Originally Posted by
MANICHAEAN
OUR MAN IN ENGLAND.
1.Parlance: Don't be surprised if you say something & get some blank stares or a suppressed giggle. Your "pants" are our "trousers", your "trunk" is our "boot" and the US "keep your pecker up" has different connatations in the UK where it means "to keep your spirits/morale up" I hesitate in all due decorum to investigate any further linkage. Another favourite of mine in different Anglo/American meetings I have attended is when you ask the way i.e. the "route" pronounced "raut". We pronounce it "root" as in the subterranean branches of a tree or plant. Apart from that you should do fine as long as you steer clear of Glasgow & Sunderland where the dialect is only intelligible to those born there. When you go to France, play the Englishman abroad and address them slowly and loudly. Everybody south of Calais is assumed to have a rudimentary grasp of the English language if spoken to in a firm manner.
2. Food & Drink: The beer is served at room temperature unless you get an extra cold Guinness in an Irish pub in Kilburn High Road in London. But you will grow to love it & spurn on your return the pee pee d'an served ice cold in the States. The price of beer however is frightening & the pub business is in free fall due to this factor & the ban on smoking. The British as a result of Empire developed a taste for curry which is eaten on average once a week. The standard & range of curry restaurants has attained a meridian splendour and is only surpassed in selective enclaves on the fringes of Bombay.
3. Native Characteristics: Normally reserved from birth as part of our upbringing, we do utter a few monosyllables in response to enquiries. Things have improved from the time when American troops were stationed here prior to D Day and when the general complaint against them was "They are overpaid, oversexed & over here". The $ / Sterling exchange rate has changed all that.
Trust that helps.
Bon Voyage.