21. Weird Accent
via GIPHY
Just like an anonymous american said in a forum “There are different British accents and each seems to have an attitude to go with it.
The worst is the upper class British accent, which you will find around Cambridge. The British upper class are, for the most part, the most insufferable snobs you could ever meet – completely condescending and superior.
Americans don’t care for them too much, but it’s the attitude that goes with the accent that repels most of us.
On the other hand, the British middle and lower classes are some of the friendliest people I’ve met. A Liverpool or London accent is very well received, simply because it usually goes with a friendlier attitude. “
I don’t agree with all. Most of this is so so so far from the truth. 8 alcoholic drinks a day? Most dont even have 1.
I can explain:
Tea: Well, it just is
Carpeted bathrooms: We have wooden floors and it’s cold. A winter in UK would show that getting up with ice on the window and trotting into a heated bathroom with fitted carpets, is the way to go.
Queueing: It’s civilised – you may have been standing in a queue for train tickets for an hour, then 100 people push in front of you because they are bigger, and fill the train, leaving you to wait for the chance to get on the next one? Sounds “survival of the fittest” to me; we gave that up when we stopped painting ourselves blue.
Weather: We talk about the weather so much because we get so much of it. It’s a great ice-breaker. No one in the Arabian Gulf starts a conversation with “It’s hot today, isn’t it?”
Other daft stuff: It’s what makes us what we are – basically daft. It’s an endearing trait.
That photograph of tea reflects nothing that ever happens in my house, and I am as British, no damn it English, as a Texan born GOP member with a room full of guns and devoted to God is American. It is not a ceremony but merely a refreshment taken when I am not drinking coffee.
I am a native from UK can assure you I certainly do not have a carpet in my bathroom- we did in the 1980s it went in 1990s to be replaced with what was called “cushion flooring” a sort of washable decorative plastic flooring material that was cut off a wide roll. This was replaced by wide ceramic floor tiles with a textured non slip finish in the next bathroom complete refurbish.
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