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Tuesday, 9 February 2016

Jo's Guide to British English for the American

Jo’s Guide to British English for the American
By J. Tornquist (V.8.2.16)

There are considerable differences between the English spoken in America and that spoken in the UK. I've been collecting “British English” words, sayings, and rhyming slangs for nearly seven years now. Below is a brief list of words I’ve come across, and I hope this will help you understand British English a little better Note that when Americans (especially Americans) make use of the terms below in a knowledgeable way, they gain swift and widespread approval from the locals. I have other collections that need more research.
Section
Word
British Usage
Pronunciation  and Spelling differences

Basil
Basil is said with a short A, sounding more like baz+ul (expect a chuckle at the "mispronunciation" of this word, followed by at least one person correcting you)

Fillet
Pronounced "fil-let" not “fil-ay”; apparently it's the proverbial middle finger to the French, but Americans have honoured the word as it was meant to have been pronounced

Herbs
The "h" is sounded out in in British English, unlike 'erbs in the USA

Oregano
Not "o-RE-gano" as Americans say but, "ō-re-GA-no"

Tomato
Tomato with an ä (like ma and pa), and not with a long ā (potatoes, however, is said just like the way Americans say it)

Jalapeño
Pronounced halapeenoe

Chilli
Chilli is spelled with two Ls in the UK

Tortilla
Pronounced tor-til-a (sometimes)

American Words Guaranteed to Raise an Eyebrow or Warrant Interjections
Aluminum
The most important word knowledge you need to have is "it is not aluminum, but instead, it is a-l-u-m-i-n-i-u-m." (Notice the last "i" in the spelling?). This knowledge will bring you the respect of not just the Brits, but of all Europeans


Bathroom
Bathroom...a room that has the facilities to bathe, therefore asking a Brit if you can use the bathroom may seem like a very personal question to that person; don't be surprised if you get handed a towel (jesting aside, they'll probably know what you're asking, as the British psyche is in tune with American television. Sometimes they know more about our television shows than Americans).

Elevator
Referred to as a lift

Fanny
The front-side private part of a woman’s body (note that if you say "fanny pack" anywhere in the United Kingdom of Great Britain, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, as well as in Ireland, laughter ensues)

Garbage
Referred to as rubbish (one asks, "where is the rubbish bin?" and not "where is the garbage can"?); in fact, the word "garbage" isn't used very often (if you want to throw something away, you'd ask, "where is the rubbish bin?" or simply “where is the bin?”

Cell Phone
Referred to as mobile phones

Restroom
Somewhere one goes to rest, not a place to relieve one's self (you could if you wanted to, but it may raise a few questions and eyebrows)

Sidewalk
Referred to as the pavement

…an finally, a word or two from the locals
Finally, more than a few Brits have asked me to point out that soil is not dirt, and that the British spelling of check (as relating to banks) is "cheque"

Food: to ensure you get what you asked for, or to know what you got...
Sharon fruit
Persimmon

Aubergine
Eggplant

Biccies
Biscuits

Bangers
Slang for sausages; one could ostensibly say "sausage" if preceded by location-adjective (Lincolnshire sausages, for example) or ingredient adjectives (apple and herb sausages). Bangers refer to what sausages are called once cooked, usually coupled with mash (mashed potato), so in its entirety, it's called "bangers and mash" and not "sausage and mashed potatoes"

Chips
Fries (see Crisps)

Cider
Not the cider one drinks in the United States, but an alcoholic beverage made from apples

Coriander
Cilantro


Courgette
Zucchini

Crisps
Chips (as in potato chips)

Eggy bread
French toast but savoury

English Fry Up
All of the following: Eggs, Toast (white/wheat), sausages (not the American breakfast sausage -- more like Cumberland sausage), bacon (not strips but "rashers"), cooked tomato, and baked beans and sometimes with black pudding

Gherkins
Pickles, unless one is referring to the phallic looking semi high rise building in London, which is colloquially referred to as “The Gherkin”

Jelly
Jello

Lemonade
"Sprite" or "7-Up" type of carbonated beverage

Prawn Cocktail
Shrimp or prawns in thousand island dressing, usually served with lettuce

Pud or Pudding
General term for dessert which has nothing to do with the actual Jello pudding

Lolly
Something on a stick (candy, or "ice lolly" which is a Popsicle)

Mash
Mashed potatoes

Roasted [Root] Vegetables
Usually comprised of potatoes, carrots, and/or parsnips, and is made by heating oil up, adding parboiled root vegetables to this hot oil, and "roasting" in a very hot oven for about 45 minutes

Sharon Fruit
Persimmon

Spring Onions
Green onions

Spuds
Potatoes

Squash
Either (1) the vegetable, or (2) concentrated juice (which, when diluted with water produces nice fruit juice; the American equivalent would be frozen concentrate juice)

Streaky Bacon
The strips of bacon eaten in America


Sunday Roast
Sunday meal, usually comprised of Yorkshire pudding, "roast potatoes", vegetable, gravy, and, of course, meat); this is an "event" as well as a meal, and the American equivalent would be Sunday brunch

Toad in a Hole
Bangers in a large Yorkshire pudding, mash, gravy, and whatever seasonal vegetable they have at-hand

White Coffee
Coffee with milk (in most places I’ve been, they don’t usually serve half and half or cream for your hot beverage; the highest fat content dairy product they serve is whole milk at 4% fat content); asking for half-and-half might result in confused looks

Yorkshire Pudding
Equal parts flour, egg, and water made the same way as roast vegetable

Getting where you want to go (especially when you have to go)...
Bog
Toilet (a crude word and *not* to be used when asking where the toilet is); "bog roll" is therefore toilet paper in equally crude terms

Cashpoint
ATM

First Floor
Second floor

Chemist
Pharmacy / Pharmacist

Garden
Backyard

Ground floor
First floor

Lavatory
Toilet (polite)

Lift
Elevator

Loft
Attic

Loo
Bathroom or restroom, as Americans understand it (more specifically "toilet", a polite slang); "Loo roll" therefore is a common and polite reference to the standard bog roll

Motorway
Freeways

Off Licence
Liquor store

Petrol
Gasoline

News Agent
Convenience shop

Surgery
Doctors office

Operating Theatre
Operating room

Trolley
Cart, as in shopping carts or flight attendants' hospitality cart (the slang for female flight attendants is "trolley dolly")

WC
Water Closet (toilet)

What not to wear, and how to know what you're wearing...
Bonnet
Hood of car, not something you put on your head

Boot
Boot...trunk of car (however, one wears boots and has lost his/her left or right boot for example in the singular unit of boots, “boot” is applicable)

Braces
Braces...suspenders (braces, as in the United States, also refers to the contraptions orthodontist apply to straighten teeth)

Dearstalkers
Sherlock Holmes's hat

Dressing Up, Fancy Dress, and Costume Parties
Dressing up is fancy dress...a fancy dress party is a costume party but always confirm whether it’s not a black tie event or not as the case may be

Hoody
Sweatshirt with a hood

Jumper
Sweater

Knickers
Underwear

Pants
Underwear (the incorrect use of this word that will get the locals into a fit of laughter because when you say something innocuous as, "Do you like my new pants?" the Brits are inclined to jest that you want their opinion about your knickers

Pully
Pull over sweater

Trainers
“Sneakers" or "tennis shoes" (say "trainers," trust me)

Tank Top
Sleeveless sweater

Waist Coat
Sleeveless garment that buttons up, like in a three piece suit

Trousers
Pants ( not underwear) if you’re American (and if you're wearing jeans, then "jeans")

Vest
Sleeveless T-shirt worn under shirts)

Wellies
Rubber boots you wear in mud and water...100% water proof

Wooly Pully
Wool sweater that you have to pull over your head

Parts of the car...
Bonnet
Hood

Boot
Trunk of a car (however, one wears boots, the singular unit of boots is applicable)

Fender
Wing

Indicator
Signals

Tyre
How the tire is spelled

Wing Mirror
Side mirrors

Vulgarities Lite
Bollocks
Balls (the family jewels); also uttered in frustration, "Oh bollocks! I left my keys in the boot!)

Bum
Backside of body

Cor Blimey
"God blight me"

Drop One
To fart

Fag
Cigarette (no need to worry when you hear that someone is going to smoke or roll a fag)

F**k-All
Nothing (for example, there's f**k-all to do at this place)

Tits up / Pear Shaped
Americans might say, "it's gone wrong" or, "it's turned ugly"

Jack the Lad
Lady's man

Muppet
Dumb kind of stupid

Nob
Pecker

Pissed
Drunk (*not* "angry")


Plonker
Idiot, and decibel shy of being wanker

Shag
Sex (all the way), meant to be a cruder (but not generally meaner) term for the same

Snog
To make out (kiss and possibly a fondle)

Tits
Not what you think; tits are tiny blue and yellow birds. However, they are still the word for what you think they are)

Trump
Fart

Twat
Idiot (see "plonker" and "wanker")

Wank
Getting off (men)

Wanker
(See "wank") one who wanks off, or a "twat" (this usually sounds funny when a foreigner uses the word "wanker")

"I'm sorry, what are you talking about?"...

At Her Majesty’s Pleasure
Prison, connotes one is serving time


Bairn
Baby (Northern word)

Basin
Sink for washing face and hands; “sinks” are more like what you find in kitchens

Bees Knees
The best, or “of quality”: his performance was the bee's knees

Bob’s Your Uncle…
“That's that”. Sometimes, when someone says, "Bob's your uncle,” another person might respond,  "Fanny's your aunt" (it means the same thing)

Bobby
Police officer

Chippy
Carpenter

Chippie
Fish and chip shop

Chuffed
Pleased

Football
Soccer, and if you're American clarify whether you are referring to American football or "proper football" ("footy"), but don't say "soccer" unless you want to draw loads of attention


Ginger
Red hair

Hen Do / Hen Night
Bachelorette party


Hobby Bobby
Police volunteers

Hosepipe
Garden hose

Kitchen Roll
Paper towels

Lollypop Lady/
Lollypop Man
School crossing staff who hold up stop signs whilst ushering children across busy streets to safety

Knees-Up
Letting one's hair down (roughly speaking)

Mate
Used amongst friends, not really used for strangers, but happens and is mildly acceptable

Missus
Wife, girlfriend, female partner

Nowt
Nothing (northern word)

Owt
Something (northern word)

Pavement
Sidewalk

Petrol
Gasoline

Piss-Up
Drinking for the purpose of letting down one's hair, and more importantly, to get drunk

Quid
£1 (the plural of quid is quid; for example, one might utter, "That ugly tank top cost me twenty quid!"

Regina
Queen, (surname Windsor). On coins, you'll see ER which stands for "Elizabeth Regina" (Queen Elizabeth)

Repeating
Burping

Revise
Studying in preparation for an exam, for example

Rex
King (surname Windsor)

Rolly
Self-rolled cigarette (very common, so don't assume everyone is making a joint when you see them rolling something; usually it's just cigarettes they're rolling)
Skint
Broke, out of money

Sparky
Electrician

Spotted Dick
Type of steamed cake

Stag Do / Stag Night
Bachelor party (heard/used in the USA)


Ta
(From tak)...thank you

Ta Ra
Good bye

Taking the Piss
Poking fun, in good humour (usually), but can also mean someone is taking advantage of something

Telly
Television

Toffs
The elites, or the aspiring elites, stuck up, upper crust (word connoting a degree of disdain for rich snobs)

Tongs
Curling or straightening irons

Torch
Flashlight

Us
Often used interchangeably for "me" (for example, when Bob is asking for a drink, he says, "Give us a drink, will you?")

Washing Up Liquid
Dish soap

Washing Up
Washing dishes

You’re Having a Laugh
You're pulling my leg


It's not all just one English; there are many distinctive dialogues and regional accents...

Brummy
Slang for what/the way people from Birmingham speak

Glaswegians
The name for people of Glasgow, as well as the accent spoken by people from Glasgow

Mancunean
Someone from Manchester

Liverpudlian
Someone from Liverpool

Scouse
Slang for what/the way people from Liverpool speak

Scouser
What people from Liverpool are referred to as

Cockney Rhyming Slang
Joanna
 In Cockney, it rhymes with piano, so you might hear someone say, "she plays the ole Joanna"

Apples and Pear
[Up the ] apples and pears...rhymes with stairs, one goes up the apples and pears

Scooby Doo
“I haven’t a clue”. This term is a modern play on words, and not Cockney

Brown Bread
Dead

Porky Pie
Rhymes with lies; “I know when you telling porky pies, son”


Likely IMPORTANT: Dates here are written DD/MM/YYYY…. It took me awhile to get used to that.

To be continued…