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@captainnutnut60773 жыл бұрын
I'm from Birmingham, and I have dinner at around 5 to 6pm, generally.
@Derby693 жыл бұрын
You can go to a local shop and send mail by using hermes yodel ups dpd etc but you have find out which local shop does that service a post box is just for stuff being sent by royal mail
@steveaga46833 жыл бұрын
I cannot think of anything worse than a road trip that consists of endless straight roads with miles of unchanging scenery.
@wncjan7 ай бұрын
You don't have to. Just go on zmall winding roads.
@tobytroubs7 ай бұрын
Yeah , what they also do is put lines of tall trees on both sides of the road so you can't see anything , and above those trees are sky high adverts on stilts for McD's and Burger Kings....rural Georgia is nice though
@garyrowden71505 күн бұрын
sounds like a lot of the Australia outback
@blotski3 жыл бұрын
You tend to eat earlier if you have little kids. In the UK if you take your driving test in an automatic car your licence is only valid to drive automatic cars and as there aren't so many of them it's very limiting. That's why most people learn and take their tests in a manual car. That way your licence is valid for both manual and automatic.
@ianprince16983 жыл бұрын
at one time you could take your test in an automatic and once passed jump into a manual there were several accidents because of this which is why the licences are different.
@MastG3 жыл бұрын
@@ianprince1698 how far are you going back ? In the 50's my father drove large lorries* for the army and was given his license ... no test. *trucks for you americans.
@0utcastAussie3 жыл бұрын
@@ianprince1698 This is once again the case if you take your test in a HGV. They are ALL Autos now so if you take your test in one you CAN legally drive a manual. (God help them if it's Constant Mesh though !!)
@Zooumberg3 жыл бұрын
@@MastG My dad did the same. He told me he got his licence by reversing a lorry into a farmers gate when he was in the army.
@terencehill19713 жыл бұрын
Funny that the US Postal service delivers the mail, while Royal Mail delivers the post.
@davidhealy45343 жыл бұрын
I think mailman sounds less demeaning
@roberttaylor59973 жыл бұрын
@@davidhealy4534 How about mail woman?
@terryhayward79052 жыл бұрын
American drive on the parkways and park on the driveway as well :)
@BostonBobby19612 жыл бұрын
@@roberttaylor5997 letter carriers they’re called.
@susie73452 жыл бұрын
@@davidhealy4534 what demeaning about being a postman ?? It’s an honest days work
@bewareofsnow3 жыл бұрын
I tried a PB&J once. I thought "It can't taste as weird as you'd think because why would anyone eat it if it did?" but I was wrong. It tastes *exactly* as weird as you'd think. I can't imagine the level of drunkenness required to invent the PB&J, or the collective madness that could make it popular.
@katerinagolovanova91722 жыл бұрын
Same 😵💫
@tiggerwood88992 жыл бұрын
I tried PB and J once. it was nice, tasty. I like the sweet and savoury taste. One of my favourite sweet and savoury sandwiches is mature Cheddar or Lancashire crumbly cheese with strawberry 🍓 jam.
@missharry5727 Жыл бұрын
I don't like smooth sweet peanut butter - but I love crunchy wholenut PB. Now I do like crispy smoked bacon with cranberry sauce in a sandwich - try it - so I thought I'd give my peanut butter a go with cranberry sauce. It was OK but I don't intend to repeat the experience. I usually eat my peanut butter with tomatoes or a nice wholegrain mustard or both.
@philipmason95373 жыл бұрын
Most European roads( not just British) were built hundreds of years ago for horse and carriage so they’re narrow and bendy. Houses and infrastructure were built next to them and can’t be moved so we make do with what we have. The US is 45 times larger than the U.K. and being a relatively young country compared to Europe the roads and cities have been built from scratch and on a grid system, which , of course, makes sense.
@kejcolley3 жыл бұрын
Breakfast is when you get up (often, for me, that's around 6am) Lunch (more often than not, referred to as 'dinner') between 12 and 1.30 - tends to be later on Sundays. Tea (Evening Meal) 5.30 onwards: we prefer to begin before around 6.30 I'm English btw :-)
@terencehill19713 жыл бұрын
Most "A" roads, the narrow country roads, started as trackways for herding animals and followed the contours of the land. Plenty of stretches of Roman roads still around too. What was definitely designed for the horse age are the road signs indicating the way to the next town or village on those back roads as they match the eye level of a man on horseback. My Father always complained that in WW2 they were all taken down in coastal areas and councils missed the opportunity to upgrade them after the war.
@Hfil663 жыл бұрын
The long summer holidays (which I think used to be a bot longer in the UK in the past) goes back to when the UK was an agricultural country and the children were given time off in the summer to help their family with the harvest.
@mollydunce18813 жыл бұрын
So, what happened to no taxation without representation? I find it strange that a country that fought a revolutionary war for its citizens rights not to be taxed by their countries government whilst they live abroad, should then adopt this practice of universal taxation as government policy. The mind boggles...
@criswhog3 жыл бұрын
We don't put "French fries" on bread, but we do put chips in a sandwich called a "chip butty" - and to add to the confusion certainly in London we have crisp sandwiches. Both using, if course the correct definition of chips and crisps
@0utcastAussie3 жыл бұрын
But to qualify as a Chip "Butty" It MUST have BUTTER on the bread (otherwise you're being diddled)
@kirsty28613 жыл бұрын
Crisps inside a footlong subway is my jam
@LEWIS1992 Жыл бұрын
In the North of England, we eat dinner (what you call "lunch") around 11-12, then tea (what you call "dinner") at like 4 or 5. I've never heard of anyone eating their evening meal at 7 or 8 o'clock.
@maryheywood3 жыл бұрын
Personally I prefer having the holidays spread throughout the year as it keeps me going. I know I only have eight to six weeks of school before having a break. I also feel like at the end of the six weeks holiday I'm ready to go back to school and wouldn't want it to be much longer.
@emmamaclean7373 жыл бұрын
Kids get board by the end of the first week lol they want to go back to school
@wobaguk3 жыл бұрын
University/college holidays here are generally the US system, ie no half terms. I think it is felt that younger kids will start to tire of school after a few weeks, but older students can power through a 10 week terms.
@MrSlothrun3 жыл бұрын
you can make your letterbox less heart attacky if you run a strip of foam or some little pads along the bottom of the flap so it cushions it when it shuts
@enlathestrange3 жыл бұрын
In the U.K. too if you take the driving test in an Automatic car your licence only permits you to drive an automatic and you can’t then drive a manual.
@josephturner40473 жыл бұрын
My father worked in a garage. One day an Aymerican woman came in with a hire car. She said it wouldn't go very fast. She thought first was the same as drive.
@Tashygay3 жыл бұрын
I remember the first time I tried peanut butter and jam sandwiches. It was also my last time eating one. I thought Americans will eat anything then obviously.
@Trillock-hy1cf2 жыл бұрын
Many years ago my son went to the US for a couple of weeks holiday (vaca y'all) and brought back a pack of Twinkies. Great I thought, and took a big bite out of one, and have never tasted such an awful roll of chemically made junk before. The left over half went into the kitchen rubbish bin (before this recycling lark became common) along with other five!! Was not impressed......:)
@Hfil663 жыл бұрын
You forgot to mention the controversy about whether dinner is what you eat in the middle of the day or what you eat in the evening.
@josephturner40473 жыл бұрын
In the RN, the lower decks have breakfast, dinner, supper. The wardroom has breakfast, lunch, dinner. On a nuclear submarine this can cause an element of confusion as forward of the RC they keep 6 hour watches. To match this, engineering aft move the first dog between the morning and afternoon. So it is dinner dog for the ratings and lunch dog for the officers and the 2nd dog is supper dog for the ratings and dinner dog for the officers. But we managed.
@josephturner40473 жыл бұрын
Correction. For morning read forenoon.
@smifull3 жыл бұрын
It's simple. Dinner is the main meal, usually the hot meal, of the day. If your main meal is the evening, then lunch is what you had at 12:30. If your main meal is the middle of the day then you have tea or supper later in the day.
@blotski3 жыл бұрын
@@smifull I think it's a bit regional too. I'm from Durham but live in Manchester now. In both places dinner is the midday meal although you can call it lunch. Tea is your evening meal regardless of the size. You can have sandwiches for dinner/lunch and a proper meal at tea time. The exception is if you go out for an evening meal in a restaurant you might call that 'going out for dinner' but mostly you'd just say you're going out for a meal.
@garyrowden71505 күн бұрын
@@blotski wow , just like my upbringing in Dunedin NZ
@LEWIS1992 Жыл бұрын
In the UK, you CAN get post/parcels picked up from your house, it just costs extra. Amazon returns etc use this method. Also, the hole in the front door is called a letterbox. :)
@acd12023 жыл бұрын
It was a deliberate decision not to build motorways straight, whilst there is some truth in a space issue they could be much straighter than they are; the tyrns are there to keep drivers allert, you are much less likely to fall asleep at the wheel on a road with constant turns than a straight one. It works the UK accident rate per mile is less than half of the US with much denser traffic.
@oufc903 жыл бұрын
Yeah that’s right, plus straight roads are so dull to drive on
@shaunsmith54023 жыл бұрын
The concept of the bendy roads goes way back, they designed them to slow the Romans down on the chariots.
@captainnutnut60773 жыл бұрын
I didn't know that! 😄 That's cool!
@beverleyringe70142 жыл бұрын
Quite agree, straight roads can get so boring,, your postman are just lazy, ours walk everywhere in all weathers.. what about parcels, they need to be weighed to pay the postage..
@markredmond20142 жыл бұрын
Nonsense, how motorways are built is due to the terrain of the land nothing do do with people falling asleep on straight roads.
@theinsideouter63713 жыл бұрын
We like driving not pointing a vehicle, we like country roads where you might meet a tractor and when we back up and let them pass we usually find a friend
@lawrencegt22293 жыл бұрын
Three types of fruit preserve in the UK. Jam = fruit conserve with pieces of fruit in. Marmalade = citrus jam (normally orange, lemon or lime). Jelly = Jam with the bits taken out - bramble jelly, redcurrant jelly (ace with cheese), etc. "Jelly" is also a type of set, solid (but wobbly) fruit-flavoured pudding/dessert - you might call it "Jello". Best with Ideal evaporated milk. Cheerio.
@ademyers27413 жыл бұрын
Taxes are much simpler in the UK. Most Britons don't have to file their taxes as its all done automatically. A regular employed person will have their income taxes deducted from their weekly/monthly salary and sent to the government tax office by their employer as part of a PAYE (Pay As Your Earn) scheme. At the end of the tax year or employment the employer will issue the employee a form (P60 or P45 respectively), detailing income and paid taxes and no further filling is required. Its only people who have a more complicated or irregular income, eg. self-employed person, that have to file tax returns.
@davebirch19763 жыл бұрын
As a brit I always think of meal times about same as you lunch between 12 and 1 and dinner at 5-6 as that's what time we had it when I was growing up
@NicholasJH963 жыл бұрын
Also depends on time you work. I work in the evenings 18.30-21.30 on Mondays & Tuesdays most of time as I’m on zero hours contract so I usually eat my eat at 16.00 but occasionally I have food at 15.30. Then I have a dessert sometimes when I come back from work
@tiggerwood88992 жыл бұрын
Mealtimes in the past, way back used to be breakfast, lunch, tea, dinner and supper
@AndrewJLeslie2 жыл бұрын
The differences in eating times are, in my experience, down to the different working hours. Typically in the US my colleagues started work at 7:30-8. Thus lunch started often at 11-11:30 and was typically 30 minutes. Most offices I worked in in the US were almost empty by 5 and they went straight home to dinner. The first time I worked late, I discovered restaurants were typically closed by 9. A real culture shock. In the UK school usually starts at 8:30-9 so people often get to start work at 9. Lunch is usually 45 mins to an hour, between 12 and 2. After-school arrangements mean that most people in an office will quit 5:30-6, going home and eating around 7pm. Restaurants will continue serving new customers until 20-ish, although some pubs will only take orders until 9pm on weekdays.
@MillsyLM3 жыл бұрын
Postman here, I cover about 12 miles a day delivering to over 500 houses a day. Customers can have parcels collected from their homes.
@GirlGoneLondonofficial3 жыл бұрын
12 miles a day, impressive!! I do like the pick up service now with parcels - not sure how much extra work it means for you, but way better for me than having to go to the post office each time!
@MillsyLM3 жыл бұрын
@@GirlGoneLondonofficial it can be a pain for those guys that have to use the red trollies as not everyone uses a van especially not in suburban areas. I'm responsible for collecting the mail from the postboxes in my area too.
@merseydave13 ай бұрын
I am a Northern working class guy ... we up here say "Breakfast, Dinner, Tea" it is self explanatory Breakfast is the morning meal, Dinner is the mid-day time meal, and Tea is the early or late evening meal.
@dougtodd243 жыл бұрын
I'm from Arbroath, Scotland, and I eat my tea when I get bored or my tummy's screaming at me.
@ianprince16983 жыл бұрын
as a child of the 50s, we had breakfast, dinner at about one o'clock and tea at 5 or 6 pm mainly sandwiches and cake. things change but I find it confusing, I like my mid-day dinner
@jimrussell34333 жыл бұрын
it's a chip butty anyway chips are not the same as french fries, have you tried marmite on toast !
@nicksykes45753 жыл бұрын
The thing that winds me up the most, is the way Americans use Acronyms for just about everything. It usually takes about 5 mins to figure out what they mean. In terms of traveling, I couldn,t put it better than the old saying "Brits think 100miles is a long way, Americans think 100 years is a long time". In the manual/auto debate, I learnt to drive what you would call semis in the late 70s, and the truck I learnt on had a crash gearbox. That means there,s no syncromesh on the gears, so the rpm between engine and gearbox has to match-up or it is impossible to change gear. Once you had mastered it you only needed the clutch to start off. every other one of the 24 gears you could change without it, OK, it was tiring driving but you had pride in being able to do it. When automatic trucks started becoming the norm, they were terrible, trying to start off on a hill without rolling backwards was a nightmare. I had a Mercedes low-loader plated for a max weight of 80 tonnes that gave so much trouble the firm ripped out the auto box and put in a manual. Now you are hard pressed to find a manual truck, but the new automatics are 1000 times better than the early ones.
@t.a.k.palfrey38822 жыл бұрын
I am from Kenya. Our family generally takes dinner together only at weekends today. Weekdays, my immediate family and I eat at around 20:00. Our more extended family eat on Fridays and Saturdays at one of our houses a little later. Sunday, lunch comes after church, around 13:00, with just our household having supper (perhaps a barbeque) at roughly 19:00, after the mosquitoes have gone to bed. Weekdays dinner lasts about 60-90 minutes, but at the weekends much longer (with far more wine!).
@steveshephard11583 жыл бұрын
When I worked in an office with flexi-time the lunch period started at 12.00 and finished at 14.00, the minimum lunch break was 30 minutes but, you could take up to 2 hours as long as you worked your contracted hours. Traditionally, when the majority of women were stay at home mothers, the children ate their evening meal soon after getting home from school around 16.30 and the adults ate when the father got home from work around 18.00 or later. Nowadays, everyone tends to eat together so, families with small children eat early and families with older children eat later. If you don't get home from work until 18.00 and still have an hour or more's cooking to do you are going to end up sitting down to eat after 19.00.
@gerghghherb8803 жыл бұрын
I think the difference is that (in my experience) american peanut butter is different from what we typically get here, they recently started to sell Skippy over here and its so sweet I couldn't believe it, its like cake icing. Ours is much more savory (Tesco own brand crunchy is my go to). Try peanut butter on a crumpet, toast and butter it first obviously. And for the record I love peanut butter and strawberry jam sandwiches, also on toast, but its very much something I started doing because of seeing Americans do it on tv, its not common here, its probably becoming more common though
@tripehoundtorture96002 жыл бұрын
The American tax system is evil beyond words, both in their long and undeserving arm and the sheer amount they take for number of services returned to the citizen.
@karlfairbanks98482 жыл бұрын
Shocking that even after almost 10 years in the UK your still having to file a tax return, I would be renouncing my US citizenship if it that was me.
@TP-uf6fn3 жыл бұрын
I have my “tea” about 6pm. I have my lunch/dinner about 1pm. I’m from Manchester but might even be odd for Manchester. I don’t really use the word dinner though it’s just lunch and tea for me. If you ask me, dinner is lunch though.
@anthonycopsey55723 жыл бұрын
When I was in school the council changed the summer holidays from six and a half weeks to five and a half weeks, so that they could extend the Christmas and Easter holidays from two weeks each to two and a half weeks, and therefore save money on heating
@micheleosullivan44303 жыл бұрын
I'm from the US. I live in England. Dinner (Evening meal) We eat around 7 pm. :) my kids are all adults now, but when they were little and I was in the US - we ate around 5-6 pm. Now, my husband often doesn't finish work until after 6, so 7 became the sweet spot. Manual transmission... My British husband only drove a manual, until... Through his company, he gets really good deals on leasing a car. All-inclusive with insurance, roadside assistance, general maintenance, etc. When it was time to give up one lease and choose another car, it came in automatic. Somehow we missed that tidbit. Anyway, once he stopped slamming on the break like a clutch, he said he'll never go back to manual. The reason is, traffic! He loves not shifting constantly in traffic. I did learn on a manual in the US, so it's no biggy, now that we're both a lot older, we do like our lazy automatic.
@TukikoTroy3 жыл бұрын
Cumbria. Dinner 12:00 - 13:00. 'Tea' around 16:00 - 17:00. Supper, just before going to bed (usually cereal or crumpets). With a manual car, you feel like you are driving it, rather than just sitting in a moving box. It keeps you more alert I suppose. Interesting that the clatter of the letter box scares you and that your first thought is that someone is breaking in, rather sad really.
@australianbloke39342 жыл бұрын
I came here because I can't imagine eating peanut butter with jelly and wanted to hear what you had to say. Firstly, I LOVE peanut butter, but if I wanted to add jelly I would have to make some and let it set in the refrigerator. Usually only children eat jelly here, except, of course if we make a trifle for pudding.
@josephturner40473 жыл бұрын
Crikey. When I was a kid in the 60's, I thought our 6 weeks seemed like forever.
@oufc903 жыл бұрын
I agree, but 90s/early 00s
@wharpblast2643 жыл бұрын
Exactly. Also if your doing public exams school effectively ends after the last exam, rather than at end of term. Making the holidays longer. There were no classes to go to. That might not have been the case for every school.
@Lee05683 жыл бұрын
Just found your channel,you have to remember,if you pass your test in an automatic car,your not qualified to drive a manual,BUT,if you pass in a manual,your allowed to drive an automatic.we also call LUNCH dinner,and DINNER we call tea.
@DJhinckley3 жыл бұрын
In the Great Kingdom of Mercia dinner is midday. We have tea in the evening. We're not monsters like them southern frenchy types...
@gary.h.turner3 жыл бұрын
And "tea" should be at something like 5pm - definitely not as late as 7pm!
@downsman13 жыл бұрын
French? I've never felt more insulted!........................................the ancient Englishman.
@georgehope53413 жыл бұрын
You should note that if you take the UK driving test in an automatic car then the licence you obtain will only permit you to drive automatics. A manual driving test will licence you for both types. If You have an automatic licence then you will have to take another test to drive a manual shift car. Driving a manual with an automatic licence will not only get the police involved but will negate your insurance.
@HighWealder3 жыл бұрын
Back in the 1950s and early 60s we had dinner at midday, now its evening. Strangest US thing I ever heard of is 'Sun tea',! When someone first told me you put a jar of cold water with a tea bag in the sun, I burst out laughing as it was so ridiculous !
@peterb22862 жыл бұрын
Yes! When I lived in the States. My ex used to do that. She'd pop a tea bag in a jar of water and leave it out in the sun on the porch. I don't like tea when it's hot but that was beyond ridiculous.
@juliebrooke60993 жыл бұрын
Peanut butter is actually banned in many schools because there are so many kids these days who have bad peanut allergies.
@J-Peg-19502 жыл бұрын
John Dover, Kent. British summer school holidays came about when children were needed to help get the harvest in. We eat Dinner around 18:00 hours. Peanut Butter with Honey yes, not Jelly. Jelly is a flavoured wobbly desert that goes nicely with Custard.
@denmaroca25843 жыл бұрын
Lots of Brits, myself included, prefer driving manual cars to automatics because it's more fun! Though it's not unknown for Americans who choose a car for the driving experience to have a manual. This might be helped by the fact that average car journeys are a lot shorter in the UK - constant gear shifting can get a bit tiring.
@stevearmstrong92133 жыл бұрын
A friend had an automatic once and he let me have a go in it. After a little while, I didn't have a big problem about not changing gears but for the entire journey (we had a decent couple of hours driving around so that I had a good go at it) I kept trying to press the non existent clutch pedal whenever I was stopping for a junction or traffic lights. It was a bit annoying.
@keithevans95443 жыл бұрын
I always hear the longer journey,argument ,but on long journeys you don't really change up and down that much.
@fionagregory93762 жыл бұрын
I prefer taxis myself.
@eddymccabe53513 жыл бұрын
As a Scot a) summer holidays are 7 weeks long, starting mid-June. This was traditionally (in my area, at least) to allow kids to help farmers harvest their soft fruits (raspberries, strawberries). Dinner-time in Scotland is around midday (like you, the English call this lunch), and the late afternoon/early evening meal is called tea (time). I have driven automatic, but my wife and I both prefer manual. Doubtless when we all go electric we will adapt and adjust. Re roads, you are quite correct in your assessment of the size of even our M-ways, which is one reason our vehicles, including leisure vehicles (RVs to you) are not enormous (Winnebagos, etc.)
@sonofliberty13 жыл бұрын
Not all English say lunch and dinner. You can go as far south as Manchester and still hear dinner and tea.
@sonofliberty13 жыл бұрын
French fries on sandwiches? In the North we have chip buttys but that's with thicker cut chips not French fries.
@susie73452 жыл бұрын
It’s not a north thing it’s a British thing
@browneof3 жыл бұрын
Can someone please tell me the difference between an “ex-pat” and an immigrant. I get the impression that Brits and Americans refer to themselves as ex-pats when they go to other countries but those who go to live in the US or the UK from third countries are called immigrants.
@davidfaraday79633 жыл бұрын
I think this "ex-pat" business started with the British officials going out to run the colonies. They didn't see themselves as immigrants into the colony concerned as they would return to dear old blighty at the end of their contract. The term has, however, stuck. These days the term "immigrant" has negative connotations so many prefer to call themselves ex-pats even when they intend the move to be permanent. However anyone who goes to another country with the intention of living there permanently is an immigrant.
@sonofliberty13 жыл бұрын
Ex-pat/Emmigrant is what you call yourself. Immigrant is how the people of your new nation refer to you. External Migrant and Internal Migrant.
@realscottsummers3 жыл бұрын
Ex-pats are temporary I think. They're coming back shortly. You might be studying somewhere or on a temp contract. But you still have your house and family in your country of origin. Immigrants/emigrants are going to settle and remain.
@darrenhemingway71213 жыл бұрын
Ex-pat is a citizen of the original country but lives abroad, immigrant is someone who attempts to change nationality to the country that they now reside.
@miketaverner44512 жыл бұрын
An imergrant is someone from a different country , an ex pat is someone who has left his/her country live in another. If I go to live in another country, I would be an ex pat but in the country I go to I would be an imergrant
@LEWIS1992 Жыл бұрын
Manual cars are better for going up/down steep hills. Also, in the UK if you pass your test using an automatic car then you're ONLY legally allowed to drive automatics. Whereas if you pass with a manual, you're legally allowed to drive either.
@mikestarkey79892 жыл бұрын
Lunch, dinner evening time is a regional thing. Were I'm from dinner is Lunch. And dinner is tea. Lunch/dinner is about 12:30 and dinner/tea about 17:00
@stephenlee59293 жыл бұрын
Hi GGL, Meal times/names: Waking: 07:00 > 09:00 Breakfast 10:30 > 11:00 Second Breakfast maybe Brunch 12:30 > 14:00 Lunch (if small meal) Dinner (if more than 1 course) 15:30 > 16:30 Afternoon Tea 17:30 > 19:00 Tea (if midday was Dinner) Dinner (if midday was Lunch) 18:30 > 20:00 Dinner 22:00 > 24:00 Supper. Sundays all meal times can be pushed upto 1 hour later. It is not required to part take of all meals, 4 of the 7 maybe optimal. 😊
@sharonlock64523 жыл бұрын
From Ashby de la zouch Leicestershire. We have dinner about 1pm breakfast , dinner and tea round here
@NickLea3 жыл бұрын
With school holidays, it varies a lot between state schools and private (what Brits call - public) schools. yes, most state schools will only have six weeks in the summer but many private (public) schools will have at least two months. For example, I know that both Uppingham and Oakham schools will finish the school year on 2nd July this year and start the new year on 6th September - which is 9 weeks summer holiday. They also get longer holidays at Christmas etc - Christmas holidays for next year will be 15th Dec - 10th Jan. That's 3.5 weeks - compared with a typical state school Christmas holiday of just 2 weeks (17th Dec - 4th Jan).
@gillianrimmer77332 жыл бұрын
Yes, my kids went to Stamford School which is an independent school, they always had much longer holidays at Christmas,Easter and the summer than the neighbours kids. I'm pretty sure they had 3 weeks at Christmas and Easter, and 9 weeks in summer - however, they also went to school on Saturdays, so I suppose it equalled out over the year.
@missharry5727 Жыл бұрын
I went to an independent school in England. Where the local state schools got 2 weeks at Christmas and Easter, and 6 weeks in the summer, we got 4 weeks at Christmas and Easter and 8 in the summer. But we didn't get the one-week half-term breaks in the three terms that the state schools got. British usage is to call the continuous periods of schooling terms, not semesters, because semester implies two halves, but our school year is broken into three terms or six half-terms.
@may_683 жыл бұрын
Larger (luxury) cars in the UK have almost always been automatic. Automatics are historically less efficient so need a bigger engine. Sports or economy cars are manual. Modern automatics are much better and are getting more common. Soon to be a moot point however as very soon all new cars will be electric with no gears.
@chriscollins5503 жыл бұрын
Wrong toyota have just realised a hygegon car. Go on sale this year. Even the top supper car's sold in the UK and Europe are given the opinion of manual gearbox. It's still better
@may_683 жыл бұрын
What’s your problem? Other than spelling? The percentage of hydrogen combustion vehicles is statistically irrelevant. Hydrogen fuel cells are electric drivetrain. Manual cars are more efficient as I said which is why they are largely used in economy models.. Luxury cars, Mercedes, Jaguar, big BMW, Range Rover are primarily automatic. Super cars are almost always flappy paddle automatic. Fast ‘drivers’ cars are still manual but as they will be phased out…
@lililijo3 жыл бұрын
I went for a period of eating pb&j after hearing about it in films. I used marmalade though as I thought that was,what jelly was. But I think it is actually jam. I enjoyed it for a while but haven't made them for years. Lunch/dinner is around 1 and tea is between 5 and 6. If not working late. I don't drive but I think some people like having control of the gears, they get more out of the driving experience with a manual.
@tiggerwood88992 жыл бұрын
I have an automatic the engine is only 1litre. My first automatic, I much prefer manual but arthritis in my legs makes operating a clutch too painful
@davidfisher9026 Жыл бұрын
Automatics are truly crap in snow. I hated driving my wife's automatic volvo in snow, prefering my front wheel drive manual vauxhaul.
@RBernsCarter3 жыл бұрын
I think when I was at school we took standard English/Maths tests called SATs at year 4 (8/9 years old) and year 6 (10/11 years old) but that was more to determine which level of English and Maths you were learning at when your year was split up according to ability
@TerenceSquires8 ай бұрын
With Royal Mail online [e.g. 24, 48 service] and some couriers you can arrange for home pick-up, but you may have to pay extra. In the US there is allot more postal theft too.
@ElizabethDebbie242 жыл бұрын
FYI we do not use mail/post boxes as a lot of UK homes are directly on the public walkway/pavement in streets and we have no room for them so letterboxes in the door are commonplace and we have post boxes scattered here and there generally many the end of streets.
@steveshephard11583 жыл бұрын
Cowboy hats and Australian stockman's hats are more commonly seen at festivals but, the stockman's hat can sometimes be seen around town in rainy weather. The odd eccentric can be seen around town wearing a cowboy hat. Wide and narrow brimmed straw Trilbies seen to be the most common sunhat.
@morganetches37493 жыл бұрын
I don't drive, but going on road trips with my dad it's never been stressful. Swooping round curves on the motorway, going down country lanes. It's always been fun. Maybe depends on confidence?
@rosemarielee77753 жыл бұрын
Getting hungry between 4 and 5 with dinner at 8 is why afternoon tea was invented. How can you work til 5-6, travel home and get dinner ready before 7?
@glasydorlan2 жыл бұрын
With regard to US tax: our sometime Premier Boris Johnson held dual nationality having been born in New York. He only renounced his US citizenship once he became Prime Minister. It was suggested at the time that far from being a political complication, as a high earner he was fed up paying US income tax.
@stvpett3 жыл бұрын
My understanding is that the reason it is becoming more popular is because they are realizing that they are working off of old information. It used to be that automatic transmissions had worse fuel mileage than manual. However, that was a long time ago. These days automatics have advanced in technology and tend to have better fuel mileage. But that is just what I've been told by my British friends. I could be wrong.
@Lily_The_Pink9723 жыл бұрын
Our road design is dictated by our geography. If you want a great motorway trip head north into Scotland on the M6 and then M74. Once you're past Lancaster, you'll see some of the best views this country has to offer and there's less traffic until you get nearer to Glasgow.
@andysutcliffe39153 жыл бұрын
There's a lot of discussion in the uk saying 6 weeks break is too long, that too much has to be repeated when the kids get back.
@mrjagriff3 жыл бұрын
Not from the unions ! Even a year off isn’t enough !
@daveofyorkshire3013 жыл бұрын
This is a southern breakfast, lunch, dinner approach, go north and it's breakfast, dinner, tea, there is no lunch, that's considered southern or posh.
@thearmouredpenguin71483 жыл бұрын
I'm from the Wiltshire and my wife's from Yorkshire, we have breakfast, lunch and tea!
@daveofyorkshire3013 жыл бұрын
@@thearmouredpenguin7148 One of you had to win out on that argument, it looks like you did. As I said southern or posh...
@noelsalisbury744823 күн бұрын
Hokey Cokey is a Dance. A Party dance. People make a great chain, and all follow each other around thevroom (or the whole building !) - singing the refrain of a very simple song, which is about putting one's legs in & out,🎶 shaking them all about etc. 🎶And that's what it's all about 🎶
@MrPaulMorris3 жыл бұрын
In reference to mailboxes: until fairly recently, regulations required that mail be delivered 'to the address' meaning actually into the property and it would have been an offence to leave it in a receptacle outside the property. That has changed recently but the boxes are still rare. At least in part this is because of worry about mail being stolen or tampered with if it not securely inside your home.
@peterb22862 жыл бұрын
As a former postman in the UK, before they changed the hours and transport. I'd have hated the idea of having to take mail from people's houses. We used to just go home after our delivery (2 deliveries back then). Didn't need to go back to the sorting office if our bag was empty after the 2nd delivery. However. Having lived in the States. I did like the idea of leaving the mail in the outside box and they'd take it for me so I didn't need to go into town to post it in a mail box.
@daveofyorkshire3013 жыл бұрын
It may be based on an old British or Irish children's song/game, but it definitely became popular (as hokey-cokey) in British music hall entertainment in the 1940s. *The Hokey Pokey Dance was copyrighted* in the US in the 1940s, and recorded in the 1950s as the Hokey Pokey. ... Sometimes it's also known as The Hokey-Tokey. In New Zealand, the dance is usually known as the "hokey tokey", or the "hokey cokey" because hokey pokey is the usual term for honeycomb toffee.
@andrewknotsАй бұрын
Scotland, 19:20 dinner., 14:00 lunch School breaks are very different Scotland vs England. Unless you qualify on a stick shift, you’re not licensed to drive one - on the other hand if you qualify on a stick shift you are allowed to drive automatic shift vehicles
@neilhunter58933 жыл бұрын
“Just leave a hate comment” - Brilliant 😂
@betsytodd35113 жыл бұрын
Speaking of the roads being different - when I went to London 27 years ago and we had someone drive us from central London to Gatwick, I was amazed by how close the motorway came to some of the houses. It looked like the traffic was going right by their front doors.
@corleth28683 жыл бұрын
To get to Gatwick (even 27 years ago) you take the M23 but that doesn't start until just before the M25. The M23 has no houses anywhere near it but the road you take to get to the M23, the A23 does. There are plenty of 2-3 lane dual carriageway A roads that do go very close to houses but even then there's usually a separate road parallel to the dual carriageway for the houses and they can't just drive onto the main road. I always assumed that the main difference between US and UK roads was the speed. Sure it's only 70mph on a UK motorway but if you're doing 70 you're in the inside lane getting passed by everyone else or maybe you're in the middle lane passing the lorries. Get into the fast lane at 70 and you're holding everyone else up.. Maybe it's my driving but when I've driven Americans in the UK they were shocked by how fast the cars were going.
@betsytodd35113 жыл бұрын
@@corleth2868 I was looking at Google maps trying to find anything that looks like what I remember, and I noticed exactly what you're saying, that it couldn't have been the M23- it may have been the A23. I found an area that's vaguely similar to what I remember, around 305 Purley Way. The houses are different from what I remember but the proximity of the front doors to the traffic is a lot like what I was thinking of. As far as speed is concerned- the ride to Gatwick was the only car trip we took other than taxis in heavy traffic, so I don't remember noticing the speed, but I remember being impressed at how the taxi drivers can change lanes so aggressively - where I'm from you can just put on your turn signal and wait for someone to let you into the next lane, but in London it seemed like you could end up stuck in a lane that would take you in the completely wrong direction, unless you're bold about moving over.
@corleth28683 жыл бұрын
@@betsytodd3511 Well it was 27 years ago so I think you did pretty well to recall the M23 at all. The likely route would be A23 to M23 as the A23 becomes the M23 so I suspect that you're right and maybe you recall the last part of the A23 (also known as Purley Way) where there are most definitely houses :) It's a very busy stretch of road and I'm not sure I'd want to live right next to it.
@lehoff3 жыл бұрын
I'm from multiple nations in Europe but live in UK. In the Mediterranean we have dinner late after 8pm. In the UK they have dinner a lot earlier! In France the whole country closes in August (or July ) for the month. It's nice people value their time off. Manuals are more fun to drive. But modern automatics are faster now but less fun and less engaging. Driving for 6hrs to visit a friend for a day trip is ridiculous! I've lived in Germany in the past and even with autobahn 2hrs is a long trip. You're right though UK roads are small, especially in older cities. Modern motorways aren't bad now.
@PaulWilliams-ko5fu3 жыл бұрын
In South Wales if I'm in work lunch will be between noon and 1 PM. If I'm home lunch is called dinner and it's between noon and 1 PM. Tea is between 5 and 6 PM. Supper is between 9 and 10 PM. We don't use the term dinner for what is actually tea time, and supper is what you eat before you go to bed.
@stuarttaylor17993 жыл бұрын
What I liked about a US post office, and I've only used one once, is that it ONLY did the mail. Unlike UK ones where it's like a bank, shop, and official form centre all in one.
@philcoogan73693 жыл бұрын
Manual and Auto cars. As I understand it in the UK if you pass your test in an Automatic then you are only allowed to drive automatics, if you pass in a manual you're allowed to drive either. As a result almost all driving school cars are manual and almost everyone starts out most familiar with driving manual. Because most people drive manuals most people buy manuals and as a result Automatics are often more expensive to buy. Personally I've had automatics as courtesy cars which is potentially lethal, slowing down in a manual you take your left foot and press the clutch as far down as it will go to allow you to change gear, do that in an automatic and instead of using the clutch you're suddenly jamming the brakes on, cue crashing sound as car behind runs straight into the back of your car - oops.
@naycnay3 жыл бұрын
It also depends on the class of car, but manuals often have additional benefits. They often are simpler. Sure the gearbox is complex, but it's often robust and doesn't have lots of computer stuff attached to it with less points of failure and easier/cheaper maintenance. Can't have stupid modern systems annoy you in a manual, like those laggy traction control systems fumbling at junctions or pre-sense systems that think you are going to crash into some imaginary obstacle and brake + steer away automatically. Secondly, if you drive an interesting car, manuals are often cheaper to buy initially and resell for more money second hand. In old classics that are appreciating in value, manuals typically command a serious premium. I think a lot of people take those sort of things into account too.
@garywood13173 жыл бұрын
Meals are called different things in the North of England. Dinner is the meal at the middle of the day and tea is early evening. Supper is just before bed. Summer holidays were longer until about the 90's I think, when a decision was made to spread them more across the year. A lot of areas used to have industrial fortnight's as well, where everyone went on holiday for the same two weeks and often to the same places.
@mohammedfarhan40003 жыл бұрын
I'm originally from Jordan and my wife is from France, and we normally eat dinner about 7pm
@richardcastro-parker37043 жыл бұрын
In the UK it's changing a bit where the postman will now offer some services at your door. Only a very very recent change.
@May-qb3vx3 жыл бұрын
I freaking love driving stick. I just like having more control over when my car shifts. Can save on gas that way too. Just makes me feel more connected to what it is I’m doing. Worst thing is when people get right up on your tail when you’re facing uphill at a stop. Used to give me heart attacks when I was learning. It really saddens me that I either have to drive an old POS or dole out more dough to get a new car custom made for me with a manual. I just want more cars to come with a manual so I can shop for a car like a normal person.
@gillcawthorn75722 жыл бұрын
I have always know it as the `Okey,Cokey`. I still regularly hear it coming from the pre-school nursery next door to my house. While I appreciate that the children sing it because it`s an action song, as a child living in London ,it was only heard from Pubs ,raucous drunken bellowing from over-excited inebriated adults.
@tonys16363 жыл бұрын
Afternoon tea was invented to bridge the gap between luncheon and dinner. My school had an 8 week summer holiday so the Headmaster could spend the summer at his Spanish Villa, the teachers would take a summer job to earn extra peanuts, the time was made up by the other holidays being shorter. We used to have straight roads, 2000 years ago but even the Romans put bends in them in places as easier to go around an hill than over it. You had to finish with a swear word, Taxes. Loving the hat, I wear an Australian one in winter, a Panama type in summer.
@simonsaunders81473 жыл бұрын
Roman roads used to be straight usually with a ditch on each side. This was to prevent potential attackers from lynching you easily unseen. Hence the name of the 'fosse way' as that comes from the latin word for 'ditch' - fossa.
@misschieflolz13013 жыл бұрын
A note on the School/college/uni thing. GCSE's usually determine getting into college which is a different thing to university. Typically you'll need around 5 A*-C grades at GCSE to get accepted in order to take subjects at AS/A level. (AS levels are simply only the first of two years of study). If you're going with more mainstream learning, looking to go into a particular academic area, you'll narrow down to typically 3, possibly 4 A levels. These must include subjects that are a prerequisite for University and the degree scheme you're going to take. It is complicated, but think of it as GCSE's which literally stand for 'general certificate of secondary education' gives a broad understanding, A -levels offer the start of education into a particular field of interest, then a Degree specifically hones the field down to a specific subject within a department (normally). Just for reference, I have a degree in Biochemistry. I left school with 11 GCSE's, which included obtaining the grades to study subjects needed for A-level. At A-level, I then studied Biology, Chemistry and Computing. So, when it came time to go to University, I'd settled on Biochemistry since I had a strong handle on organic and retrochemistry at A-level. There's also little diversion once you begin studying at degree level, aside from 'catch up' modules in first year. Some are mandatory for whatever route your taking, others are elected out of interest but options dwindle as you specialise in very specific areas. Or... at least as far as such an academic course goes. I never understood what the Major/minor thing was that I heard from American movies and stuff. I did Biochem and pretty much everything I did was in some way specialised toward the subject.... even the catch-up stuff was taught in a way that was relevant and actively used.
@gillianrimmer77332 жыл бұрын
I used to teach at university in England - typically, American students who wanted to do their degree in England had to do a foundation year in the subject they'd chosen to study. This is because the academic standard of A Levels is equal to the first year of college in the USA.
@misschieflolz13012 жыл бұрын
@@gillianrimmer7733 This makes sense. During my first year there were a lot of mandatory courses just to bring everyone up to a particular basic knowledge. This included maths and IT, and yeah. I dropped maths at A level because it wasn't going in Turns out that tutor was infamous locally for their inability to explain the concepts. When it came up again, it made far more sense explained in context.
@missharry5727 Жыл бұрын
I studied in the era of O and A levels, standing for Ordinary and Advanced. O levels were universal for secondary education, taken at 15/16 in a wide range of subjects, and were the school leaving exams for students who did not intend to go on for further education. If you stayed on till 18 you would then take A levels which were the equivalent of university entrance, usually in 3 subjects depending on what you were going to do next, but with an additional paper on use of English which counted as another A level. O levels could be used to help you decide what A levels to do. At my school if you knew what A levels you wanted to do you did not take them at O level. For me this meant that I only took 4 O levels (English, maths, art and biology) and went on to do Latin, French and Greek at A level. This was then the information on which I applied to universities.
@TheHeavyduck3 жыл бұрын
Breakfast is Breakfast. Lunch = dinner Dinner = tea...
@severs19662 жыл бұрын
Until recently, automatic gearboxes were less popular in the UK and Europe simply because they are more expensive. The are more expensive to buy, they are more expensive to insure and, until the recent trend for computerised auto gearboxes, they consumed more fuel. They also need the gear oil replacing more frequently.
@whydotheyneedtoknow7183 жыл бұрын
Motorways were mainly built from scratch ...and some were purposely not straight to promote you to be alert. In the USA the practice of straight interstates just make you less alert and in turn more likely to have accidents
@davidjones3323 жыл бұрын
The mealtime thing is partly class-related. People who work in a factory or similar environment may well start work at 0700 or earlier, so they will normally eat lunch (which in the North they probably call "dinner") around midday. By the time they get home at 1700 or thereabouts they will want their dinner (or "tea"), especially if they have younger children. Eating later is a more middle-class trait, or for long-distance commuters who probably get home later. As far as cars go, most European cars are smaller, partly because our roads are narrower, but also because fuel is more expensive. Automatic gearboxes are inherently less fuel-efficient than manuals, and they are heavier, and the smaller the engine, the greater the loss of efficiency, so if you are driving a car with an engine of less than 1.5 litres it makes sense to stick with a manual. For most who Brits don't tow caravans they don't need anything more powerful.
@john_smith14713 жыл бұрын
There are many more automatic cars around now, I think they’re excellent, with our congested roads having no clutch is great, I can also switch to semi automatic mode, one day all cars in Britain will be automatic and we will be like America.
@ianprince16983 жыл бұрын
electric cars have no gears
@john_smith14713 жыл бұрын
@@ianprince1698 Yes i know i used to ride a milk float and ride a trolleybus.
@elemar52 жыл бұрын
@John Smith I bloody hope not. I hate this messed up comment section where your reply ends up wherever it wants.
@davidfisher9026 Жыл бұрын
Yuk.
@BillCameronWC3 жыл бұрын
I have owned & driven an automatic car a couple of times, not in the UK though, but in Hong Kong and the UAE & Saudi Arabia. The advantage in Hong Kong was that it was hilly on the island & I lived near the top of it and the constant start/stop of traffic on congested roads made it convenient & easy. But I’ve mostly owned & driven manual cars elsewhere, including here in the UK, and generally prefer them, but my partner (who is mainland Chinese) much prefers automatic, as do most of his contemporaries in China itself from what I gather. As for meal times, when I was younger b/fast was 7.30 to 8 (6 to 7 in one country I lived in), lunch 12-1 or 1.30pm, usually tea/coffee and a cake/biscuit(cookie) brought to me at my office desk at around 3.30. Apart from when I was at school, when the main evening meal was at 5-6, with a light supper at 8.30-9, as an adult my main evening meal, dinner, has mostly been at 7.30-8.30, although in a few countries (Spain or France) anywhere from 8.30-10.30pm, but I’ll usually have had at least tea/coffee & a cake or maybe a sandwich at around 4pm.. I learned something completely new from your video though - what the up/down flags/levers on US suburban mailboxes are used for - I’ve occasionally driven through suburban/rural areas in the US (Florida, Illinois, Wisconsin, California amongst others) & noticed they were sometimes up & sometimes down, but never understood the reason 😉👍.
@garystroud61532 жыл бұрын
I tend to eat when I'm hungry, breakfast usually between 9 & 10, a light lunch anytime between 12 & 3 depending on my activity, dinner after about 6 depending on when I had lunch. What you call meals varies with where you live as does what constitutes those meals.
@PhilipWorthington3 жыл бұрын
As far as I know it's illegal to drive a 'stick shift' in the UK on a US licence. In the UK you can pass a test to get an 'automatic licence' which only allows you to drive automatics, but you have to pass a test in a 'manual' car if you want a full standard licence (which lets you drive both).
@veryblocky3 ай бұрын
Some universities do have entrance tests, but they’re all subject specific, because university education here is subject specific. There’s things like STEP for maths, BMAT for medicine, ELAT for literature, LNAT for law, etc. But I believe only the top universities tend to require these. I had to do the CSAT for Computer Science, but I think that’s been replaced with something else now
@neilcroft90203 жыл бұрын
I’d never driven an automatic until I moved to Canada from the UK. It’s obviously less effort, but there’s a couple of small annoyances. When you’ve been used to driving an manual you listen to the engine to know when to change gear. At first I found it a bit annoying that the car changed gear for me at times when I wouldn’t have chosen to. Also, some automatic cars have a delay in acceleration. You press the accelerator and nothing happens for what seems like minutes, but is probably just a few seconds.
@corleth28683 жыл бұрын
PB&J is utterly ridiculous, it should be BANNED in the UK. Peanut butter sandwiches, great, Jam on toast, great (sandwiches ok). It's chips in a butty not French fries :P I'm in London - lunch depends on the slot at work, early and it's 12 but it could be 1pm or even 2pm. Dinner 7-8pm usually but going to a restaurant at 9pm is completely fine.
@AndrewJLeslie2 жыл бұрын
You may feel you are going to die every time you drive on a UK road but a) we have MOT tests to help safety standards and b) US road fatalities rose 10.5% last year and fell 6% in the UK.
@raymondporter20943 жыл бұрын
From North Yorkshire and eat dinner at about 6.30pm at home and 7.30pm when "out".
@russellpotter72943 жыл бұрын
We always had to have homework and projects from school in Summer Holidays. The sensible child would wait until the day before they had to go back to school and panic before opening up any school book. The long hot summer holidays in the UK may have felt as if they lasted all holiday. But it was probably as short as our Summers feel now. Where as in some parts of the US they have hot summers.
@OfficialConCoGaming3 жыл бұрын
Cambridgeshire. As a child, shortly after my mum got home from work, be that 4 or 8, either because she was cooking or she was being cooked for. She worked shifts so it was inconsistent. When I went too uni, my first year flat had one oven for 10 people, not incuding their guests or partners, so cooking continually happened from like 5 to 9: If I didn't get in early, It would be dark by the time I started, so I got in the habit of eating quite early ~5.
@bobbell44613 жыл бұрын
I am an exiled Scot living in Enfield North London and I eat Dinner (some of us call it Tea - I do) between 5.30 to 7pm