An American's view of England
Oct. 6th, 2015 01:25 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
A friend found this and I just loved it, so I had to share it here too. I think it may explain some things we might have discussed a few times before.
The full article is here.
So much of this is absolutely spot on! I think he got an untypically favourable impression of our trains though. I have to ask my American friends now - what is this about using the fork in your right hand and upside down????
The full article is here.
I was in England again a few weeks ago, mostly in small towns, but here’s some of what I learned:
- Almost everyone is very polite
- The food is generally outstanding
- There are no guns
- There are too many narrow stairs
- Everything is just a little bit different
- The pubs close too early
- The reason they drive on the left is because all their cars are built backwards
- Pubs are not bars, they are community living rooms.
- You’d better like peas, potatoes and sausage
- Refrigerators and washing machines are very small
- Everything is generally older, smaller and shorter
- People don’t seem to be afraid of their neighbors or the government
- Their paper money makes sense, the coins don’t
- Everyone has a washing machine but driers are rare
- Hot and cold water faucets. Remember them?
- Pants are called “trousers”, underwear are “pants” and sweaters are “jumpers”
- The bathroom light is a string hanging from the ceiling
- “Fanny” is a naughty word, as is “shag”
- All the signs are well designed with beautiful typography and written in full sentences with proper grammar.
- There’s no dress code
- Doors close by themselves, but they don’t always open
- They eat with their forks upside down
- The English are as crazy about their gardens as Americans are about cars
- They don’t seem to use facecloths or napkins or maybe they’re just neater then [sic] we are
- The wall outlets all have switches, some don’t do anything
- There are hardly any cops or police cars
- 5,000 year ago, someone arranged a lot of rocks all over, but no one is sure why
- When you do see police they seem to be in male & female pairs and often smiling
- Black people are just people: they didn’t quite do slavery here
- Everything comes with chips, which are French fries. You put vinegar on them
- Cookies are “biscuits” and potato chips are “crisps”
- HP sauce is better then catsup
- Obama is considered a hero, Bush is considered an idiot.
- After fish and chips, curry is the most popular food
- The water controls in showers need detailed instructions
- They can boil anything
- Folks don’t always lock their bikes
- It’s not unusual to see people dressed different and speaking different languages
- Your electronic devices will work fine with just a plug adapter
- Nearly everyone is better educated then we are
- If someone buys you a drink you must do the same
- There are no guns
- Look right, walk left. Again; look right, walk left. You’re welcome.
- Avoid British wine and French beer
- It’s not that hard to eat with the fork in your left hand with a little practice. If you don’t, everyone knows you’re an American
- Many of the roads are the size of our sidewalks
- There’s no AC
- Instead of turning the heat up, you put on a jumper
- Gas is “petrol”, it costs about $6 a gallon and is sold by the liter
- If you speed on a motorway, you get a ticket. Period. Always
- You don’t have to tip, really!
- Scotland, Wales, Ireland and Cornwall really are different countries
- Only 14% of Americans have a passport, everyone in the UK does
- You pay the price marked on products because the taxes (VAT) are built in
- Walking is the national pastime
- Their TV looks and sounds much better then ours
- They took the street signs down during WWII, but haven’t put them all back up yet
- Everyone enjoys a good joke
- There are no guns
- Dogs are very well behaved and welcome everywhere
- There are no window screens
- You can get on a bus and end up in Paris
- Everyone knows more about our history then we do
- Radio is still a big deal. The BBC is quite good
- The newspapers can be awful
- Everything costs the same but our money is worth less so you have to add 50% to the price to figure what you’re paying
- Beer comes in large, completely filled, actual pint glasses and the closer the brewery the better the beer
- Butter and eggs aren’t refrigerated
- The beer isn’t warm, each style is served at the proper temperature
- Cider (alcoholic) is quite good.
- Excess cider consumption can be very painful.
- The universal greeting is “Cheers” (pronounced “cheeahz” unless you are from Cornwall, then it’s “chairz”)
- The money is easy to understand: 1-2-5-10-20-50 pence, then-£1-£2-£5-£10, etc bills. There are no quarters.
- Their cash makes ours look like Monopoly money
- Cars don’t have bumper stickers
- Many doorknobs, buildings and tools are older than America
- By law, there are no crappy, old cars
- When the sign says something was built in 456, they didn’t lose the “1”
- Cake is is pudding, ice cream is pudding, anything served for desert is pudding, even pudding
- BBC 4 is NPR
- Everything closes by 1800 (6pm)
- Very few people smoke, those who do often roll their own
- You’re defined by your accent
- No one in Cornwall knows what the hell a Cornish Game Hen is
- Soccer is a religion, religion is a sport
- Europeans dress better then the British, we dress worse
- The trains work: a three minute delay is regrettable
- Drinks don’t come with ice
- There are far fewer fat English people
- There are a lot of healthy old folks around participating in life instead of hiding at home watching tv
- If you’re over 60, you get free tv and bus and rail passes.
- They don’t use Bose anything anywhere
- Displaying your political or religious affiliation is considered very bad taste
- Every pub has a pet drunk
- Their healthcare works, but they still bitch about it
- Cake is one of the major food groups
- Their coffee is mediocre but their tea is wonderful
- There are still no guns
- Towel warmers!
- Cheers
So much of this is absolutely spot on! I think he got an untypically favourable impression of our trains though. I have to ask my American friends now - what is this about using the fork in your right hand and upside down????
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Date: 2015-10-06 02:30 pm (UTC)Anyway - here is one about the forks (It's the same in Norway (all of Europe really) as in England)
start watching at 3:30
...and btw, it's NOT just the older generation. Everyone (above age 3) does it this way
And I'm gonna be a dumb Norwegian here.... I thought Cornwall was a county. Ireland, Scotland and Wales I knew were countries.....
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Date: 2015-10-06 02:34 pm (UTC)Thanks for the vid, I'll have a watch!
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Date: 2015-10-06 01:09 pm (UTC)I had to look up how British eat. (Because Dad passed many years ago.) I didn't get what the big deal was. That is how I was trained to eat. (I was trained as a young girl to be a proper Southern Lady. Something which is hard to find... even for my own age group. *30s*)
Your fork should never be pointed toward a guest/host, because if your fork slips, you could cause a social faux pas. Take small bites, for the same reason. Cover your mouth when speaking at the dinner table. Yes, even after you have swallowed your bite. After all, there may be food on your teeth.
Yes, I drive my family mad, my training came at the hands of a family friend. So this was not how my mother taught me. Though a ruler to the knuckles is far more memorable than being told something.
So to answer your question, I do not know; possibly a lay over from the time when using your left hand was illegal.
Though on the flip side, I am sure that visiting Indians are slightly appalled at the way the British eat. (The left hand is unclean there... literally.)
Food for thought!
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Date: 2015-10-06 01:20 pm (UTC)I think using the left hand to shake hands or eat with is a faux pas in many Arab countries too - though one would hope that by now most places people use toilet paper and wash their hands, you know?!
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Date: 2015-10-06 02:56 pm (UTC)I also wanted to comment on this one:
Only 14% of Americans have a passport, everyone in the UK does
Part of that is because the UK is about 94,000 square miles--the entire country. I live in Montana, which by itself is 147,000 square miles. That's part of it.
I mean, it takes me 3 1/2 hours to drive home to see my Mom, and I'm still in Montana. If I did that in Europe, I'd pass through several countries!
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Date: 2015-10-06 03:47 pm (UTC)Obama is considered a hero, Bush is considered an idiot I think this one's pretty much universal :)
Also, the idea that US money looks like Monopoly money is hilarious to me!
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Date: 2015-10-06 03:51 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-10-06 03:57 pm (UTC)Also, we have no pennies, our coins go up to $2 and all our bills are different colours. It's nice. Kinda looks like Monopoly money, but it's useful.
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Date: 2015-10-06 04:23 pm (UTC)Thank goodness for credit cards :)
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Date: 2015-10-07 12:06 am (UTC)AHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.
Ahem. He certainly wasn't on a Virgin line, then...
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Date: 2015-10-07 01:27 am (UTC)Jelly was the other one that got me as a kid. How on Earth did those American kids on the telly who were eating peanut butter and jelly sandwiches get the jelly to stay between the bread? You'd think it would just wobble out, right? ;)
And in the UK...mostly, the shower pressure and hot water was terrible (although that might depend where you stay...some of the infrastructure is pretty old) and...fly screens...nobody seems to have them? Maybe there just aren't as many flies and mozzies in England as there are in Australia! :D
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Date: 2015-10-07 02:59 am (UTC)Hah, I can't eat with a fork in my left hand, it just feels so wrong. I always have my fork on the right, even when I use a knife. I just use the knife with my left hand, even though I'm right handed. :P
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