10 Culture Shocks Living In The UK
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- čas přidán 4. 12. 2022
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Greenwich observatory is literally the centre of the world.its where time and navigation starts.. the reason is that the first reliable time piece or chronometer was placed in the building while it's brother was taken by captain Cook around the other side of the world and back, upon return the two pieces were compared to see if they kept the same time.... they had as little as a couple of seconds difference, this was the biggest breakthrough in navigating history.....( Having an accurate time piece meant ships could sail in open seas and not have to keep land in sight)...... Longitude line " zero or O" on the world map is directly through Greenwich......
So accurate navigation and accurate time keeping in any atmospheric conditions is yet another British invention.....
Basically, London is a completely different world to the rest of England!
haha other people have told us that too! We should explore other cities soon :D
@@JossAndJanik Other cities unless you head for historic ones such as Bath or York would feel very London like, try to get out of the cities to some truly rural areas even if only for a day, I think londoners would get a culture shock doing that.
It might as well be Monte Carlo.
@@chrisfortune1813 try smaller cities like lincoln or yes just rural areas , the cotswolds, lake district etc
London is not England
The college you were talking about was built in the late 1600's as a hospital for seamen. Then in the late 1800's it became the Royal Naval College where navy officers were trained. Then, in 1998 it became the University of Greenwich. It has some amazing painted ceilings and architecture. I believe it was a Wren building.
It also was in a Thor film
It is also the campus for Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music & Dance
@@A14Rors
It is also the place where the body of Lord Nelson was taken for laying in state, in the painted hall, before his funeral at St Paul's Cathedral on January 9th 1806.
An amazing positive cultural shock: museums are free!
All the national (gov't funded ones are).But, others do charge entry: so worth checking first.
One of our favorite things here!
Not all free, your supposed to make a donation
I don’t know why we’re standing on the right side of the escalators.
You’re doing it correctly (where you drive on the right) since you overtake someone on the left.
@@nicola_k-s if you want
Hello guys, service charge is not compulsory to pay, and yes it’s a tip usually divided among all front of house and kitchen staff. If you don’t have a good service you can totally ask for the charge to be taken off your bill since it’s discretionary, hope it helps 😊
Discretionary but you have to ask to have it taken off? Hm
Taking it off will feel like it’s especially to show service was shit
@@ja_u Tipping should always be optional because workers should be paid a living wage. It's the law.
@@ja_u You're not even obliged to pay the bill if it's that bad, but best not to eat it, then try that.
Actually it is … it’s not a tip. Tip is what you leave on top of that you are really satisfied with the service however a lot less than in the US it can be 0-10%. And if you are really dissatisfied you can get it taken out of the whole bill not specifically the service charge.
@@kristinapaxton9686 should should should should, yeah but no
As a Brit it really made me smile when you said London looked like Harry Potter
There is so much wonderful architecture in London, the history is fascinating.
I live in the Shires about an hour north of London and i love going into london for a day trip, it is a very culturally diverse city, however to get a true flavour of Britain you need to travel outside of london.
Also this new fashion with the fake eyelashes is awful and looks chavy in my opinion.😊
Try to travel up north to Yorkshire especially York. The city goes back in history as far as the Vikings. The Yorkshire coast very picturesque. Whitby is where Bram Stokers Dracula have landed in his novel. Well worth the visit.
It is much older than the Vikings. Try Roman and before.
We drive on the left side of the road because 90% of people are right handed so when you hold a lance (in your right hand) whilst on the back of a horse you are closest to your opponent. We stand on the right side of an escalator for the same reason, you can use your dominant hand to hold the rail. You can chose to remove the service charge if you are unhappy with the service.
Jousting isn't a good example as when jousting you hold the lance in your right hand and attack the opponent on your left. Swords!
Yes. It’s about swords, not lances.
Also means two right-handed people can shake hands 🤝 with the least effort.
I don't see why we have to justify that driving on the left hand side is valid with anecdotes of mediaeval jousters and the such. Since the times when everyone drove/rode on whichever side of the road took their fancy, MORE countries adopted the left hand side of the road to drive on. It's only since various countries tried to standardise, (to avoid border head-on crashes) that regulations were enforced as to which side to drive on. Since many countries had been under the control of (Napoleonic) French rule for some time, the obvious decision was made to drive on the right hand side. Great Brtitain, as an island, wasn't subject to these regulations and so continued to drive on the left hand side.
London isn’t really like the rest of the UK , some things are the same but you really need to visit other places to get a real sense of what we’re really like . A major thing is people are a lot friendlier outside of London lol 😂.
I'm tired of hearing this. I'm from Manchester.. I never get into a conversation with a stranger in the north. I visit London about 6 times a year & always end up talking to a stranger. A far friendlier place.
As a Mexican that has lived in the UK for almost 9y now I can tell you that since Mexico I've learned to look both sides on the street (nunca falta el pendejo) and that saved me here when moving to the UK as I always looked to the "wrong side" in Mexico.
Regardless the currency its true, pretty much since the pandemic no one uses cash now, which was annoying back in Mexico as they have the card machines with the contactless "but its not working" hahaha
For the pre-cook meals I've heard somewhere that this come since the WWII I think where UK struggled with food and with gas that big companies started making them and since then they are available.
The tip I think is mostly in big cities and depending on the restaurant, outside its not common to have it included and you can actually refuse to give it.
Things that I have noticed and got into my nerves is that most of the toilets, when you want to wash your hands they have either cold or hot water, so either you freeze your hands or get them burn (the water is pretty hot) which is so annoying as a 1st world country. Also the girls in here tend to look very ... orange, they use a lot of fake tan and sometimes you can see the lines.
Keep enjoying guys!
Same here, bogotana en UK
“Nunca falta el pendejo” JAJA México mágico
The orange tan is because of excessive drinking of tango or irn - bru in Scotland.
Apropos- I really should book another visit to México...
The water thing should only be an issue in public toilets if they have no sink plug, stopper or whatever it's called
The thing with the separate taps dates back to having water tanks in the loft, cold water would come from the mains supply and was drinkable, but hot water came from the tank and was not drinkable because it was standing water and could contain harmful bacteria, so to prevent contamination of the water from the tap they were separated.
It just hasn't really bothered us enough to change it everywhere after most hot water was changed to mains supply. Also, some households and other establishments still have water tanks in the loft supplying the bathroom (not drinkable), and the kitchen is mains water (drinkable) as every household should have a supply of drinkable water.
I think London is very different to the rest of the UK. Nobody is obliged to pay service charges in restaurants. It is something people do only if they want and some people don't. Covid changed things in the UK. People use contact less a lot now as we were encouraged to do so to help stop infection. I had to change my habits as I was a prefers cash girl. It has just become a habit now. The UK has a lot more to offer than London.
Covid was used to push a cashless controlled society, covid is airborne, so was complete BS, use cash wherever you can, once it’s gone you will be totally state controlled, not a good citizen your card will be declined, gravelled too far your card will be declined - get the picture!
@@debbiewindsor6834 I am a nurse working in the NHS and I am sorry but Covid was mainly spread on hands. Hence the handwashing and hand gel everywhere. Yes it could be spread by coughs and sneezes so we wore masks.
You know "C" isn't transmissible by cash, right?
TPTB used "C" as an excuse for installing some seriously nasty laws, regulations and just plain old panic.
@@willbass2869 sorry but yes cash could get infected with C. It did become a transmission risk. Basic infection control.
I don’t live in London, but have noticed a lot of places have gone cashless, which I personally don’t like.
I couldn’t help but laugh when you said British girls look ‘British’. But thinking about it, I actually say the same about Eastern European girls. Not by the makeup, but by the shape of their faces 🤷🏼♀️
Boycott cashless and support cash-friendly if you want cash to survive and Big Brother to lose market share.
@@juliapigworthy unfortunately easier said than done when it’s happening everywhere.
"They" want everyone on digital money because they can control it. Ask a Canadian trucker. (Google of you don't know about their bank accounts being frozen for refusing vaccine passports.) "They" are talking about carbon footprint control by limiting your expenditure on certain things. Keep cash alive.
@@glennmealing6907 yeah I saw something about Canadian truckers. I absolutely agree, it’s all about control and it’s scary what’s happening.
@@titchs9098 I'm not aware of anywhere in the Midlands that doesn't accept cash; I only use my card for major purchases, but for general shopping it's always cash.
I'm from UK. (And a fellow potterhead) I have never heard of having to walk on a certain side of the street. Just walk where you want.
I worked in Minsk for a number of years and there you walked on the same side of the pavement as if you were driving a car (in theory), so on the left.
It did actually make things easier, although a great many of the pavements are so wide it doesn't make a huge difference - which is even better.
In London some streets do have guidelines on the street to keep the flow of pedestrian traffic going in rush hour ……usually the bridges but definitely most places don’t 😄
@@TheHookahSmokingCaterpillar- That’s completely barmy. The rule of the countryside is you walk on the side of the road where you face oncoming cars. That way, on narrow lanes you have the maximum amount of time to get out of their way.
@@sirrathersplendid4825 It is extremely rare to find pavements in rural Belarus and the rule only applies on them. It's not barmy at all, it just means that on narrow pavements you get less of the 'dance' for who shall pass on what side.
@@TheHookahSmokingCaterpillar - Ah. I guess you mean that people mentally divide the pavement (US sidewalk) into two halves, and then walk on the side as they would when driving? I was thinking more of a country lane, where there’s very little foot traffic and typically no pavement.
The “ready made meals”, as we call them, are most definitely a British thing all over the country. It was a cultural shock for me too, as well as the amount of sandwiches they have in almost any store!
And as soon as Joss mentioned the makeup I was like EYELASHES, because yesss! It’s such a common thing in young british girls. Personally, I don’t like it lol, but you do see it a lot and IT IS A THING.
Love you guys! Enjoy your stay here and come to visit me in Sussex please 😂😂💖
False eyelashes are largely seen on working class girls only.
@@robanks3895 : I think they look like sofa-beds myself, ridiculous, ugly accessory.
@@robanks3895 Yep , Adele 😂
So embarrassing about the false eyelashes, false lips is a pet hate of mine too and too much make up 😂
@@robanks3895 yes, and excess make-up.
Did you notice the metal line on the ground at Greenwich? It represents the Prime Meridian of the World -- Longitude 0. Everywhere on earth is measured in terms of distance east and west from this line.
If you want a to walk up a street that really feels like Harry Potter, you'll love The Shambles in York! It's what the Diagon Alley set was based on in the films.
I´m catching up to all your daily videos and I´M LOVING IT. It felt like you were not as interested in making videos anymore for a bit (which is fine) and it just feels like you´re yourselves again. Traveling was a big part of your lives and i´m glad to see you bringing it back.
This winter in the UK is colder than other years to be honest. The sad part about the plastic issue is not all councils recycle the plastic trays, so yeah there's a lot of waste.
About one week has been cold. The rest of the Autumn and Winter has been above average.
It totally isn't. It's just wintery weather in winter. 🤣
If you think this is cold you'll love January.
The Look Left/Right thing is only prevalent in cities with higher levels of (international) tourism. The rural parts of the U.K. lack it.
To be honest I don't know anywhere else in the UK that does it except London! Maybe Manchester?
As for driving on the left, most Eastern European countries used to drive on the last but when WWII happened they were forced to drive on the right hand side of the road. I found this out when looking at some CZcams videos a few years ago about life in European countries and was amazed to see trams and cars driving on the left!
I was told that it was due to Napoleon and it helped English spies stand out as they rode on the left by default.
Pretty sure that it was Napoleon who standardised things across most of Central Europe, not WW2. Sweden didn’t switch over until 1967.
Most evidence suggest the ancient Romans drove on the left, like the Brits still do today.
Yeah, maybe not Napoleon at all. Just read the Wiki article and it’s far more complicated. The former Austro-Hungarian empire didn’t switch over to the right until the early 1930s. And it’s not even certain that the Romans drove on the left, judging from evidence in Pompeii. Italian cities each had their own rules as late as the 1920s or 30s!
So happy to see your videos. My husband and I are going to London this Wednesday from Chicago.
Yeah, we want the song 🎄
Thanks for this video ! ❤🥰
Really enjoyed that, subbed.
Brit here (outside of London). I can confirm that the cashless thing is pretty much everywhere now. The few places that don't have card machines are generally small, local service businesses like dance classes, and they generally accept direct bank transfer as payment if you don't have cash. In the UK you can send an instant bank transfer to anyone for free under something like £15 000 if you have their account details, so it's super convenient. I completely stopped taking my wallet with me anywhere after the pandemic, and now I just bring ID and my phone for making contactless payments, since there's effectively no upper limit for contactless when it's on a phone because you have to authenticate it.
Regarding make-up, I found it to be the opposite for me coming from Romania where girls use a lot of make-up. I noticed British girls are quite natural with their hair and make-up. The young girls use a lot of orangey make-up indeed.
@@emmamusic4600 yes, it is very heavy! Lots of conturing etc.
Love you guysss thank you for posting every dayyy
So depressed and fan since 2018 and glad you cheer me up this month, 27 and no goals in my life but you make my days better
I'm studying tech! well, I'm starting soon. This world has many opportunities, specially if you manage a good English.
I felt the same at 27 en started to study, lol I'm 30 and still studying but well it is at least a goal ..
Don't give up - make a plan - fail & fail again, but never give up ( this isn't patronising, but I've been there).
I want to hear you guys sing your original Christmas carol! I think it's so cute when Janik says "super much."
Hi guys!! ❤️ I love your daily videos and I can't thank you enough for doing this, I can't imagine the super big effort you are putting in this, it's such a gorgeous present for Christmas 🎄💜 Love you. Greetings from México 🇲🇽
I had the same problem with walking when I moved from theUK to USA. I realized I kept walking into people and that’s when it dawned on me that people walk on the same side that they drive on!!😂😂
Glad your enjoying London, we had an extra cold December I work in int and it was tough for me.
It looks like you were down by the Greenwich naval hospital buildings designed by Christopher Wren. The ship you saw is the Cutty Sark.
Great vlog, really funny and enjoyable, hope you had fun!
You can walk under the Thames to the other side it's the big red bricked dome opposite the Cutty Sark.
Isambard Kingdom Brunel's father constructed it and it had rows if shops during its era....
Love you guys!! I love this video because I am actually going to the UK
Glad you're having fun, love your observations, it's good for us to know.
Yes, we drive on the wrong side of the road....but we all do it at the same time....mostly.
Just like one of the most car-exporting countries in the world - Japan.
That's the same exact price we pay for mobile data in Italy. I'm currently living in the USA and it's painful how much I pay for so little service.
Siii quiero verlos cantar su villancico, muy interesante y divertido el video, love u guys 🫶🏻✨❣️
I live in Greenwich! It's great to see you enjoying the area
Welcome to England/UK and if you want to have your mind blown (her mind) head North to Newcastle upon Tyne (where the first light bulb was in a street and windscreen wiper was invented and the iPhone designed) then rent a car and head east to Tynemouth and when you get to Tynemouth castle (the river mouth of one of the most important rivers in the UK) drive north about 20 miles and you end up in a small place called Newbiggan, and there is a statue of a man and woman in the sea, but that's by the by, keep heading north and when you leave Newbiggan you will see a sign that says "coastal route" and for the next 60 miles you will be amazed, and your lass will be astounded (not telling you), but that to me is one of the greatest, but thankfully, not well known parts of England. I promise that you will come across beaches that have few people on, but visit these places Bamburgh (Bam-bra your last stop unless heading to Edinburgh Edin-bra) Craster, Alnwick, walkworth, Druridge Bay, Beadnell Bay, seahouses, and honestly, that 60 miles will be your most viewed video. (Don't tell anyone in the south) visit Grey street in Newcastle first, the first Street in the world with electric lights, and our bridge (Tyne bridge) is the bridge that Sydney bridge in Australia is copied from. All the best.
Ilove Newcastle friendliest people ever
We don't tip in UK! In the last 10 years, they started adding "service charges" in the bills which you can generally ask to remove but looked down onwards. Also, it's free to get tap water in all restaurants !
Tipping or extra service charges are very common in restaurants, but that's about it. Charging for water is ridiculous, unless it's purely for the bottled variety
I’ve always tipped in restaurants but not in other places.
Thankfully tipping is not expected in pubs or places with counter or buffet service or where you pay up front.
In restaurants where you have waiters, some tipping is expected - 7% to 10% is the norm, 15% generous.
Love your videos👍
hahaha as a former Londoner...I found it cute what you said "British people like doing things differently"...well. yes..this is the case
It's not British people that do things differently-it's everybody else!
@@g.g.dunnitt9181 perrrrrrrfect...hahahahaha
In Leather Lane most of the street foods come in cardboard or bamboo holders and this is surely true in other street markets. So buy from leather lane monday's to Fridays. Some take away places also do this.
I do, quite often!
A Swirling Delight! Subscribed!
Nice people, hope you enjoy London and see more of the uk
When you showed the pavements with the sign saying walk on the left is I think left over from covid we walk both ways usually xx
Everything in the the uk is different from london cost of living in london is crazy up north is totally different you can get cheaper places to rent as long as you stay away from the popular area
It does rain but not all the time. I've lived here for 24 years. This year, the summer was beautiful and it didn't rain at all. Unfortunately, you have chosen the winter to come over here
It's been cold (and the days are much shorter in winter). In the summer it's still light outside at 9pm.
BTW you make a lovely and good looking couple.
We went in summer as well and we had amazing weather! Actually now in winter we barely had any rainy days either, that was more of a joke cuz at that very second it started to rain 😄
London is actually the driest part of Britain. The rainfall is less than half that of west coast cities like Manchester and Bristol. Indeed, I believe it gets less rainfall than many cities on the Continent.
The money thing was excellerated by covid with many businesses supported to go cashless. The pre prepared food is very much a london thing, partly because of busy lifestyles but also increasing housing issues. Lots of people are having to house share and reduce the space available to cook and prepare food
Accelerated.
You guys look so cold! We'd probably be on the first plane back to warm Mexico, lol. Loving these Christmas vlogs from you guys!
Of course we want that Christmas Carrol. You were both so into it right away! Los amo.
you two are joyous!
I'm English and a culture shock for me when I went to London is I see no actual native English people your in England but there is no English culture left in London or many of our big cities anymore you need to go to the country side while it's still English to experience English culture Winston from London or Muhammad from London can't teach you English culture 👍🏻🤔🏴
What’s a native English person??
@@soniabynoe196The native English People are an Ethnic people native to England as it will tell you if you Google it read it your be educated as they say 😉🏴👍🏻
Ditto Dublin and Ireland. People jet in and out as tourists thinking they’ve seen Ireland. Ah … wrong, sorry. Try again. 😂
@@richardjohnston3359 ohhhhhhhhhhh you’re THAT GUY!!!!!!!!!
@@soniabynoe196 One of many 😉👍🏻🏴
Other parts of the UK do use cash more and I do not kow any busker who has a card reader in Manchester. Where I live (West Yorkshire), we try to avoid plastic and we recycle. A lot of places do not recycle properly.
We! Outside London, also have pre-cooked meals hanging outside our turf hovels & caves drying out.
The pre cooked food is what I miss in Germany so much! I visit my friend in England once a year for an eating tour.
I love cooking so mostly cook from scratch, but I found the lack of premade food in Germany very frustrating when I lived there. I had a baby over there and so to have the option to grab a ready meal when I’d had 2 hours sleep in a week would have been good.
We were in London in July. On the freeway, cars pass on the right. It makes more sense to follow driving laws when walking wherever you go.
We do have a lot of pre prepared food available in all supermarkets across the country...its because a lot of us work long hours with long distance or slow commute times, which makes conveniently pre prepared meals an attractive option when under time pressure.
Great video. Great comments. London is it's own little world, and unfortunately tourism suffers from it's own success. Absolutely Everybody heads for London. I hope you get to tour the rest of our country (May is our mildest month for weather). :)
Hey guys! First off, love you guys. I love seeing this side of traveling. I've never been to London but hope to one day. Could you guys maybe make a video or give me tips on getting the most for my money when traveling abroad? It feels a little intimidating traveling somewhere I've never been and would really appreciate some insight. Thanks guys! I look forward to seeing your videos everyday!
Thanks so much Erika! We will think about a video like that :)
1. It's not the wrong side of the road, it's the right side of the road. 2. In the rest of the UK we accept cash. 3. Pre-cooked food is a London thing. 4. Lash extensions are a young woman thing.
Escucho «see u tomorrow» y me emociono al chile jajaja ❤️❤️❤️. Los tqm.
Joss en el metro de México en las escaleras eléctricas nos orillamos a la derecha si no queremos avanzar y dejamos que pasen del lado izquierdo los que quieren subir rápido las escaleras, en la gran mayoría de las veces me ha tocado eso y me ha tocado a veces quedarme en la derecha y otras avanzar por la izquierda, igual no digo que luego no haya desman pero por lo menos a mi y a mi novio nos ha tocado vivir eso, saludos, me gusta que suban videos más veces👍😊 y sí, canten su Xmxs Carol
Casi nunca se respeta eso. Una vez sí lo vi pero porque había personas organizando de esa manera pero normalmente todos se quedan parados obstruyendo la escalera.
justo eso iba a comentar, también en los centros comerciales es igual te vas a la derecha si no tienes prisa y quienes van rápido para el cine o pagar algo suben por la izquierda.
Genauso ist es in Deutschland, wir gehen nur links auf der Rolltreppe zum überholen, so wie auf der Autobahn oder mehrspurigen Straßen. Also doch alles konsistent in Deutschland, und die Brits sind da weird.
i recommend a bus trip through the peak district to see some beautiful rural england, also of historic interest, the beginning of manufactories, arkwright's spinning jenny etc.
about colleges and universities: in the UK, colleges are part of a university. for instance, the university of cambridge has multiple colleges, like the kings college.
Only some, not all.
@@scruffyo4460 yea
Plus people go to community colleges and these are not part of universities. So if you say you are going to college, you will mean you're not going to a college that is part of a university.
Nah, this is basically wrong. Fancy universities do have “colleges”, but this isn’t what English people mean at all when they talk about college.
College is between secondary school and university. You can finish secondary school at sixteen and stop your education. If you want to go to uni you have to go to college for two years first (16-18) and get A levels (or possible a diploma that awards university points). But you can also quit education after college and start work then, if you want to. Everything up until university is free. And when I went to
Some colleges are a part of the secondary school (they are often called “sixth forms”).I think most are completely separate and only focus on college age students
@@cleoldbagtraallsorts3380 yes, colleges and universities have nothing to do with each other (except the colleges OP was referring to, which is not the typical meaning).
community colleges aren’t a thing in the uk, though.
College is free. But the college qualifications (A levels and diplomas) are not equal to a uni degree. They are qualifications you have to earn in order to attend uni… or you can learn something actually useful (like a trade) and go straight to work after college too
Personal style here is perhaps depending on age a little more eccentric. So the Young Girls will be experimenting alot more, the 20's 30's generally Conservative corporate. Weekend's- all styles for them go! After that, you've earned the right to dress however you feel or suits, depending on season and weather!
Hope it helps.
Last time I went to see the Cutty Sark, it was a rusted metal skeleton, the result of a fire that had destroyed it completely, except for a couple of masts that had been removed to be repaired.
Here in New Zealand even going to the market, most stalls will have an Eftpos (electronic fund transfer at point of sale), machine so there is no need to carry cash, and if you need to give money to a friend we use direct money transfer, free of any charges.
I'm an Aussie, so many things are pretty similar except measurements as we use metric, and escalators we ALWAYS stand on the left side. We also are much more "French/Au Naturale" in makeup style over 25, except for Gen Z's who are waaaay more "Kardashian/Cardi B" or very Hipster like Portlandia lol.
The guy in the beginning saying hi to the cámara in the back 😂 I love you guys ❤️ I hope to visit England one day too
What a lovely couple. Welcome! Try to escape London and experience the cultural differences in, say, Cambridge (not too far from London by train or bus).
That was fun to watch, thank you.
Countries that drive on the left include Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Macau, Japan, Thailand, Ireland, Singapore, South Africa, India/Pakistan/Bangladesh, a few other Caribbean, Asian and African countries... quite a lot, actually.
'Sidewalks' are called 'pavements' in the UK, just to add to the confusion! Also, we sell petrol (gas) in litres, but we measure the economy of cars in Miles per Gallon..! Crazy. No-one uses gallons anymore! And yet we buy milk and beer in Pints.
Tips are not always included, outside of London... you have to check the bill. If it's included, you can ask to remove it. Otherwise, 10% is usual if you're happy.
You should go to Westminster and take the river tour.
I leave near Greenwich
So crazy seeing you guys so close to where I used to live. Hope you're enjoying your time up here in the Arctic Circle!! The pound used to be a lot stronger. It's taken a battering of late and isn't far from being 1:1 with the Euro :-( Joss, when talking about amounts of money here, £2.50 would be said as "two-fifty" or "two pounds fifty". We would probably (initially) interpret "Two fifty pounds" as £250! Using a debit card abroad will probably cost you big time. When I go abroad, I use a credit card that doesn't charge me for using it abroad. I do all my transactions in the local currency and just pay the exchange rate on the one occasion when I pay it off after I've got back home. Could be something to look in to. Obviously I have no idea about Mexican or German credit cards, so can't really suggest anything.
Yeah, opening a Wise account would help as well. Im Mexican and my boyfriend is from the UK, we're here in Winchester for the holidays and I ordered a wise card to my mother in law's house since Wise doesnt send cards to Mexico yet. It works wonders and its contactless as well lol
I think in some European countries there is a charge for credit card use, i.e. it isn't free even if you pay off the whole balance each month.
I only have a Debit card as it's so easy to be tempted to spend with a Credit card. Also I don't have contactless, as I got robbed and the thieves spent my money all over town. But I'm 72 and live in a small town in Yorkshire, nearly 200 miles north of London. There still plenty of places where we can spend cash here. Last time I was in London in June this year, the Taxis insisted on cash.
London is the best place to live. Full of oportunities, excellent accent, very multicutural and the whole beautiful city is a museun... aaand also the many beautiful green parks thanks to the crazy rain haha London is a little bit crazy, sometimes raining and two minutes later sunny. I really loved to lived there while I been studying english. I miss you London, I love you.
Me too. Born in Stratford E.15, living in the Midlands as I enter my retirement.
So many friends, so many nationalities, so many points of view...
"die-versity" + proximity = war
@@willbass2869the truth is quite the reverse. Both truth never bothers you
Lol there are thousands of different accents here. As to beautiful green parks, the council haven't bothered maintaining my local park this year and it's overgrown, grass and weeds 1 metre high, and you have to duck beneath branches walking on the paths because they haven't trimmed the trees. Inside the entrance people just dump rubbish. A woman was raped there a few weeks ago.
We have pre-cooked meals are available all over the UK, but a lot of people don’t buy them, or might buy them occasionally - maybe on a Friday night out, instead of a take away.
Many restaurants only add service charge on tables over 4 or 6 dinners. Many restaurants don't add it at all but I usually leave 10% because I used to work in a restaurant and appreciated the tip. I have family members and friends who don't leave a tip and it embarrasses me when I'm with them.
Lets hear the Christmas Carol!!!
As a point we do not drive in the wrong side of the street! We just drive on the left!
1:33 That is the Admiral college. Royal navy college. This location was used to film the british miniserie Poldark.
In Spain, we do it as Germans! We stand in the right side of the scalators so that people run in the left side :)
Thank you so much for making these videos, I'm going to London march of next year and I feel so nervous, this will help me a lot.
Enjoyable vid! Happy to watch more. NB - The UK (well England specifically) has a number of collegiate and federal universities. The individual entities are usually called a college. It's thus fine to say you went to college.
Thanks for sharing this cultural shock ✨
Yes, service charge is the tip! Also I live mostly on ready meals (pre-cooked meals), & I don’t live in London!
You two are a hoot!
London is a culture shock even for other Brits because it's a different world from rest of the UK. Here in Warwickshire the pace of life is slower, people are generally more sociable and cost of living is far far cheaper than London even though it's just under 2 hours away by train.
It will be fun to listen to the Christmas carol jajajajaja.
you should look at the escalator like a highway, it is one way, so in germany you are doing it right. slower people stand on the right, quicker go on the left side, but everyone is moving in the same direction.
That's a city thing getting service charges, we don't do tips at All because we pay our workers a decent minimum wage compared to the usa food restaurants.
Though leaving gifts for servers is a nice thing to do.
London companies brought in service charges to take advantage of tourism, and one reason used is to cover the cost of the London bubble (London just costs twice as much as any other city in the UK).
Burger and chips London £10-15. Leeds etc £6.95-8.95 (with a drink)
For escalators, think about multi lane driving - normal lane on the right and passing lane on the left. So I think you have it correct in Germany and it's wrong here in the UK because we have escalators reversed compared to driving
I live in Dublin and the girls with fake eyelashes were such a culture shock here for me too, they are peculiar haha and how they also use a ton of fake tan sprays lol
I have to say it's quite silly. Esp when it's so obv fake.lol
😂 and we won’t even talk about the thick drawn on eyebrows that look like hairy caterpillars
@@shirleyboyes6080 or the lips so pumped up that they look like they are having an allegic reaction
Traveller chic
@@shirleyboyes6080it’s what I call “the angry bird” look
ready meals are available everywhere not just london, service charge is a tip, you can say no if you want to
It's WAAAY colder in parts of North America and lots of snow too lolol!
En la ciudad de México también hacemos lo de las escaleras jajaja
Walking on escalators feels more like passing a slower car driving in the same direction, so I can understand why Germans walk on the left side of an escalator when they use the left lane for passing. Walking down a sidewalk where other people are walking in the opposite direction, I can understand that matching the side of the road people drive on.
Gren-itch has the Royal Naval College. It still has a function as part of the Royal Navy, I understand.
In the UK University is a collection of colleges. For example Kings College is in London University, there are 40+ colleges in Oxford University.
The UK never changed sides of the road, you did. We're on the correct side having not switched. Either you were influenced by France or later the USA after they were infouenced by France.
It's another example of Emperor Napoleon influencing democracies against Britain.
He standardised most of the weights and measures in France, too. Down from a known 250,000 different ones, to about 300.
None of which are used in the US, being the origin of the metric system.
@@stevetheduck1425 Not necessarily Napoleon, or only Napoleon, the American revolutionary war and 1812 war where triggered by France as a diversionary act against the British. I know the Americans think it was all about their independence, but really it was just an attempt to draw forces months away prior to French military challenges closer to home...
The metric system is older than you think...
_1670: Gabriel Mouton proposed his decimal system of measurement based on a fraction of the Earth’s circumference_
_1671: Jean Picard proposed the swinging pendulum as a measure of length_
_1790: The National Assembly of France asked the French Academy of Sciences to create a standard system of weights and measures_
_1795: France adopted the metric system_
Who do you state is the origin of the metric system, because it predates the USA. In fact the USA uses the British imperial system with some rather odd variances. Like pints and gallons being 20% smaller, but essentially the USA is one of the few clinging on to imperial weights and measures.
Los quiero :) fan desde el 2017 💟 Saludos desde México.