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  4. Pizza Pie, caravans and a common language

Pizza Pie, caravans and a common language

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  • L Lost User

    Chips in the UK - fries in the US Curtains in the UK - Drapes in the US Boot in the UK - Trunk in the US Bonnet in the UK - Hood in the US Nappy in the UK - Diaper in the US Fag (cigarette) in the UK - Something different in the US! :)


    Faith. Believing in something you *know* isn't true.

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    Shog9 0
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    Robert Edward Caldecott wrote: Curtains in the UK - Drapes in the US Actually, both here; mostly curtains though. Robert Edward Caldecott wrote: Fag (cigarette) in the UK - Something different in the US! So *that's* what was meant by "those UK people, always sucking on fags..." :rolleyes:

    Shog9 ------

    So they took me down to the gallows And this boy, he said to me: "Why do you smile, when the rope's around your neck?" I said, "I tell you boy, when i get back..."

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    • R Roger Wright

      Hmmmm. A lorry is a truck. A boot is a trunk. A flat is a measure of fruit. A mac is a raincoat. Petrol is gasoline. We try to lose pounds, while in the UK one attempts to acquire and invest them. A mate is an Aussie's friend; we sleep with ours. A Barbie is an expensive doll, and though she has a Ken, she doesn't understand a thing. "Another day done; all targets met; all systems fully operational; all customers satisfied; all staff keen and well motivated; all pigs fed and ready to fly." - Jennie Agard, McGuckin Hardware Systems Manager

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      Paul Watson
      wrote on last edited by
      #8

      Roger Wright wrote: A mate is an Aussie's friend; we sleep with ours So do Aussies... :rolleyes: (sorry, couldn't resist!) You made me laugh with that paragraph, good word use. :) Roger Wright wrote: A lorry is a truck. We call pickups, baakies.

      Paul Watson
      Bluegrass
      Cape Town, South Africa

      Ray Cassick wrote: Well I am not female, not gay and I am not Paul Watson

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      • P Paul Watson

        First of all I was amazed Roger did not know what a caravan was. Then I found out they call them something different in The States. So what other cultural differences do you know of? So far there is:

        • Pie in SA is like blueberry pie, not ever a Pizza. But in America you can go out for pie and buy a pizza, though pie in America can also just mean pie... :confused:
        • A trailer is not a trailer, it is a camper van. And nobody knows what a caravan is because it is either a bunch of camels or a wheeled home, but it is not a camper van
        • In SA we call them braais, in Aussie barbies and in the States BBQs
        • Pants are short trousers her in SA, but are underwear in the UK

        And I am sure many, many more. Sometimes I wonder we communicate in English at all! :-D

        Paul Watson
        Bluegrass
        Cape Town, South Africa

        Ray Cassick wrote: Well I am not female, not gay and I am not Paul Watson

        M Offline
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        Megan Forbes
        wrote on last edited by
        #9

        Chips in SA are crisps in Uk Chips in SA are also chips in UK Chips in SA/UK are fries in US :rolleyes: :-D


        I've always heard that there was an idea behind Win ME... I still can't figure out what that was... anyboy know??? I;ve herad the idea was that it was supposed to be n operating system but I doubt this. - Brian Delahunty

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        • L Lost User

          Chips in the UK - fries in the US Curtains in the UK - Drapes in the US Boot in the UK - Trunk in the US Bonnet in the UK - Hood in the US Nappy in the UK - Diaper in the US Fag (cigarette) in the UK - Something different in the US! :)


          Faith. Believing in something you *know* isn't true.

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          Paul Riley
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          Oh, and if you try to order a burger, they tend to mumble something incomprehensible at you which under investigation means "Combo or sandwich", that can be confusing to the uninitiated Brit. Paul I think there're pieces of me you've never seen - Tori Amos, Tear in Your Hand

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          • M Michael Dunn

            Don't forget: fanny means bottom (the part you sit on) in the US, but vagina* in the UK. *Hey, it's the Soapbox, I can say that --Mike-- "I'd rather you just give me a fish today, because even if you teach me how to fish, I won't do it. I'm lazy." -- Nish Just released - 1ClickPicGrabber - Grab & organize pictures from your favorite web pages, with 1 click! My really out-of-date homepage Sonork-100.19012 Acid_Helm

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            Roger Wright
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            Yikes! That could cause an international incident!!! "Another day done; all targets met; all systems fully operational; all customers satisfied; all staff keen and well motivated; all pigs fed and ready to fly." - Jennie Agard, McGuckin Hardware Systems Manager

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            • S Shog9 0

              Robert Edward Caldecott wrote: Curtains in the UK - Drapes in the US Actually, both here; mostly curtains though. Robert Edward Caldecott wrote: Fag (cigarette) in the UK - Something different in the US! So *that's* what was meant by "those UK people, always sucking on fags..." :rolleyes:

              Shog9 ------

              So they took me down to the gallows And this boy, he said to me: "Why do you smile, when the rope's around your neck?" I said, "I tell you boy, when i get back..."

              R Offline
              R Offline
              Roger Wright
              wrote on last edited by
              #12

              Shog9 wrote: So *that's* what was meant by "those UK people, always sucking on fags..." I had the same impression, and excused the way they talk for that reason.:) "Another day done; all targets met; all systems fully operational; all customers satisfied; all staff keen and well motivated; all pigs fed and ready to fly." - Jennie Agard, McGuckin Hardware Systems Manager

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              • M Michael Dunn

                Don't forget: fanny means bottom (the part you sit on) in the US, but vagina* in the UK. *Hey, it's the Soapbox, I can say that --Mike-- "I'd rather you just give me a fish today, because even if you teach me how to fish, I won't do it. I'm lazy." -- Nish Just released - 1ClickPicGrabber - Grab & organize pictures from your favorite web pages, with 1 click! My really out-of-date homepage Sonork-100.19012 Acid_Helm

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                David Wulff
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                Oh yes - the classic cause of great humour to us Brits is when some American guy starts talking about how wide his mother in law's fanny is, or how someone touched his fanny when he was taking a pee... :laugh: :eek:


                David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

                An orgy in Tiverton... ({) `/\^^/\:p (Z) :$/\^^/\` (})

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                • M Michael Dunn

                  Don't forget: fanny means bottom (the part you sit on) in the US, but vagina* in the UK. *Hey, it's the Soapbox, I can say that --Mike-- "I'd rather you just give me a fish today, because even if you teach me how to fish, I won't do it. I'm lazy." -- Nish Just released - 1ClickPicGrabber - Grab & organize pictures from your favorite web pages, with 1 click! My really out-of-date homepage Sonork-100.19012 Acid_Helm

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                  Paul Watson
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #14

                  Michael Dunn wrote: fanny means bottom (the part you sit on) in the US, but vagina* in the UK. I remember reading The Famouse Five and going red in the face everytime they talked about Aunt Fanny. Sad but true (I was only 12 ok!) Fanny means vagina here too.

                  Paul Watson
                  Bluegrass
                  Cape Town, South Africa

                  Ray Cassick wrote: Well I am not female, not gay and I am not Paul Watson

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                  • P Paul Riley

                    The confusion comes more from words they don't have or words that mean something different (fag is the only example there and most of them have heard that one, so it's not too bad when you say "I'm going out for a fag"). Don't bother asking for crisps in the US, you'll just get a blank look. Call anyone you like a wanker, that rarely does more than confuse them. They don't even have mince pies, except in select places. Vinegar is a strange wine-dressing for salads, but salad cream is something you can't get in the US. Their definition of a rare steak is very different from ours. Randy is a boys name and only that. It goes on and on forever. Paul I think there're pieces of me you've never seen - Tori Amos, Tear in Your Hand

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                    David Wulff
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #15

                    Paul Riley wrote: Their definition of a rare steak is very different from ours By that am I to take it you mean something that moos when you poke it? :suss: Paul Riley wrote: Randy is a boys name and only that. Ah yes. Bless his soul but I once went to school with a lovely British-American kid nammed Randy Faggot. The poor sod!! :omg: For the benefit of our stateside friends, that word-for-word translates to "sexually excited gay bloke". Like I said: poor sod!


                    David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

                    An orgy in Tiverton... ({) `/\^^/\:p (Z) :$/\^^/\` (})

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                    • R Roger Wright

                      Hmmmm. A lorry is a truck. A boot is a trunk. A flat is a measure of fruit. A mac is a raincoat. Petrol is gasoline. We try to lose pounds, while in the UK one attempts to acquire and invest them. A mate is an Aussie's friend; we sleep with ours. A Barbie is an expensive doll, and though she has a Ken, she doesn't understand a thing. "Another day done; all targets met; all systems fully operational; all customers satisfied; all staff keen and well motivated; all pigs fed and ready to fly." - Jennie Agard, McGuckin Hardware Systems Manager

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                      David Wulff
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      Roger Wright wrote: A flat is a measure of fruit. OMG - I can't imagine that! Can you give an example? Roger Wright wrote: A Barbie is an expensive doll, and though she has a Ken, she doesn't understand a thing. Ah, Barbie. The source of all dumb Blonde jokes. :laugh:


                      David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

                      An orgy in Tiverton... ({) `/\^^/\:p (Z) :$/\^^/\` (})

                      R 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • M Megan Forbes

                        Chips in SA are crisps in Uk Chips in SA are also chips in UK Chips in SA/UK are fries in US :rolleyes: :-D


                        I've always heard that there was an idea behind Win ME... I still can't figure out what that was... anyboy know??? I;ve herad the idea was that it was supposed to be n operating system but I doubt this. - Brian Delahunty

                        P Offline
                        P Offline
                        Paul Watson
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #17

                        Megan Forbes wrote: Chips in SA are also chips in UK LOL true. I onced asked for slap chips in a UK fish shop. The guy looked very confused and then said "We only have Walkers here." :rolleyes:

                        Paul Watson
                        Bluegrass
                        Cape Town, South Africa

                        Ray Cassick wrote: Well I am not female, not gay and I am not Paul Watson

                        M 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • P Paul Watson

                          Michael Dunn wrote: fanny means bottom (the part you sit on) in the US, but vagina* in the UK. I remember reading The Famouse Five and going red in the face everytime they talked about Aunt Fanny. Sad but true (I was only 12 ok!) Fanny means vagina here too.

                          Paul Watson
                          Bluegrass
                          Cape Town, South Africa

                          Ray Cassick wrote: Well I am not female, not gay and I am not Paul Watson

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                          M Offline
                          Michael Dunn
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #18

                          There used to be a comedian here named Fanny Flagg. :eek: (I'm not sure how well-known she is, she was a regular on old Match Game shows.) --Mike-- "I'd rather you just give me a fish today, because even if you teach me how to fish, I won't do it. I'm lazy." -- Nish Just released - 1ClickPicGrabber - Grab & organize pictures from your favorite web pages, with 1 click! My really out-of-date homepage Sonork-100.19012 Acid_Helm

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                          • D David Wulff

                            Roger Wright wrote: A flat is a measure of fruit. OMG - I can't imagine that! Can you give an example? Roger Wright wrote: A Barbie is an expensive doll, and though she has a Ken, she doesn't understand a thing. Ah, Barbie. The source of all dumb Blonde jokes. :laugh:


                            David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

                            An orgy in Tiverton... ({) `/\^^/\:p (Z) :$/\^^/\` (})

                            R Offline
                            R Offline
                            Roger Wright
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #19

                            When purchasing directly from a grower, fruits such as berries are packaged in flats. They usually have a half pound or so to a small basket, and 24 or so baskets are stacked on a wooden flat. Buying the whole flat will often get you a discount:-) "Another day done; all targets met; all systems fully operational; all customers satisfied; all staff keen and well motivated; all pigs fed and ready to fly." - Jennie Agard, McGuckin Hardware Systems Manager

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                            • D David Wulff

                              Paul Riley wrote: Their definition of a rare steak is very different from ours By that am I to take it you mean something that moos when you poke it? :suss: Paul Riley wrote: Randy is a boys name and only that. Ah yes. Bless his soul but I once went to school with a lovely British-American kid nammed Randy Faggot. The poor sod!! :omg: For the benefit of our stateside friends, that word-for-word translates to "sexually excited gay bloke". Like I said: poor sod!


                              David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

                              An orgy in Tiverton... ({) `/\^^/\:p (Z) :$/\^^/\` (})

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                              Paul Riley
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #20

                              David Wulff wrote: By that am I to take it you mean something that moos when you poke it? If you're lucky. It could quite easily be in the foetal stage :). I love steak that bleeds but I never order anything less than medium-rare in the US. David Wulff wrote: Ah yes. Bless his soul but I once went to school with a lovely British-American kid nammed Randy Faggot. :laugh::laugh::laugh: You are kidding? I thought comic writer Randy Queen was bad enough. But he must have thought he was getting away from the name jibes when he left the US :laugh:. Paul I think there're pieces of me you've never seen - Tori Amos, Tear in Your Hand

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                              • P Paul Watson

                                First of all I was amazed Roger did not know what a caravan was. Then I found out they call them something different in The States. So what other cultural differences do you know of? So far there is:

                                • Pie in SA is like blueberry pie, not ever a Pizza. But in America you can go out for pie and buy a pizza, though pie in America can also just mean pie... :confused:
                                • A trailer is not a trailer, it is a camper van. And nobody knows what a caravan is because it is either a bunch of camels or a wheeled home, but it is not a camper van
                                • In SA we call them braais, in Aussie barbies and in the States BBQs
                                • Pants are short trousers her in SA, but are underwear in the UK

                                And I am sure many, many more. Sometimes I wonder we communicate in English at all! :-D

                                Paul Watson
                                Bluegrass
                                Cape Town, South Africa

                                Ray Cassick wrote: Well I am not female, not gay and I am not Paul Watson

                                C Offline
                                C Offline
                                Chris Losinger
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #21

                                Paul Watson wrote: in America you can go out for pie and buy a pizza, though pie in America can also just mean pie not everywhere, it's mostly a NYC/NJ thing. when you say "pie" but mean pizza, it helps to say it with a NYC accent.


                                "[it was..] one of those evenings when you feel that not only will there definitely be a revolution, but that the Association of Manufacturers will foot the bill." -- Umberto Eco, Foucault's Pendulum

                                Smaller Animals Software

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                                • P Paul Watson

                                  Megan Forbes wrote: Chips in SA are also chips in UK LOL true. I onced asked for slap chips in a UK fish shop. The guy looked very confused and then said "We only have Walkers here." :rolleyes:

                                  Paul Watson
                                  Bluegrass
                                  Cape Town, South Africa

                                  Ray Cassick wrote: Well I am not female, not gay and I am not Paul Watson

                                  M Offline
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                                  Megan Forbes
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #22

                                  :laugh: Lol! :laugh: Been down that rocky path...


                                  I've always heard that there was an idea behind Win ME... I still can't figure out what that was... anyboy know??? I;ve herad the idea was that it was supposed to be n operating system but I doubt this. - Brian Delahunty

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                                  • D David Wulff

                                    Paul Riley wrote: Their definition of a rare steak is very different from ours By that am I to take it you mean something that moos when you poke it? :suss: Paul Riley wrote: Randy is a boys name and only that. Ah yes. Bless his soul but I once went to school with a lovely British-American kid nammed Randy Faggot. The poor sod!! :omg: For the benefit of our stateside friends, that word-for-word translates to "sexually excited gay bloke". Like I said: poor sod!


                                    David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk

                                    An orgy in Tiverton... ({) `/\^^/\:p (Z) :$/\^^/\` (})

                                    L Offline
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                                    Lost User
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #23

                                    David Wulff wrote: The poor sod!! While in the US most folks would understand the use of "sod" in this phrase, they would generally not use it themselves. Over here "sod" usually means grass (for your lawn) grow at a farm and transplanted.

                                    Mike Mullikin :beer: You can't really dust for vomit. Nigel Tufnel - Spinal Tap

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                                    • P Paul Watson

                                      Michael Dunn wrote: fanny means bottom (the part you sit on) in the US, but vagina* in the UK. I remember reading The Famouse Five and going red in the face everytime they talked about Aunt Fanny. Sad but true (I was only 12 ok!) Fanny means vagina here too.

                                      Paul Watson
                                      Bluegrass
                                      Cape Town, South Africa

                                      Ray Cassick wrote: Well I am not female, not gay and I am not Paul Watson

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                                      Atlantys
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #24

                                      Paul Watson wrote: I remember reading The Famouse Five and going red in the face everytime they talked about Aunt Fanny. Sad but true (I was only 12 ok!) I remember that! :laugh: Those beltpacks that people have (you know the kind, they wrap around the waist, have a like pouch area at the front, with some zips, people put cameras and/or random things in them), I know people who call them "Fanny packs" (as a reference to their bottom). I used to laugh whenever someone mentioned it. :laugh::laugh: I remember reading about someone who "lit up a fag". yeah, it was then time for me to learn some more of the UK-English language. Frelling scared me when I first read it though. :wtf::wtf:

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                                      • A Atlantys

                                        Paul Watson wrote: I remember reading The Famouse Five and going red in the face everytime they talked about Aunt Fanny. Sad but true (I was only 12 ok!) I remember that! :laugh: Those beltpacks that people have (you know the kind, they wrap around the waist, have a like pouch area at the front, with some zips, people put cameras and/or random things in them), I know people who call them "Fanny packs" (as a reference to their bottom). I used to laugh whenever someone mentioned it. :laugh::laugh: I remember reading about someone who "lit up a fag". yeah, it was then time for me to learn some more of the UK-English language. Frelling scared me when I first read it though. :wtf::wtf:

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                                        Paul Riley
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #25

                                        Atlantys wrote: I know people who call them "Fanny packs" They sell these all over the theme parks of Florida (for obvious reasons). I'm 29 and I still go into giggle-mode. Never grow up, never surrender. Paul I think there're pieces of me you've never seen - Tori Amos, Tear in Your Hand

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                                        • R Roger Wright

                                          When purchasing directly from a grower, fruits such as berries are packaged in flats. They usually have a half pound or so to a small basket, and 24 or so baskets are stacked on a wooden flat. Buying the whole flat will often get you a discount:-) "Another day done; all targets met; all systems fully operational; all customers satisfied; all staff keen and well motivated; all pigs fed and ready to fly." - Jennie Agard, McGuckin Hardware Systems Manager

                                          A Offline
                                          A Offline
                                          Atlantys
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #26

                                          Roger Wright wrote: When purchasing directly from a grower, fruits such as berries are packaged in flats. They usually have a half pound or so to a small basket, and 24 or so baskets are stacked on a wooden flat. Buying the whole flat will often get you a discount Out in the West (ie: BC), we call a 24-pack of beer (in cans) a "flat" (since it's flat, and probably similar to this fruit-thing you speak of). Whereas, in the East (Toronto and such), they call 24-pack of beer (in bottles) a two-four. Out West, milk is most often found in cartons, and in the East, people use nothing but milk bags Silly stuff like that, but there's this is a language/cultural difference in the SAME country. :wtf: And don't even get me started on the Quebecois! (no offense!)

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