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On this site? I think I'm the only person (well, of course I'm not) who realizes that half of us are in the UK, the rest of us are American. I've started to use the following terms more lately, just for fun: "bollucks," "nappies (baby diapers)," "bloke," "mate." The list goes on. How about you?! (no insults allowed, there's enough of that around here)
I'm in America, by the way.

2007-05-04 04:23:39 · 3 answers · asked by Sleek 7 in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

3 answers

American here.
I knew a bunch before, but use them a lot more now. I've got people looking at me like I'm a nut...bullocks to them. Bloody hell. lol

that's one I love - bloody hell
I new about nappies, fa-gs (the cigarettes), bullocks, biscuits, the loo, the lift & more

I learned about chavs & being fussed, and that we use "math" but they use "maths" which I kind of like. ☺ I've also referred to apartments/duplexes as flats and called people 'love' a lot.

2007-05-04 04:33:28 · answer #1 · answered by Enchanted 7 · 1 0

English in maximum circumstances is an extremely confusing language to study for foreigners because of the fact there are no longer any agreements, etc. with English as there are in maximum different languages. i think of British English could be greater easy to study for foreigners because of the fact they seem greater centred on grammer fairly than temper, etc. individuals have particularly some slang which could positioned off a undeniable vibe to mirror cultural history while British human beings tend to stay far flung from that.

2017-01-09 11:35:51 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

I'm in America and use 'boot' alot for a trunk of a car, I use flatmate to mean roommate, and say I fancy something. I do sometimes say things are lush.

2007-05-04 04:28:52 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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