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  • (upbeat music)

  • - Hello everyone, and welcome back to English With Lucy.

  • Today I'm very hot, and it's only 19 degrees.

  • We're gonna talk about that later.

  • Today I'm going to talk to you about

  • 50 weird and random facts about British culture.

  • Now this lesson's more of a fun one.

  • It's going to be great for your listening practise

  • and if you want to improve your pronunciation

  • alongside your listening, I highly recommend Audible.

  • It's an online database of audiobooks,

  • and I've got loads of recommendations

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  • at the same time as reading the actual book,

  • it's basically the key to learning perfect pronunciation.

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  • Right, let's get started with the video.

  • Fact number one.

  • Tea is by far the most popular drink drunk by Brits.

  • Maybe you knew this, but apparently we drink

  • 165 million cups of tea every single day.

  • Bananas!

  • I've drunk no tea today.

  • It's not my favourite, I don't hate it,

  • I'll have it if I'm offered, but yeah.

  • Number two, on our main TV channels,

  • that's channel one and two and quite a few others,

  • they're run by the BBC and we don't have any adverts.

  • This is because we pay a licence fee

  • and I think it's over 100 pounds a year,

  • but basically we have to pay.

  • If we have a TV we have to pay it,

  • even if we don't wanna watch the BBC.

  • Now I kind of like it because I like ad-free TV,

  • but I also don't want the BBC

  • to tell me whether I can have a TV or not.

  • Number three, queues are incredibly important to us.

  • If you push into a queue, if you queue-jump,

  • you will be universally hated in Britain.

  • Doesn't make sense.

  • Comment below if queues are important in your country,

  • because I went to Spain and I lived there for a while,

  • and people did not respect queues.

  • When I lived in Spain I remember being in a bank

  • and some lady thought that her problem

  • was more important than my problem,

  • and she just pushed in and was like

  • sorry, this is an emergency.

  • I was like, in Britain that would never happen!

  • Number four.

  • Please, sorry and thank you basically dominate

  • all of our social interactions.

  • It's so ingrained into our brains

  • that we often bump into things

  • and then apologise to the inanimate object.

  • Like I have whacked my shoulder on a door

  • and said "Oh, sorry", and then felt really stupid

  • and British, at the same time.

  • But yeah, just a simple task

  • like passing the salt at a dinner table.

  • "Sorry, please could you pass the salt?

  • "Thank you, sorry, sorry, excuse me please."

  • Honestly, we say it about eight times.

  • Number five.

  • When you greet a friend in the U.K.

  • you don't normally shake their hand.

  • You don't normally shake their hand.

  • Normally you give them one kiss on the cheek.

  • If you've recently been in the rest of Europe

  • then you might give two kisses by mistake

  • and say "Oh sorry, I've just got back from France.

  • "Just got back from Spain."

  • And if you're feeling very masculine

  • and you're with another very masculine person,

  • then even though you know them very well

  • you might still shake their hand,

  • but that's only if you're very very masculine.

  • Number six.

  • When the sun comes out,

  • because it doesn't come out so often,

  • we make the most of it.

  • In 15 degree heat we will wear sandals, mini-skirts,

  • strappy tops, bikinis,

  • and we will get very very sunburned as well.

  • The day after a sunny day, everyone is red.

  • It's terrible.

  • Also, our houses are not designed to cope with the heat,

  • as I'm experiencing right now.

  • It's 19 degrees outside and I am absolutely dying.

  • Number seven.

  • British cuisine, well our most known dish

  • is probably the Sunday roast,

  • or beef and Yorkshire puddings.

  • However, we actually voted for our national dish

  • and we voted for a chicken tikka masala,

  • which is an Indian dish.

  • Number eight, if you are on public transport

  • it is highly expected that you give up your seat

  • for an elderly person or a disabled person.

  • And if you don't do it, people will tut at you.

  • This is a very British thing.

  • People just go (repeated tutting).

  • But we don't like to be too direct.

  • Sometimes we muster up enough courage to say

  • "Excuse me, that person needs that seat",

  • but we're not gonna be too confrontational about it.

  • And if we are ever confrontational with someone

  • on public transport, we spend the next week

  • coming down from the adrenalin and replaying the situation

  • in our head, telling our mates about it.

  • It's a big deal.

  • Number nine, our humour can be quite difficult to understand.

  • We love sarcasm, we have quite dark sense of humour.

  • We can be quite dry, so we can say things without smiling.

  • I love the British sense of humour

  • but it can offend people sometimes.

  • Sucks to be them.

  • Number 10.

  • The majority of museums in London are free.

  • And we do actually use them quite a lot.

  • There's been a big increase

  • in Brits trying to do cultural things,

  • which I think is great.

  • Hasn't quite reached me yet,

  • but I did go to the museum in my village last year,

  • so that was great.

  • Number 11.

  • If you are invited to the home of a British person,

  • if they are providing a meal or a party for you

  • then you are sort of expected to bring some sort of gift.

  • Normally a bottle of wine, some flowers or chocolates.

  • If you don't bring a gift,

  • we wouldn't say anything about it

  • but we would silently judge you.

  • Number 12.

  • We are absolutely obsessed with our animals here,

  • by animals I mean pets.

  • We put our pets before our own children sometimes.

  • We are dog and cat crazy.

  • Number 13, as soon as the sun comes out

  • we leave work, when it's a good time to leave work,

  • normally five o'clock, and we go straight to a pub garden.

  • We don't go inside the pub,

  • we go straight to the pub garden

  • or if there's no direct route to the garden

  • then we will march through the pub directly to the garden.

  • We love a pub garden.

  • In fact when I finish this video,

  • I'm going straight there with my neighbour.

  • 14, that brings me onto our drinking culture.

  • It's quite bad but it's getting better.

  • It's very normal to see some very very drunk people

  • on Friday and Saturday nights,

  • and Sunday nights if it's a bank holiday,

  • which means we have the Monday off work.

  • But millennials, our younger generation, are drinking less,

  • which is a very good thing,

  • and binge-drinking cases are going down.

  • Number 15.

  • If we hold open a door for you, which we probably will,

  • we expect a thank you.

  • However, if somebody holds a door open for us,

  • and it's actually at a really awkward distance

  • so we have to kind of walk faster

  • and they have to wait for ages holding the door,

  • both parties hate this situation

  • but we still say thank you and we still do it,

  • because, I don't know why.

  • It's polite!

  • Number 16.

  • We are, hmm, this is divided.

  • Some of us are very polite drivers

  • and some of us are very rude.

  • The polite drivers will probably let you through

  • but they will expect a thank you.

  • We live for that thank you wave.

  • Sometimes people just lift a finger and that's enough.

  • I just like the acknowledgement.

  • I'm a polite driver.

  • Polite drivers also love to tut and shake their head

  • at impolite drivers who have not thanked you

  • for letting them pass.

  • (repeated tutting)

  • Number 17.

  • In many cultures around the globe

  • women want to have lighter skin,

  • but in the U.K. we want to have darker skin.

  • Well, not all of us, but a lot of us like to use

  • fake tanning products to make our skin darker.

  • I must admit I have got some on today.

  • I'm a very light shade of orange, on my knees particularly.

  • Yeah, we don't have much sun,

  • we don't get much chance to tan,

  • and having a tanned complexion, I think,

  • is almost a sign of wealth.

  • Like you've been on holiday recently.

  • I just think I look healthier with a bit of a tan

  • but you might not agree.

  • Number 18, we are very divided over the Royal Family.

  • Some people think it brings in loads of tourism and money.

  • Some people think that they spend way too much money

  • and there's never really been a study to show

  • whether they bring a profit or loss to the country.

  • So it's a funny one, we just don't know.

  • Number 19, the weather in summer can never be guaranteed.

  • So we don't actually go on holiday

  • in our own country that much.

  • We do, but we can't guarantee

  • it's gonna be a sunny beach holiday.

  • A couple of years ago my family and I

  • went away to Cornwall, to a beach resort,

  • and there was not a single day of sunshine.

  • It poured it down the entire time

  • and we just said never again.

  • We will always go abroad now.

  • Number 21.

  • We like to thank the bus driver when we get off the bus.

  • In London, on the school bus, anywhere,

  • it's pretty normal to say "Thank you", as we get off.

  • My school bus driver was absolutely amazing.

  • He actually used to buy us all Easter eggs.

  • A whole school bus of children, he was lovely,

  • his name was Roger.

  • I hope I get to see him again.

  • Number 22.

  • Dinner is often our biggest meal of the day,

  • I'm talking about evening dinner.

  • We have a fairly heavy breakfast, a light lunch

  • and then a heavy dinner,

  • and we normally have breakfast between seven and eight,

  • lunch between 12 and one,

  • and dinner between six and seven normally.

  • Number 23.

  • "How are you" and "You all right" are not genuine questions.

  • If we say "Hi, you all right,"

  • I don't actually expect you to answer saying

  • "Well, actually, no I'm not, my goldfish died."

  • I just expect you to say "Yeah yeah, you all right."

  • And that's it.

  • Top quality interaction.

  • Number 24.

  • Our population is incredibly diverse.

  • In London, for example, in 2011,

  • when they did the census that they do every 10 years,

  • 44.9% of the population were white British.

  • That means London, as a city, is so diverse

  • and it's something that a lot of us are really proud of.

  • However, if you go up to the north east,

  • 93.6% of the population were white British.

  • So it's not evenly distributed.

  • Number 25.

  • We care a lot about where you stand on an escalator,

  • and we will tut and shake our heads

  • if you stand in the wrong place,

  • and I always see tourists do this.

  • You have to stand on the right

  • and you have to leave enough room

  • for busy rushy people to overtake you.

  • Otherwise, they won't say anything

  • but they'll stand there and tut

  • and maybe even say "Excuse me, excuse me!"

  • Just be prepared.

  • 26, we drink beer and cider in pints.

  • Sometimes we drink a half pint

  • and our beer is sometimes served warm.

  • Not lagers, but our British ales,

  • we serve them at room temperature,

  • and that can be shocking for some people.

  • 27, we are terrified of wasps.

  • The most serious, straight-laced person

  • is likely to cause a massive flap and go (screaming),

  • if a wasp comes.

  • I was in a church, watching a wedding ceremony

  • the other day, and a wasp came and it was absolute carnage.

  • And, of course, all the women had flower decorations

  • in their hair, which just made it all the more hilarious.

  • I just observed and thought I'm gonna put this in a video.

  • Number 28.

  • Our winters are really dark.

  • In the peak of winter, the sun doesn't come up

  • till past nine, and it goes down just after three.

  • It means that you can go into the office

  • and leave the office, without seeing sunlight.

  • It is really quite intense.

  • 29.

  • Carpets are a key feature in our houses,

  • and I'm not sure how I feel about this.

  • Carpets in a bedroom, okay,

  • but in a lot of old-fashioned houses

  • we have carpets in the bathroom,

  • which I don't think is hygienic,

  • and it shocks quite a lot of people

  • when they come over here.

  • We also have carpets on the stairs,

  • which are really really hard to clean.

  • I know that when I design my own house

  • I won't be having so much carpet in it.

  • Number 30.

  • Our plugs are different.

  • We have a three pronged plug

  • which is different to the European plugs,

  • so make sure you bring an adaptor with you.

  • Let me see if I have a plug.

  • God, I'm so hot.

  • Yeah, this is our plug.

  • It's a three pronged plug, and this is an earth prong.

  • Tom Scott has got a really good video on this.

  • This is gonna be one of two times

  • that I recommend his videos in this video.

  • I think he's got a video explaining that,

  • and it's a really good one, so I'll link it down below.

  • I am gonna mention another of his videos later on.

  • 31.

  • Our society really doesn't prioritise religion.

  • Church attendance and membership numbers

  • have been falling drastically.

  • In the 1930s, church membership was at 30%

  • and now it is at 10% or lower.

  • A lot of people just go to church on really important events

  • like weddings, Christmas and maybe Easter.

  • Number 32.

  • We often have separate taps, or faucets,

  • as you might call them, for hot and cold water,

  • especially in old-fashioned houses.

  • This is where I talk about Scom Tott (laughing).

  • This is where I talk about Tom Scott's video.

  • He's got a really really good video

  • explaining why this is, 'cause I've always wondered

  • because I've always grown up with

  • having to choose between boiling hot water on my face,

  • or freezing cold water on my face,

  • and just thinking why can't we just mix them.

  • We do have mixer taps now,

  • but it was something to do with the tanks

  • that stored hot water.

  • They couldn't legally be mixed with drinking water,

  • hence why hot in one, cold drinking water in another.

  • Again, it's something I have in my house right now

  • but when I move into my own house

  • I will be making sure that all taps are mixed taps.

  • Number 33.

  • We drive on the left, but we walk on the right.

  • So you must drive on the left-hand side of the road

  • but you must go up the escalator on the right.

  • Number 34.

  • When something is in fashion,

  • all women end up wearing the same thing

  • even if it doesn't suit them.

  • I've had so many friends come over from abroad

  • and say oh my God, everyone is wearing the same thing.

  • And I hadn't noticed it before but it is true.

  • I remember there was a fashion of like

  • quite see-through black leggings, and they just,

  • they didn't look good on anyone,

  • but everyone seemed to wear them

  • with the wrong coloured underwear underneath.

  • Number 35.

  • When we're 18, we are sort of expected, by our parents,

  • to move out and start our lives.

  • In a lot of countries, people will stay with their parents

  • till they're well in their 30s.

  • Here, we just wanna get out as soon as possible

  • and our parents want us out as soon as possible.

  • If we go to university, we go at 18

  • and we normally go to a university

  • that's quite far from our own home.

  • However, if we're going to start a job straight away

  • then yes, we might stay with our parents a bit longer.

  • It is becoming more common

  • to move back in with your parents

  • after you've finished university.

  • That's something that I did for six-ish months

  • when I was starting my business after graduating.

  • Number 36.

  • Our university fees are high.

  • Very very high.

  • For U.K. residents, nine grand a year,

  • grand is pounds, thousand pounds, 9000 pounds a year,

  • and for international students it can be much much higher.

  • Number 37.

  • We have ice cream trucks that drive round our villages

  • playing a tune, like a little dingy-bell tune,

  • and it's the most exciting sound as a child.

  • I never had it 'cause I lived in a rural village

  • but when I went to the park or to see friends,

  • I remember hearing this noise and being like ah,

  • the ice cream man.

  • But I think my friend's mum told her

  • that the ice cream man only played the tune

  • when he'd run out of ice cream,

  • which I think is the meanest thing ever.

  • Number 38.

  • We don't use our car horns that often.

  • They are for angry emergencies.

  • Or just emergencies, not necessarily angry ones.

  • I went to Bali last year, or the year before,

  • and they just used them all the time to say hello

  • and to nudge people.

  • No.

  • Over here, car horns are quite a big deal

  • and if someone beeps their horn at you

  • you spend the rest of the car journey getting over it.

  • I've had one car horn ruin my entire day.

  • 39.

  • Car drivers hate cyclists and cyclists hate car drivers.

  • It's a war on the road at the moment.

  • Cycling has increased massively in popularity

  • and car drivers are not happy about it.

  • 40.

  • Our supermarkets are very big

  • and they have a huge range of pre-prepared food,

  • so ready meals, to cook in the microwave.

  • I've been to lots of other countries

  • and I've never seen the range that we have,

  • apart from, perhaps, in America.

  • 41.

  • If we live in a city

  • we tend to totally mind our own business.

  • We don't talk to our neighbours.

  • We maybe stretch to a hello sometimes.

  • And you really don't get to know people

  • outside of your own friend group

  • and your social activities and work.

  • In a village, however, it's completely different

  • and you have quite a hard time protecting your business.

  • If you tell a secret to someone the whole village will know.

  • I kind of like it though.

  • Number 42.

  • We find it incredibly rude if somebody talks on their phone,

  • loudly, on public transport.

  • And the best example of this

  • is the train going to and from Luton Airport

  • and Gatwick Airport.

  • You can see, before it arrives to Gatwick,

  • everyone's just sitting in silence,

  • and then as soon as you've gone past it

  • it's just filled with tourists that don't know

  • our society rules, just talking really really loudly

  • to their mums, saying that they've arrived safely

  • and all of the British people looking like,

  • they're talking loudly on public transport, what do we do.

  • 43.

  • Our tabloid gossip newspapers are disgusting.

  • They are terrible.

  • They lie so much, but we all secretly read them.

  • I can't say all of us,

  • but many of us will secretly read the Daily Mail.

  • 44.

  • In the countryside, especially,

  • we have milk delivered to our doorstep in bottles

  • and it's something that I'm very passionate about.

  • I'm really passionate about supporting our local milkman

  • and supporting our local dairy farmers.

  • I get my milk delivered on Monday and Thursday

  • and I love it, it's amazing,

  • we always have fresh milk at the door.

  • 45.

  • We generally tip 10% in restaurants

  • and we prefer to tip it in cash

  • 'cause then we know it goes directly

  • to the waiter or waitress.

  • However, some restaurants, especially London restaurants

  • or chain restaurants, will already add a service charge

  • to your bill, which is normally 12.5%,

  • and some of us will get very angry about this

  • and we'll ask for that to be taken off

  • and will, instead, give cash directly

  • to the waiter or waitress.

  • Because we know that they are not on the best wages

  • and those tips form a big part of what they earn,

  • and yes, yes I do that.

  • 46.

  • We're very indirect.

  • Instead of saying, "I don't like it", we would say

  • "Well I don't hate it."

  • Or, "It's not my cup of tea."

  • Yeah, we just hate being straight to the point.

  • We don't like offending people.

  • But it can be very very confusing for people

  • who aren't from here.

  • 47.

  • Most Sundays we have a meal called a Sunday roast.

  • We normally have it in a pub or our mum will cook it for us

  • and oh, it's the best meal in the world

  • and everyone's favourite Sunday roast

  • is their mum's Sunday roast,

  • and their mum's Sunday roast is supposedly better

  • than any other Sunday roast.

  • But everyone says that.

  • But my mum's genuinely is the best.

  • 48.

  • Although fish and chips are really famous here,

  • I would say that going out for a Chinese

  • and going out for a curry, are way more popular.

  • We do that way more often.

  • Fish and chips, I probably have it once every two years.

  • Fish and chip shops have declined in quality.

  • Number 49.

  • We will do literally everything in our power

  • to avoid the most minor awkward situation.

  • I was walking with my friend the other day,

  • she is quite awkward,

  • and she had a plastic bag full of shopping.

  • She saw someone she knew, the bag broke and emptied out,

  • but instead of stopping to pick it up,

  • which would mean she would have to talk to this person,

  • she just carried on walking with an empty bag.

  • And I just thought that is peak British there.

  • Number 50.

  • Women seriously underdress for the weather or nights out.

  • On New Year's Eve you will see women in like bikini tops

  • and tiny dresses, bare legs, strappy heels.

  • But they don't necessarily get cold

  • and this is a phenomenon we like to call the beer blanket.

  • Once you have enough beer in you, you can't feel the cold.

  • Right, those are my 50 random weird

  • and just a bit quirky facts about British culture

  • and British life.

  • I hope you enjoyed them.

  • Don't forget to check out Audible.

  • You can claim your free audiobook

  • and 30 day free trial, in the description box,

  • along with my recommendations.

  • Just click on the link.

  • Don't forget to connect with me on all of my social media.

  • I've got my Facebook, I've got my Instagram

  • and I've got my Twitter.

  • And I shall see you soon for another lesson.

  • (imitates kissing)

  • (upbeat music)

(upbeat music)

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