? He should react to reading the pudding entry on Wikipedia at this point.
@davers1953
@davers1953 Жыл бұрын
I often think it's because he is assuming that mostly Americans are watching his videos and so he needs to act accordingly.@@mrrajsingh
@PaulWalker-yb9dx
@PaulWalker-yb9dx 23 күн бұрын
It's obvious that Tyler is feigning ignorance. I didn't need to have seen others of his reactions to realise this.
@mattymcnally
@mattymcnally Жыл бұрын
(15:00) Two taps use a plug in the sink lol Beer, and milk we sell in pints water, fizzy drink we sell in litres
@josephturner7569
@josephturner7569 Жыл бұрын
I live in France where they still use the inch/pouce, the lb/pound/1/2 kilo and the pint/punt/1/2 litre.
@brumplum
@brumplum Жыл бұрын
The main thing about laws in England is that they are usually very pragmatic and primarily determined by practical needs. On drinking laws, the important distinction is that it is illegal to BUY alcohol if you are under 18 , or rather, it is illegal to SELL alcohol to under 18s - the legal burden is on the seller (pub, store, market stall, etc, not the buyer). Legally a child can drink alcohol if it is offered by an adult (though child protection laws apply if you give a child "too much", and how much is "too much" is determined by circumstances and the "reasonableness" measure). On the faucets/taps, the historical context is that the way hot running water used to be generated in homes meant that it was not technically safe to drink (it sat around in a hot tank amd was prone to contamination), and so if you mixed it in the tap with cold water, the cold water would therefore be presumed to be contaminated. Modern domestic heating systems (installed in the last 30 years or so) work on different principles and so hot tapwater is as drinkable as the cold one. However, older homes which may have had the heating system upgraded may not have had all the pipes replaced so are still not considered "safe" (though that's just a technicality) and a lot of homeowners simply haven't replaced the sinks and/or taps , some people actually like having separate taps. In my home (built 1920s, heating originally installed 1950s, overhauled 1990s and 2010s) there is a mixture of twin taps and mixer taps.
@24hellish
@24hellish Жыл бұрын
Sandwich is a place, not a person, the Earl is Said to have been the first person to do this, which is why they are called sandwiches
@littlesparrowwitch
@littlesparrowwitch Жыл бұрын
I had my first sip of alcohol at 3 (almost 4) a small drop of Port at Christmas. Then it was Snowballs, Lemonade Shandy, Baby Sham, and then at my sister's wedding Martini (I was 13), then dry white wine, and finally a drink I actually liked the taste of - Guinness! Yes I have occasionally got drunk, but as I'd always been allowed to drink and there was no mystic so it was never the reason I drank - in 56 years I've probably only been properly drunk 6/7 times!
@lesleyhawes6895
@lesleyhawes6895 Жыл бұрын
I was born in 1944, the war was still going, I was premature, and so, according to my Mum I had a half bottle of brandy by the teaspoon which kept me alive as a heart stimulant!
@jamesbeeching6138
@jamesbeeching6138 Жыл бұрын
Well in Britain a 5 year old can drink but in America a 5 year old can own a gun!!!😂😂😂😂
@henryblunt8503
@henryblunt8503 Жыл бұрын
The story goes that the Earl of Sandwich wanted a convenient food he could eat while playing cards without getting his hands sticky or greasy - putting one thin slice of bread and butter on top of another was his solution. I don't think the chip butty or the meat ball sub roll would have worked tbh. P.s. in the UK it's usually pronounced "sanwidge", or "samwidge". Not "-witch". Because it's a place name so normal rules don't apply 😅
@airs1234
@airs1234 Жыл бұрын
We used to have a little drink like shandy or Babycham when I was 10 at Christmas but never drink loads.
@rosemarygriffin2184
@rosemarygriffin2184 Жыл бұрын
When I was growing up, we only used the Imperial measurement system. Later on the metric system was introduced. I couldn't get used to it, so converted everything to the imperial measures, especially feet and inches, now I know both, I can convert centimetres etc in to inches and feet, mainly because I can't visualise sizes in centimeters, but can in inches. I still weigh things out in pounds and ounces too.
@Phiyedough
@Phiyedough Жыл бұрын
In practice British children are not drinking alcohol although I do recall sometimes getting very weak brandy when ill. France was the country for actual underage drinking, with wine served as part of school meals for many years.
@Bazk01
@Bazk01 Жыл бұрын
A chip roll is amazing with a buttered roll, salt and vinegar on the chips and roll, and a pickled onion all wrapped up together. Doesn't matter if its a crispy or soft roll, but it's best with chip shop chips..
@littlesparrowwitch
@littlesparrowwitch Жыл бұрын
With the chips hot enough to melt the butter! 🤤 Dammit I'm hungry now!
@stewedfishproductions7959
@stewedfishproductions7959 Жыл бұрын
Just to confirm... we call 'sandwiches' BUTTIES because _(UNLIKE America)_ it's essential and usual to spread REAL BUTTER on each bread slice. Not MAYO like many Americans do, but butter OR an alternative _(veg based)_ spread. This ensures the bread doesn't get 'soggy' and is perfect for taking on PICNICS - When the meal may not be eaten for several hours! Also, in the UK and Europe, REAL BUTTER contains a higher percentage of butterfat than is required in the US, so tastes much nicer and imparts better 'flavour' to the sandwich. Finally, store bought bread in the US can contain over 500% more sugar than a standard sliced loaf of bread in the UK or Ireland.
@EmilyCheetham
@EmilyCheetham Жыл бұрын
Well lots of Brits do use mayonnaise on their bread. However Yes lots of Brits do use butter.
@stewedfishproductions7959
@stewedfishproductions7959 Жыл бұрын
@@EmilyCheetham Very true... And Mayo is OK when used properly! If you are making a sandwich to eat immediately, no issue to use it in place of butter on the actual bread slices. But if making a sandwich for 'future use' _(such as a picnic or to be put on a shop shelf to be sold within a few days),_ it won't work because the sandwich bread gets too moist!. Butter is a BETTER barrier on the BREAD to prevent 'leakage' from additions to creating a sandwich such as tomatoes, cucumber slices, relish, mayo, mustards and/or pickles etc. To CREATE a good and perfect sandwich, you must PLAN the order of ingredients. Unfortunately not everyone CAN make a good sandwich. For instance, my own brother can 'throw' ingredients together and offer up a sandwich to eat immediately as a 'snack', but it will neither 'look good' NOR hold itself together for longer than an hour or two in a fridge! Just saying! Like NOT everyone can do a good painting job or is natural at it... It ALSO requires a natural instinct. 😋
@EmilyCheetham
@EmilyCheetham Жыл бұрын
@@stewedfishproductions7959 well yes and no. It depends where you put the mayonnaise. I have a dairy allergy so I cannot eat butter. I wouldn’t put mayonnaise directly on the bread if I was making it for a picnic/packed lunch. I’d put the meat and then the mayonnaise and then lettuce 🥬 or something else before the other slice of bread. Also some shop bought sandwiches (atleast in uk) do something similar as I buy them occasionally.
@stewedfishproductions7959
@stewedfishproductions7959 Жыл бұрын
@@EmilyCheetham Exactly right... Mayo IS a 'middle' addition, as you say, between lettuce slices for example. To create a 'long shelf life' sandwich takes skill. I'm sorry to hear about your allergy, it must be hard at times to find a 'quick snack' to eat!? You would probably do better in the US, because it's NOT 'the norm' to put butter on a sandwich - mind you, I would not buy a sandwich from a 'gas' filling station as they don't seem to be able to (usually) produce decent looking sandwiches there at all - LOL!😎
@EmilyCheetham
@EmilyCheetham Жыл бұрын
@@stewedfishproductions7959 depends on the petrol/gas station. In uk we have some gas stations that sell big brands like Costa/Starbucks/M&S/crispy creme & advertise them. It’s not all rubbish. I get sandwiches from Co-op, M&S, Tesco sometimes. UK packet sandwiches are much better than American ones. I also tend to get seeded/brown bread sandwiches rather than white bread. Or I get a baguette occasionally. I like things like chicken & bacon sandwiches or chicken & stuffing. But at home I often make ham salad sandwiches. But I like only specific types of ham (German/brunswick ham). As for snacks & my allergy it just means I often have to check the ingredients label if I don’t know what in it. It was very hard at first but now I know many safe foods & I’m used to checking labels. It’s often desserts I struggle with. Especially when eating out. Not many places have desserts that are milk free or if they do it is often just sorbet.
@denniswilliams160
@denniswilliams160 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate that it may come as a shock but there are NO faucets in the UK and spigots are small pegs or plugs, especially for insertion into the vent of a cask.
@Lily_The_Pink972
@Lily_The_Pink972 Жыл бұрын
I first came across spigots during my nurse training when we used them as taps or stoppers on urinary catheters.
@damianpritchard1456
@damianpritchard1456 Жыл бұрын
Just put in the plug and mix the water in the sink to the desired temp, wash hands, pull out plug. Simple. But most are mixer taps now
@jamesgornall5731
@jamesgornall5731 Жыл бұрын
Lift up leg, wash smelly feet in the sink before going to bed after being shouted at by the wife. Perfect!
@ewan8947
@ewan8947 Жыл бұрын
So just do a few unnecessary things before washing your hands? 😆 There’s the complacency that ensures we continue installing 2 taps for no reason
@bblair2627
@bblair2627 Жыл бұрын
i have 2 taps in the bathroom and a mixer in the kitchen, i also eat marmite toast and tea for breakfast every day
@StephenSilverbeard
@StephenSilverbeard Жыл бұрын
In the House Of Commons in the UK Parliament there are two red lines that define the central aisle. Traditionally it is two swords lengths apart to prevent MPs duelling during debates. During a debate a member may not speak when stood between the the red lines during a debate, while this is not strictly enforced (re. pictures of Ian Blackford standing across the line during a debate), it is intended to prevent MPs entering the chamber to speak in a debate before they have taken a seat. Another quirk is that in the members cloakroom there is a ribbon attached to each coat peg to allow the MP to hang up their sword.
@stewedfishproductions7959
@stewedfishproductions7959 Жыл бұрын
On 'special occasions' (at home); i.e. Christmas time, New Year or a Birthday Party - my parents would allow myself, my brother and sisters an 'odd' alcoholic drink as a treat... Also, when 'sick' with a cold, mum would often give us a 'Hot Toddy' before going to bed etc.
@cyberash3000
@cyberash3000 Жыл бұрын
rally? you poor neglected person, i was drinking regularly from the age of 7
@stewedfishproductions7959
@stewedfishproductions7959 Жыл бұрын
@@cyberash3000 Are you drunk? Or did you mean to actually write 'really'? 😎
@cyberash3000
@cyberash3000 Жыл бұрын
neither mate, i saw that it had the squiggly line and i thought, im talking to yanks so spelling doesnt matter. just like i wouldnt correct a spelling mistake if i was writing a letter to my dog. yeah? do you understand what im saying, no probably you dont understand. @@stewedfishproductions7959
@ewan8947
@ewan8947 Жыл бұрын
The tap thing is very common, even in newer builds. There are mixer taps but less common I’d say. Makes no sense anymore! Just a stupid thing we continue for no reason haha …maybe bit like the massive gaps in your restroom stalls
@charlesunderwood6334
@charlesunderwood6334 Жыл бұрын
AS bathrooms are often small, a sink with a tap on each side rather than one at the back means you can have a smaller sink which takes less space.
@ewan8947
@ewan8947 Жыл бұрын
@@charlesunderwood6334 Sorry I don’t understand your logic there. You can have a sink as small as you like with a mixer tap
@vijay-c
@vijay-c Жыл бұрын
First thing I've done every time I've moved house, one of the first things I've done is remove the single taps/sink & install a mixer.
@francesfavre4722
@francesfavre4722 Жыл бұрын
As I understand it, Marmite is made from brewer's yeast and did not catch on in the US because of prohibition. It is savory and very good on hot buttered toast, spread very thinly, not slathered on like peanut butter. And incidentally, Sandwich is a coastal town from which the first English naval battle was fought, back in the 1200's.
@pauldurkee4764
@pauldurkee4764 Жыл бұрын
Its not confusing Tyler, when I go to buy milk i buy pints, but it so happens the labelling also gives the amount in litres for those people who think in metric, everyone is happy. I remember my grandparents going to a pub, and as a curious seven year old asking for sips of beer. As I got older you might have shandy, a mix of beer and lemonade. The italians also introduce children to drinking watered down wine at dinner, its perfectly normal.
@TribalMatriarch
@TribalMatriarch Жыл бұрын
My grandmother gave a New Years party every year for anyone who wanted to turn up in the whole village, she could easily have 50+ guests in her 3 bedroom council house! The only trouble was that we had no car and the 3 mile walk home at 1am when herding 3 drunk kids was a nightmare for my parents…. Bless.
@radouanezid425
@radouanezid425 Жыл бұрын
Not really my parents gave me my first glass of wine as a nine year old at dinner. Continued the tradition with my kids and they understand how to handle alcohol when at the pub or club.
@trickygoose2
@trickygoose2 Жыл бұрын
I remember being given small amounts of wine at about 9 or 10 as well. At first, I tended to only like the taste for the first sip or two, but a year or two later I liked the whole glass. When I went to a youth hostel in Germany with the school when I was 14, a wine tasting session was one of the trips we went on.
@JarlGrimmToys
@JarlGrimmToys Жыл бұрын
Yeah my parents allowed me wine or beer with Christmas dinners, family parties, or holidays. In moderation and under supervision. Always handled myself in pubs, and always got home. That’s even with heavy drinking when I was younger. My cousin on the other hand whose mother was catholic. Absolutely banned alcohol for her until she was 18. Didn’t even do it on the sly with her mates. Anyway at 18 working part time in an office while at college. She was invited to her bosses house for a works do. Where she started drinking red wine. She threw up on the bathroom floor, she threw up all over the toilet and sink, and up the walls. Her boss rang an ambulance and the hospital decided she had to have her stomach pumped. For the large amount of red wine she had drank. She admitted she had no clue how to pace herself. She wasn’t sipping it as you should do with wine. She was drinking it like pop.
@c_n_b
@c_n_b Жыл бұрын
Same, my parents let me have the odd wine or beer at around age 9. I first got properly drunk at 12. It was amazing 😆
@alisonread8254
@alisonread8254 Жыл бұрын
Taps: before the advent of the combi boiler the hot water was fed from a copper tank and heated by either an electric immersion heater or a back boiler from the real fire. The cold water came straight from the main system so a tap for each was required. Whilst running both taps you can put the plug in the sink and wash your hands that way without being scalded or frozen
@lisatolley5045
@lisatolley5045 Жыл бұрын
When I was a child I was allowed a glass of wine in an Esso glass with our Sunday roast. Still a lovely memory feeling all grown up..even though I wasn't.
@billybscotland7246
@billybscotland7246 Жыл бұрын
Drinking at home at 5 and under 18 is rare but usually a shandy is serviced, so a mix of beer/lager and fizzy lemonade etc
@hellsbells8689
@hellsbells8689 Жыл бұрын
Or wine and lemonade. I was drinking wine every Sunday lunch from a very young age. It made it less taboo for the teenage me. I never had more than three drinks when I was an adult "out on the piss".
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 Жыл бұрын
😊🍷 I was raised on 'Guinness' (in small glasses - from a young age - Five yrs) due to being "sickly" from babyhood (born _prem_ & caught Polio at _8_weeks) & never became a 'regular drinker' - though not averse to certain types of alcoholic beverages occasionally!! ❤Definitely a good thing in my mind - if not taken to excess, of course. (Re 'chip butty' etc, I say 'sanwich' btw, but use Flora as I hate butter - except in 'bread & butter pudding').❤🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🖖 We have a mixer tap in our kitchen, but have two taps in our 'bathroom' - just put the plug in the plughole & save water.😊
@chriszardis8543
@chriszardis8543 5 ай бұрын
We had pure wine but in small quantities
@-R.Gray-
@-R.Gray- Жыл бұрын
The term Imperial derives from emperor or empire - in this case, the British Empire.
@stewedfishproductions7959
@stewedfishproductions7959 Жыл бұрын
Although, erroneously, Americans use a FORM of Imperial Measurements, but NOT British Imperial sizes! At one point, the 'British Empire' supplied THREE different 'Imperial Rates' across the 'Empire' - So the America's, Canada, Australia / New Zealand AND the other Commonwealth Countries used DIFFERENT 'Imperial Measurements'. This meant that sizes varied, but taxes didn't. A PINT of X bought in one country, would be stamped Imperial PINT, sent by ship to another country and sold as labelled (an Imperial PINT); thus they would be purchasing X amount of PINTS, they were getting LESS, but paying import tax on a greater amount than received! This was just one way the British Empire became SO wealthy!
@lottie2525
@lottie2525 Жыл бұрын
It's hilarious how mixed our system is in the UK with pints for milk and beer, but litres for other drinks (e.g. 2 litre fizzy drink bottles), miles for distance but litres for petrol used to drive those miles. Age also comes into it, I'm in my 50s and don't know anything about Fahrenheit temperatures and notice it's mostly older people than me who use it. But I do still use stones and pounds for my weight rather than kilograms. Not confusing at all 🤣🤣
@christineharding4190
@christineharding4190 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely - not confusing at all. It just goes to prove how versatile we are and how agile our brains are.
@AriMalatesta
@AriMalatesta Жыл бұрын
The thing about the two taps is that one source comes from the boiler room in the basement, hence directly from the river, the cold one comes from the deposit on the roof, the potable one... there are mixing taps in newer buildings, yes, but that's how it worked in Argentina also.
@pabmusic1
@pabmusic1 Жыл бұрын
Put the plug in the sink and run enough water from each tap to get the temperature you want, Simple. Why can't people work that out for themselves?
@Markevans63
@Markevans63 Жыл бұрын
Youre dealing with Americans here mate, thats far too complicated for them!
@ewan8947
@ewan8947 Жыл бұрын
That’s so silly. So we have to fill up the sink every time and have a little hand bath hahah. Just have a mixer tap, Simpler!
@hellsbells8689
@hellsbells8689 Жыл бұрын
@@ewan8947 The use of a plug and only filling the sink with as much water needed to dip your hands in, saves water. You're not letting water run away the whole time you're mushing your palms together and then rinsing. Simple as fvck.
@ewan8947
@ewan8947 Жыл бұрын
@@hellsbells8689 I mean showers are famously more water efficient than baths so I’d be surprised if there’s any difference, if not the inverse. Completely insignificant compared to washing machines etc anyway. That’s a silly argument, especially in a country where it never stops raining haha
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
They can't even work knives and forks. They can only use one hand at a time.
@MrBulky992
@MrBulky992 Жыл бұрын
In the UK, distances are displayed on road signs in miles and yards, not kilometres and metres. Speed signs on roads are exclusively in miles-per-hour and cars made for the UK markwt will have mph marked on the speedo on the dashboard (as well as kmph). Height restrictions are shown on road signs in both feet and inches as well as in metres. The distance between the stumps on a cricket pitch is one chain (22 yards). Most imperial and avoirdupois units are no longer used. These include rods, perches and poles (5.5 yards), chains (22 yards), furlongs (220 yards, 10 chains, 1/8 of a mile), quarters (28 lbs, 2 stones), cwts (hundredweights, 112 lbs, 4 quarters, 8 stones), (avoirdupois) ton (2240 lbs, 20 cwt), bushels and many more. Anything requiring arithmetic calculation is always done in metric measurements, despite the fact that we now all have electronic calculators to avoid the mechanical arithmetic we had to do on paper when I was young before metric measures were common.
@1stFloorAudio
@1stFloorAudio Жыл бұрын
The mistake people make with Marmite is amount. You only put a centimetres worth on a slice of toast. Hardly any in fact. It is loved or hated though I think alot is because of the amount people put on. It is ill advised to eat Marmite on a spoon!!! Like the USA do with many Jard food substances. As for 2 taps, the vast majority of households have 2 Taps if you want to wash yourself use the plug and fill the sink or bath to your preferred temperature. Simple really. It is called a chip Butty not buddy! Chip butty A chip butty is a sandwich filled with chips[5] (hot thick-cut deep fried potatoes), optionally eaten with condiments such as brown sauce, ketchup, mayonnaise, or malt vinegar. The bread may be slices from a loaf or a bread roll, and is usually buttered.
@jamesgornall5731
@jamesgornall5731 Жыл бұрын
Marmite on toast, too thick and nauseating, just right and heavenly
@hellsbells8689
@hellsbells8689 Жыл бұрын
American bread contains way more sugar than the UK stuff. Rather than tell them (Americans) to use French-fries as the clip did, they should have said Steak-fries. They then would know you need a thick chip and not a crispy but empty casing. The sink plug usage seems to be unheard of. It saves water rather than allowing it to run away as you rub your hands together to wash and then rinse.
@TheAmishGamer
@TheAmishGamer Жыл бұрын
With “garage”, I think us Brits would say that the American way - “garaaahj”, like it’s a posh French delicacy - is the fancypants version, compared to the bluntness of “garrij”!
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
They do that whenever they think a word is French. Like fillet and valet.
@sarahfields288
@sarahfields288 Жыл бұрын
I call it a car hole lol
@josephturner7569
@josephturner7569 Жыл бұрын
The Romans ate sandwiches. They weren't called that until the Earl of Sandwich, yes it is a place, asked for his meat snack to be served in bread while he was playing cards, think poker tournament, so he didn't get the cards greasy.
@stewedfishproductions7959
@stewedfishproductions7959 Жыл бұрын
Although you should realise that a _(proper English)_ 'SANDWICH' requires certain criteria to be fulfilled to be called a sandwich... Sadly, American's have NEVER understood what a real sandwich is _(explaining why many have quite a dislike, or more likely never 'understood' what makes a sandwich, especially from a 'truck stop' senario)._ Ignorance is BLISS, so the saying goes; and American's don't appreciate a 'PICNIC STABLE' sandwich and how to make a GOOD one! 😎
@josephturner7569
@josephturner7569 Жыл бұрын
When I was a train guard/conductor in Scotland, an American thought she could buy a ticket with $. I told her, we don't accept monopoly money.
@pattaccone
@pattaccone Жыл бұрын
15:06 you can also turn each tap on a bit to get warm water. Shouldn’t be this complicated 😂😂😂
@pilksuk
@pilksuk Жыл бұрын
Geordie is a nickname for a person from the Tyneside area of North East England.
@G0Lg0Th4N
@G0Lg0Th4N Жыл бұрын
The nickname comes from the coal industry. Newer head-lamps came into use nationally but around Tyneside they kept using their older Geordie lamps. The nickname eventually became used for everyone from that area.
@CherylVogler
@CherylVogler Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the explanation! I always wondered what exactly Geordie meant and where it came from. Good to know!@@G0Lg0Th4N
@Outnumberedbykidsandcats
@Outnumberedbykidsandcats 11 ай бұрын
The two taps are normally found more in older houses - new builds will get a mixer. It’s because cold water comes from the mains water and is potable - the hot water used to come from a tank in the roof and go through a boiler. Once that water is used up you have a freezing shower lol. I hate that when I go to my dad’s house as we have a combi boiler that gives you as much hot water as you want and we had 5 kids so was needed.
@elemar5
@elemar5 11 ай бұрын
Don't use big words with Tyler. He thinks potable means being able to carry it around.
@jos9116
@jos9116 Жыл бұрын
Apparently an ancestor of mine played an important role in inventing marmite. It is such a wonderful spread, and great to cook with as well.
@alchristie5112
@alchristie5112 Жыл бұрын
The emperial system was invented from the British “Empire”, not surprisingly. We started converting to the metric about 50 years ago so it’s kind of phasing across the generations. For instance, growing up in the 70s it was pretty much all imperial and since the 80s I’ve mostly been metric
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
A gentleman's accomplishments are still measured in inches ..
@DRN2013
@DRN2013 Жыл бұрын
South Africa also uses the two tap system
@christineharding4190
@christineharding4190 Жыл бұрын
I never watched Geordie shore - far too intellectual for me. 😂😂 We don't say "You alright?" We say "Alright?" The American "What's up?" is the same thing for goodness sake. Some of this stuff is a load of outdated twaddle.
@wow-roblox8370
@wow-roblox8370 Жыл бұрын
Or even shorter pronunciation
@IKnowEverythingButMyIdentity
@IKnowEverythingButMyIdentity Жыл бұрын
And don't forget the ever popular "Wotcher"
@tashasgran
@tashasgran 17 күн бұрын
Uk changed to metric many years ago but we won’t let Imp. go. We know that 1 meter is approx 39 inches so can easily adjust. We usually measure both when we need to buy items.
@jamesgornall5731
@jamesgornall5731 Жыл бұрын
9:25 theyd need subtitles/closed captions to watch Geordie Shore, as do the non-Geordie population. I have a friend from there and when we first met at university it took weeks before I could understand a word.
@bats-are-just-Puppy-with-wings
@bats-are-just-Puppy-with-wings Жыл бұрын
Wae aye man, it's all canny
@danielferguson3784
@danielferguson3784 Жыл бұрын
Distance in the UK is measured in miles, not Kilometres, & not time, cos you cannot be sure how long it will take to travel anywhere. People in the UK just use what they are used to. For people's weight we use pounds & stones, not pounds alone, but we also recognise metric measures. There is no need to worry about converting from one to the other, as we use whichever we like. American English is not totally phonetic either. Marmite spices up gravy to increase the flavour. Geordie is a name for people from Newcastle upon Tyne. The many UK accents come from the deferent origins of the people over the centuries, allowing for distinct speech patterns in different areas. 'Alright?' is just like 'How's it going?' . I just saw two taps in an old American movie, so it's only a temporal thing. There is a sink to mix the water, & the water is not instantly hot or ice cold in any case. 16 year olds can only drink with an adult, & when having a meal. However there is no real age limit to drinking at home, though most adults would not give a child alcohol. Maybe a little wine etc with a meal. In Continental Europe, say France & Italy this is quite normal. Sandwich is a place, the Earl took his title from. It has to have butter on the bread to become a Butty, i e butter. Most sandwiches in the UK start with buttered bread.
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 Жыл бұрын
😊 my butties have Flora as I have always hated butter right from childhood (the only "butter" I liked was 'crunchy peanut butter'!!) I tend not to eat much bread these days though, unless as a cheese toasty!!) Being so old (70) has *"played havoc"* with my digestion!! *"Let loose the dogs of war"* so to speak!?!😊🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿☕❤🖖
@rosaliegolding5549
@rosaliegolding5549 Жыл бұрын
We say “you alright “also in Australia it’s one of the many ways of saying hello a normal occurrence and everyone knows the meaning an react also with a greeting 👏🤣🤷‍♀️
@JohnResalb
@JohnResalb Жыл бұрын
Hi Tyler, The mixture of measurements stems from our proximity to Europe (just 20 miles from Dover Castle) and also our time in the EU. We need always to be prepared to recognise both systems.
@wobaguk
@wobaguk Жыл бұрын
If you didnt have a low drinking age at home you would be able to prosecute things like red wine being used in cooking. Just because its legal above 5 doesnt mean you cant be prosecuted for mistreatment of a child if you got them drunk to classify as damaging to their health, its not a licence to do what you want.
@chrisperyagh
@chrisperyagh Жыл бұрын
Bovril (the beef version of Marmite) is usually mixed with hot water to make a beef tea-type drink. I've never heard of anyone doing that with Marmite.
@geoffpriestley7310
@geoffpriestley7310 Жыл бұрын
I've tried it. it doesn't work well
@colinhyde572
@colinhyde572 Жыл бұрын
We use whatever measurement is convieniant at the time. Our tape measures have inches & cm on, eg u can measure something , u might say 2 foot long or 60cm ir 600mm. Everyone does it. The milk is bottled in maybe 4 pints but will be sold as 2.273 litres so it makes up 4 pints ( its from being told what we can do by the dragons in europe , they only know metric). 4:19
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
Historically, you either let kids drink beer at age 5, or they drink water and die of thyphoid.
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 Жыл бұрын
❤ I think you meant typhoid. . The other spelling sounds like a typo?!😊 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🖖
@amathans
@amathans Ай бұрын
All our new sinks and baths have 2 holes for taps. We can get mixer taps but we have to cover the two holes in baths and sinks otherwise we would all have mixer taps now. I have a mixer tap in my kitchen but had to cover the original two holes in the sink unit
@jeanbicknell7887
@jeanbicknell7887 Жыл бұрын
Re the taps: The hot water tap does not instantly deliver boiling hot water, it starts off cold and slowly builds up to hot. It is normally very possible to wash your hands under the hot tap before the water gets too hot to bear. Re the drinking age: Many parents give their youngsters a sip of their dad's beer or mom's wine,( yes I say 'mom' , it's not an Americanism ; I'm a Brummie and we have always said mom and not mum), or the weakest of lemonade shandies
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
Or put the plug in the sink properly, you caveman! 😂
@jeanbicknell7887
@jeanbicknell7887 Жыл бұрын
@@neuralwarp I'm a quick worker, all done and dusted before the hot comes through. No time for plugs.
@sandrabeaumont9161
@sandrabeaumont9161 Жыл бұрын
My maternal Grandmother actually used to give me sips of Guiness when I was 5! Usually to calm me down if I was upset or playing up lol.
@michael56521
@michael56521 Жыл бұрын
There's many reasons I follow your channel one of the biggest would be of how much you admire us 😊
@meezursrule
@meezursrule Жыл бұрын
Weirdest example of weights and measures that I have encountered is buying carpet: it is sold in 4 metre widths and you buy it lengths measured in feet.
@russetmantle1
@russetmantle1 Жыл бұрын
The hot and cold taps thing is really common, but you're right that modern developments tend to have a single one. I live in a terraced house that is over 100 years old and what we have is a mixture, because obviously, over time, the people who lived here changed some things and didn't change others. In the kitchen, there's a single tap. In the bathroom, we still have one hot and one cold tap. When I was a kid in the 80s, all the rooms in the house I grew up in in Scotland had two taps. Generally, if you wanted to wash, you'd put the plug in the sink and make a pool of water that was a mixture of hot and cold, so you'd end up with warm. But now, if there's hot and cold taps and I want to wash my hands, I just run the cold tap and freeze myself because it's better than burning. This is very much a UK quirk and Europe laughs at us for it. 😅
@JenniferAllan-be1vf
@JenniferAllan-be1vf 3 ай бұрын
When washing your hands, if there are two taps, try putting the plug into the sink and mix the water to an comfortable temperature .
@solaccursio
@solaccursio Жыл бұрын
Here in Italy it's quite normal to have some watered down wine as a child, maybe during the holidays or family festive dinners, or some similarly light alcohol to taste (not to guzzle down like water, mind you). It takes the "forbidden" out of drinking alcohol, and it does not encourage binge drinking as soon as you reach the legal age to drink (18, here). For instance, I like cocktails, and I drink maybe one a month, but not even every month, just every now and then (I got drunk when I was an adolescent, at least 7-8 times, but that's about it, I never did it as a grown up). If you're familiar with a drop of booze you don't see it as the forbidden fruit...
@rufusevison2913
@rufusevison2913 Жыл бұрын
The mix of measurements is easier than you might think because of the way we tie some measurements to specific things. Younger people are pretty much exclusively metric, but those of us who grew up with the imperial mix a bit. Imperial for body measurements and driving, metric otherwise. I am around 6 foot four,but my son is however much in metres and centimetres. I understand miles per hour but translate the km when in France.
@adrianwaygood7156
@adrianwaygood7156 Жыл бұрын
Generally, older people who left school before the country adopted the metric system in the '60s tend to use Imperial common units. Most others use the metric system.
@GrahamAstles
@GrahamAstles 11 ай бұрын
Yeah, in Scotland we give our school age kids malt whiskey in thier porridge for breakfast - it helps fortify them against the cold. It is most important to give them this before we go out on a haggis shoot, as weather on the hills can be particularly brutal.
@Bogmore1
@Bogmore1 Жыл бұрын
Taps are attached to a sink so you can put some water in the sink from both taps, it ain't rocket science. The Earl of Sandwich is a title not a name. Most sandwiches were just stuff on a single slice of bread not inside two slices.
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
It was the Earl who thought of folding the bread to enclose the filling
@-R.Gray-
@-R.Gray- Жыл бұрын
I saw a video you might want to try - "Why Do The British Look Down on Americans", by a thoughtful American named Nathaniel Drew. It touches on some aspects you haven't seen before.
@djgrant8761
@djgrant8761 Жыл бұрын
In Australia we have the chip butty which is hit potato chips but we also have the chip sandwich in which we butter two slices of bread open a packet of potato chips and put the potato chips between the two slices of bread. Delish!
@ThéroigneRussell-s6v
@ThéroigneRussell-s6v 4 ай бұрын
Sandwich is a small town in Kent. There's a village nearby, called Ham.
@janeroyce6568
@janeroyce6568 5 ай бұрын
About 50 years ago Britain joined Europe in the Common Market and we went metric. Except we never quite managed it. There are many examples, for instance we measure hot weather in Farenheit eg 80 F, and cold weather in Centigrade - 0 C.
@kevintwine2315
@kevintwine2315 Жыл бұрын
I don’t think I’ve ever seen a man ponder whether there is a difference between pronunciation and an accent 🤣
@dev1346
@dev1346 11 ай бұрын
Pity he didn't try it with the word aluminium, or as they say it aluminum
@RoadkillbunnyUK
@RoadkillbunnyUK Жыл бұрын
My house was built in 2916 and I am the only one who has ever lived there. The only sink with a mixer tap is the kitchen. Downstairs loo, 2 taps, family bathroom on 1st floor, 2 taps for sink and bath and finally on suite shower room has two taps on the sink. So yes, even some new homes are built with the old tap layout even though they have never had the cold tank for hot water. My house was built with a combi boiler so hot water is made on demand. Yes, it drives me a bit crazy.
@bandycoot1896
@bandycoot1896 Жыл бұрын
If you buy a beer in a pub it comes in a pint or half pint glass, however if you buy a bottle in the supermarket it comes in 500ml bottles or 440ml cans. A UK gallon is different to a US gallon. I worked in the construction industry and that was all in mm. We measure distances in miles and measure fuel consumption in miles per gallon, even though we buy fuel in litres. Speed is measured in miles per hour. We also use stones and pounds (14lbs /stone) when we weigh ourselves, but also use kilograms. The same applies to height measurement (I'm 6'3" or 190.5cms depending on who is taking your measurement). Marmite spread very thinly (and I mean very thinly) on hot buttered toast is rather good, actually. "Gordie" is the nickname of people from Newcastle. We have mixer taps throughout our house. Many designs of sinks and basins are now produced to accept mixer taps. In France and Spain they water down wine and can give it to children. Chip butties are delicious (can't use those skinny scrawny things you get from Micky D's, but fat buggers). I sometimes put some mushy peas on it as well, with some HP sauce. Even the fish is sometimes included. Yum😂😂😂 You guys just don't know what you're missing
@JohnResalb
@JohnResalb Жыл бұрын
Sandwich is a quaintish coastal town in Kent. I assume the Duke came from there. (It's near to Canterbury). I checked for you - as you might expect, there are three Sandwiches in USA, mostly in New England.
@blazednlovinit
@blazednlovinit Жыл бұрын
1:10 Lol, why do you think it is called "imperial" (as in, relating to "empire")?
@richardedgar9670
@richardedgar9670 Жыл бұрын
I work as a builder and we all routinely use both imperial and metric, often in the same set of measurements depending on which fits best. Equally I only know my weight in stones and height in feet but I can comfortably convert speed in to mph or kph as I need. It’s quite useful really. It could be used as a metaphor for how the english language developed as well.
@frankmitchell3594
@frankmitchell3594 Жыл бұрын
Before weights and measures were rationalised every trade had their own system and by coincidence some would be round numbers against others. The metric system is seen by older folk as just another trade measurement system not related to normal everyday life. (I bought a carton of milk today; volume marked as 2.27litre - 4pints)
@mattheworford
@mattheworford Жыл бұрын
Everyone talks about Marmite, why does no one introduce Bovril to the USA. Mainstay of cold football matches and great on buttered toast.
@PiskieChaos
@PiskieChaos Жыл бұрын
With the drinking rules, yes it is pretty common for kids to be given alcohol young, mostly during Christmas and new year but depends on the parents. I remember growing up and having a weak alcohol during Christmas time (I think it was shandy) when I was a kid but from the ages of 10 I was allowed to have alcopops (mainly bacardi breezers) regularly at parties (only 2 max) and was upgraded to half a glass of wine at Christmas time. It's a good was to teach kids about drinking safely and removes the mystery behind it. I'm now 31 and barely drink, only special occasions and even then sometimes I don't. I mainly use whiskey to gargle when I have toothpain, which I've been doing since I was a kid, my dad started me on gargling whiskey, he use to dip our dummies (in America it's called a pacifier) in whiskey when we started teething.
@katydaniels508
@katydaniels508 Жыл бұрын
I think I was 5 the first time I had a tiny bit of wine topped up with lemonade on Christmas Day. It wasn’t a big deal
@ShizuruNakatsu
@ShizuruNakatsu Жыл бұрын
Both measurement systems are common in Ireland. We measure large distances in Kilometres, but often use feet and inches for smaller ones. Everyone I know measures height in feet and inches, not centimetres. Weight is usually stone, or pounds, or kilograms... Edit: The American way of saying "garage" sounds more fancy than the British way 😂 Also I say "privacy" the same way you do.
@JD-gc7lt
@JD-gc7lt Жыл бұрын
If it’s a liquid it’s in litres/milliletres, unless it’s beer or milk then it’s in pints. Fuel is sold by the litre but consumption measured in miles per gallon. Weight is in grams/kilograms, unless you’re measuring your own body weight which is in stone/pounds. Measurements are usually in centimetres/metres, unless you’re measuring your height in which case it’s in feet/inches!
@tmac160
@tmac160 Жыл бұрын
17:00 When I was 4 years old I used to try to sneak into public houses and indulge in under-age drinking. Strangely though, the first time I was asked for ID was when I was celebrating my 18th birthday. By then, it was far too late to save me.
@helenwood8482
@helenwood8482 Жыл бұрын
Mixer taps are worse than useless. I have one I my kitchen and it never gets fully hot, so I have to boil a kettle to wash dishes. We prefer two taps because we know how to use a sink (insert plug, mix perfect temperature, wash hands).
@robertcreighton4635
@robertcreighton4635 Жыл бұрын
In Victorian times gin was useful to settle a crying baby....Good times 😂
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 Жыл бұрын
Sadly (?!) Victorians also employed the liberal use of laudenham* to quieten their offspring (& others, wives, perhaps?!) Opium was quite enjoyed generally speaking...& I think a great deal of novels were 'created' aided by 'sozzled' authors ("high as kites") of the era!! *unsure of spelling*😊 "Frankenstein's Monster" by Mary Shelley, being one of them🥺!!😊 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿❤️🖖
@robertcreighton4635
@robertcreighton4635 Жыл бұрын
@brigidsingleton1596 oh yes the 'great binge' in late Victorian times every one was off their face on stuff good times 😆. FYI frankenstein was written before those days
@brigidsingleton1596
@brigidsingleton1596 Жыл бұрын
​@@robertcreighton4635 Shelley & Byron et al were mostly "off their faces" on some drug or other. Mary probably was too. "The Grand Tour" had its advantages obviously !!
@robertcreighton4635
@robertcreighton4635 Жыл бұрын
@@brigidsingleton1596 drink fight drug f-ck 😆 let's do it even Educated bees do it
@thedisabledwelshman9266
@thedisabledwelshman9266 Жыл бұрын
the trick with marmite. dont spread it on the bread to thickly.
@playmyhero
@playmyhero Жыл бұрын
Taps - I'm not in a really old building, and yes, I have separate hot and cold taps in the bathroom sink. However, the kitchen sink has 1. Drinking - when I was 16 I was allowed a drink at parties mainly given by my auntie or my nan lol. My generation used to drink outside lol not sure how much that happens now. I started drinking in a pub late 17 in places we knew would be relaxed about no ID but again pubs are a lot more on it now woth ID.
@TheOnlyGazzLam
@TheOnlyGazzLam Жыл бұрын
1. Units of measurement. Yeah, Metric for some stuff, imperial for other stuff, and some we just pick whichever comes to mind first or we are more comfortable with. In a pub, beet is served in half-pints and pints, but wine is sold in millilitres. In the shops, milk is labelled in both pints and litres. At a supermarked, you might buy a a kilo of (lets say) bacon, but at a butcher, you might get that by the pound. Temperature is in Celsius, unless you are over the age of 70, in which case it's the luck of the draw. Roads are measured in miles, and fuel consumption is miles per gallon, but the petrol (gas) is sold by the litre! People's weight is usually in stone and pounds (you don't use stone, but 1 st = 14 lb).. but you might use kg. Height is almost exclusively feet and inches, except on your passport. You might describe something as 10 metres away, or you might say 30ft.... or use yards (which I never have). short measurements might be in inches or cm. 2. Taps. The thing you turn is the tap, the bit where the water comes out could be called the faucet. You have 2 options.... well, 3 if you include first aid. You can put the plug in the sink and turn both taps on. Or if you are lazy (hello!) turn both on, cup your hands together then start with the cold tap, and zip your hands between the two very quickly. 3. Drinking. We still have underage drinking at 16, because no 16 year old wants to go to the pub with their parents for food. The low drinking age at home possibly goes back to the tradition of Sunday Lunch. Historically, Sunday Lunch has been a traditional thing (possibly related to church-goers back in the day). My niece and nephew grew up with a bit of a French cultural influence (at least 1 trip to France a year). They would typically each have a small glass of wine with their Sunday roast from about the age of 9 or 10. 4. Chip Butty. A "butty" is a sandwich (generally a more northern expression). Whether a ham butty, or a cheese butty, or a jam butty... or a chip butty (maybe because you butter the bread??? I have no idea of the origin). 5. Marmite drink. Some people drink OXO (stock cubes) and water, some have Bovril (meat extract paste) and hot water, so do it with marmite. Funny fact: Marmite happily advertise that 50% of the nation think it's disgusting. Back in the 90s when the ad break came on, they'd often have one at the start showing people loving it, and then one at the end of the ad run showing people hating it. They are possibly the only adverts I've seen that shows the product in a negative way
@robertlisternicholls
@robertlisternicholls Жыл бұрын
We have 2 taps but water from the hot tap doesn't become too hot immediately. You can wash your hands before it becomes too hot.
@rainyfeathers9148
@rainyfeathers9148 Жыл бұрын
I don't know about Marmite as a hot drink but Bovril is good
@jamesphillips7990
@jamesphillips7990 Жыл бұрын
Kids drinking alcohol is common. Parents or a cheeky uncle letting a 10 year have a sip of beer at Christmas happens all the time
@RevPeterTrabaris
@RevPeterTrabaris Жыл бұрын
Here is something that the maker of this video apparently did not know. The first recorded "sandwich" was recorded in the 1st Century by the Rabbi Hillel, Elder. Also, you might be interested, Meijer's grocery story sells Marmite. It is listed as Vegan. Fun video, Tyler. Thanks. Peace
@cadifan
@cadifan Жыл бұрын
In New Zealand older houses have two taps, newer ones have mixers. Chip sandwiches are awesome. One of the best ways to eat chips! And if you're really hungry and payday is tomorrow you can grab a couple of bucks of chips on the way home and have chip sandwiches which are VERY filling! There's no actual drinking age in NZ. The "drinking age" law pertains to buying/selling alcohol. You can't buy alcohol if you're under 18 (obviously you can't sell it to an under 18), but at home there's no law. I was stealing dad's beer off the table as soon I was tall enough to barely reach the table, of course he would help me so I didn't spill his beer all over the floor. It was always dad's that gave their toddlers sips of beer, mother's never did for some reason.
@SongBillong
@SongBillong Жыл бұрын
4:48 She doesn't get it quite right. It's "Wuss-tuh-shuh"
@philipmason9537
@philipmason9537 Жыл бұрын
A couple of other different pronounciations are Baton( Battern in the U.K. and Fillet ( Fill It in the U.K.).
@neuralwarp
@neuralwarp Жыл бұрын
Americans assume any word they don't recognise is French and then try to guess its pronunciation. Hence valet becomes val-EY instead of VAL-it.
@williambailey344
@williambailey344 Жыл бұрын
Washing your hands with 2 taps is easy just put a plug in the sink put cold or hot first then using either hot or cold again to get the right temperature and don't burn yourself.
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