Here's your: AMERICAN TOURIST'S GUIDE TO THE UK LANGUAGE The Brits have peculiar words for many things. Money is referred to as 'goolies' in slang, so you should for instance say 'I'd love to come to the pub but I haven't got any goolies.' 'Quid' is the modern word for What was once called a 'shilling' - the equivalent of seventeen cents American. If you are fond of someone, you should tell him he is a 'great tosser' - he will be touched. The English are a notoriously demonstrative, tactile people, and if you want to fit in you should hold hands with your acquaintances and tossers when you walk down the street. HABITS Ever since their Tory government wholeheartedly embraced full union with Europe, the Brits have been attempting to adopt certain continental customs, such as the large midday meal followed by a two or three hour siesta, which they call a 'wank.' As this is still a fairly new practice in Britain, it is not uncommon for people to oversleep (alarm clocks, alas, do not work there due to the magnetic pull from Greenwich). If you are late for supper, simply apologise and explain that you were having a wank - everyone will understand and forgive you. UNIVERSITIES University archives and manuscript collections are still governed by quaint medieval rules retained out of respect for tradition; hence patrons expected to bring to the reading rooms their own ink-pots and a small knife for sharpening their quills. Observing these customs will signal to the librarians that you are 'in the know'- one of the inner circle, as it were, for the rules are unwritten and not posted anywhere in the library. Likewise, it is customary to kiss the librarian on both cheeks when he/she brings a manuscript you've requested, a practice dating back to the reign of Henry VI. One of the most delightful ways to spend an afternoon in Oxford or Cambridge is gliding gently down the river in one of their flat-bottomed boats, which you propel using a long pole. This is known as 'cottaging'. Many of the boats (called 'yer-i-nals') are privately owned by the colleges, but there are some places that rent them to the public by the hour. Just tell a professor or policeman that you are interested in doing some cottaging and would like to know where the public yerinals are. The poles must be treated with vegetable oil to protect them from the water, so it's a good idea to buy a can of Crisco and have it on you when you ask directions to the yerinals. That way people will know you are an experienced cottager. FOOD British cuisine enjoys a well deserved reputation as the most sublime gastronomic pleasure available to man. Thanks to today's robust dollar, the American traveller can easily afford to dine out several times a week (rest assured that a British meal is worth interrupting your afternoon wank for). Few foreigners are aware that there are several grades of meat in the UK. The best cuts of meat, like the best bottles of gin, bear Her Majesty's seal, called the British Stamp of Excellence (BSE). When you go to a fine restaurant, tell your waiter you want BSE beef and won't settle for anything less. If he balks at your request, custom dictates that you jerk your head imperiously back and forth while rolling your eyes to show him who is boss. Once the waiter realises you are a person of discriminating taste, he may offer to let you peruse the restaurant's list of exquisite British wines. If he doesn't, you should order one anyway. The best wine grapes grow on the steep, chalky hillsides of Yorkshire and East Anglia-try an Ely '84 or Ripon '88 for a rare treat indeed. When the bill for your meal comes it will show a suggested amount. Pay whatever you think is fair, unless you plan to dine there again, in which case you should simply walk out; the restaurant host will understand that he should run a tab for you. TRANSPORTATION Public taxis are subsidised by the Her Majesty's Government. A taxi ride in London costs two pounds, no matter how far you travel. If a taxi driver tries to overcharge you, you should yell 'I think not, you charlatan!', then grab the nearest policeman (bobby) and have the driver disciplined. It is rarely necessary to take a taxi, though, since bus drivers are required to make detours at patrons' requests. Just board any bus, pay your fare of thruppence (the heavy gold-colored coins are 'pence'), and state your destination clearly to the driver, e.g. 'Please take me to the British Library.' A driver will frequently try to have a bit of harmless fun by pretending he doesn't go to your requested destination. Ignore him, as he is only teasing the American tourist (little does he know you're not so ignorant!). For those travelling on a shoestring budget, the London Tube may be the most economical way to get about, especially if you are a woman. Chivalry is alive and well in Britain, and ladies still travel for free on the Tube. Simply take some tokens from the baskets at the base of the escalators or on the platforms; you will find one near any of the state-sponsored Tube musicians. Once on the platform, though, beware! Approaching trains sometimes disturb the large Gappe bats that roost in the tunnels. The Gappes were smuggled into London in the early 19th century by French saboteurs and have proved impossible to exterminate. The announcement 'Mind the Gappe!' This is a signal that you should grab your hair and look towards the ceiling. Very few people have ever been killed by Gappes, though, and they are considered only a minor drawback to an otherwise excellent means of transportation. One final note: for preferential treatment when you arrive at Heathrow airport, announce that you are a member of Shin Fane (an international Jewish peace organisation - the 'shin' stands for 'shalom'). As savvy travellers know, this little white lie will assure you priority treatment as you make your way through customs. --
The Taxi's are really paid for by the government? Wow! What a cool country, good football, good writers, music, what else is there?
And don't forget that when you visit Old Trafford, to visit the visual delight that is Salford. Lovely people, and will always welcome you with open arms, especially in their local pub if you refer to them as a 'great tosser'.
If you are going for an early morning walk with a young lady, tell her father you will knock her up as early as possible.
do not listen to him if you do most of them things to brits in the uk you will be dead the next morning real slang goolies-balls the things next to your dick if you call anyone a great tosser you will get your nose broke it is not great tosser its tosser do not say you have just been for a wank trust me do not kiss the liberian she will call the police and get you arrested and we do not have medievil rules and traditions do not say you want to do some cotaging do not say you want bse beef do not gother doing anythink he said if you want to leave the uk alive i just checked £1 to $1.77
Tell him what a Grass is, or a wind up, I really think you've failed to see the humor in this thread.
WHAT?!?!?!?!?!? Mot, is this true? How dare you trick us! ENGLAND_RULE, I know your a newbie but come on, you can't really be thinking anyone took this seriously! It was supposed to make you laugh.
The differences in the slang used by Brits and Yanks can be hysterical. I spent half a year working in the States, and it took about 3 months for us to get to grips with translating each others slang, with some very funny misunderstandings along the way! I found that the Americans had real difficulty with the word 'Bollocks' If you hear a Brit say that something is 'THE Bollocks,' that means its very good, but if you hear us say that something is 'Bollocks,' that means its not! e.g. Ronaldo is the bollocks. e.g. The way Ranieri was treated by Abramovich at Chelsea last season, that was just bollocks! A lot of the yanks didn't even know what 'a pair of bollocks' are... one of the girls guessed shoes! lol
haha - as an English fella that is quite funny. if u r ever coming over though you must take part in an essential part of a match going experience - havin a PIE AND BOVRIL! The pies have fillings such as steak and kidney, chicken curry and meat and potato - and bovril is a drink made from boiled down cows bones. Might seem peculiar. But having a pie and bovril is a traditional part of going to a match.
Hell you could've posted a real Tube map and it would've been hilarious. Cockfosters, Mudchute, Chorleywood... and one hilariously named "Arsenal".