English to USA Translations
Replies
-
Question for the British: What do you call the cart you put your groceries in while shopping? We have a few variations between northern and southern US. In the north, it is either carriage or shopping cart. In the south I have heard people call them buggies.
I've lived in Georgia and Florida and I always hear the people with the Southern accents call them buggies. It's us Yankee carpetbaggers who call them carts. :-) So I hear both. I can't remember hearing anyone call a bag a sack, though. Not saying it isn't the case, I just haven't noticed it.
I grew up in VA and call them "buggies". I'm in Lexington KY right now and no one here calls them buggies and they look at me really funny when I do. lol They call them "carts".0 -
UK Roundabout = US Rotary
I've only heard them called roundabouts in the US. Rotary is a club (Rotary International).
I know they are Rotaries in the Northeast. My wife is from Boston and I grew up in the UK so we argue all the time about it.
Weird, I'm from the NE and we don't even have roundabouts (which is what they'd be called if we did). Of course, Boston is a bit of an aberration...
Oh Really, says the guy from Boston who still pronounces his Rs.
Really! I'm a New Yorker and a big Yankees fan, so I have to get it in where I can0 -
Question for the British: What do you call the cart you put your groceries in while shopping? We have a few variations between northern and southern US. In the north, it is either carriage or shopping cart. In the south I have heard people call them buggies.
I'm from NY, so they're carts. But some people here in VA call them buggies. Also, they put my groceries in bags, but Southerners' in sacks.
What about when something is on the opposite corner from another thing? Where I'm from, that's "kitty corner" (and I have no idea why) but here in the South they say "caddy corner".
In the UK we call them shopping trollies, and if something was on the opposite corner from something else I would say they are diagonally across from each other.0 -
What about the thing you sit on in a sitting room? We have sofas. WHat are they in the US?0
-
Question for the British: What do you call the cart you put your groceries in while shopping? We have a few variations between northern and southern US. In the north, it is either carriage or shopping cart. In the south I have heard people call them buggies.
I've lived in Georgia and Florida and I always hear the people with the Southern accents call them buggies. It's us Yankee carpetbaggers who call them carts. :-) So I hear both. I can't remember hearing anyone call a bag a sack, though. Not saying it isn't the case, I just haven't noticed it.
We call a shopping cart a trolly over in the UK!0 -
What about the thing you sit on in a sitting room? We have sofas. WHat are they in the US?
Sofas or couches.
But we usually call it a living room unless we're super rich. :-)0 -
Elevator - lift
Cookie - biscuit
Pants - trousers
Pants - underwear
zucchini - courgette
eggplant - aubergine
There are hundreds of these, I have an American boyfriend and he laughs at my Englishisms all the time!0 -
What about the thing you sit on in a sitting room? We have sofas. WHat are they in the US?
I say both "sofa" and "couch". My grandfather used to call in a "davenport", though :laugh:0 -
My husband is British and I am American. Before our wedding the family was sitting together discussing what they would wear. His mum was worried about someone taking her shopping and what she would buy. I told her not to worry so much about it. I told her she could just wear pants if she wanted. Everyone looked shocked for a moment and then they started laughing. At the time I did not realize that I told his mum she could go to the wedding in just her underpants.0
-
I can see how sometimes a child's meal is called tea, as they are usually hungry when they get out of school, so some children have a meal at 4 or 5 pm, which is tea time, but I don't think anyone would call an evening meal tea. Tea is definitely afternoon.
Nope, it honestly varies from family to family. We still ask each other "what you having for your tea tonight?"0 -
What about the thing you sit on in a sitting room? We have sofas. WHat are they in the US?
Sofas or couches.
But we usually call it a living room unless we're super rich. :-)
Can also be called a settee I say couch most of the time0 -
Oh and "front room" instead of living/sitting room!0
-
What about the thing you sit on in a sitting room? We have sofas. WHat are they in the US?
We call this a sofa, couch....if it's a 2 seater, we sometimes call it a love seat....because two people in LOVE can sit together.0 -
holiday = vacation0
-
I have one
Washroom (Canada) - Bathroom (US)
Washroom (US) - Laundry room (Canada)
Maybe I should be more specific. I heard this in West Virginia, I don't know if it's true across the US0 -
What about the thing you sit on in a sitting room? We have sofas. WHat are they in the US?
We call this a sofa, couch....if it's a 2 seater, we sometimes call it a love seat....because two people in LOVE can sit together.
...or two people can uncomfortably sit too close to one another if at a party and all the other good spots are taken. haha.
depends on the love seat though0 -
I have one
Washroom (Canada) - Bathroom (US)
Washroom (US) - Laundry room (Canada)
It's a laundry room in the US. At least in my experience.0 -
Question for the British: What do you call the cart you put your groceries in while shopping? We have a few variations between northern and southern US. In the north, it is either carriage or shopping cart. In the south I have heard people call them buggies.
I've lived in Georgia and Florida and I always hear the people with the Southern accents call them buggies. It's us Yankee carpetbaggers who call them carts. :-) So I hear both. I can't remember hearing anyone call a bag a sack, though. Not saying it isn't the case, I just haven't noticed it.
We definitely call them buggies in the south!!0 -
Another one I've run across here on MFP:
US drive-through > UK Take-away
Take away isn't just a drive through, it's usually an order for pick up for a delivery.0 -
Question for the British: What do you call the cart you put your groceries in while shopping? We have a few variations between northern and southern US. In the north, it is either carriage or shopping cart. In the south I have heard people call them buggies.
I've lived in Georgia and Florida and I always hear the people with the Southern accents call them buggies. It's us Yankee carpetbaggers who call them carts. :-) So I hear both. I can't remember hearing anyone call a bag a sack, though. Not saying it isn't the case, I just haven't noticed it.
We definitely call them buggies in the south!!
I have noticed that NO ONE in the US calls them carriages??? really? in CT it is quite common.0 -
Question for the British: What do you call the cart you put your groceries in while shopping? We have a few variations between northern and southern US. In the north, it is either carriage or shopping cart. In the south I have heard people call them buggies.
I've lived in Georgia and Florida and I always hear the people with the Southern accents call them buggies. It's us Yankee carpetbaggers who call them carts. :-) So I hear both. I can't remember hearing anyone call a bag a sack, though. Not saying it isn't the case, I just haven't noticed it.
We definitely call them buggies in the south!!
You probably ran into more Northerners in those places. Where I lived in GA was a TINY place. 50,000 total population for the county, so a lot of "natives."
Where I live now is bigger and we still have a lot of transplants, but there are a lot of people here who grew up in the rural South and they call them buggies.0 -
haha we don't say 'knock me up' or 'gataux'
love that Americans think we do though.
you say 'pissed' to mean angry.... i keep thinking you're describing yourself as 'so drunk' not 'so angry'...
xxx
That pissed thing is interesting...I had NO idea it meant drinking for you all...0 -
I can see how sometimes a child's meal is called tea, as they are usually hungry when they get out of school, so some children have a meal at 4 or 5 pm, which is tea time, but I don't think anyone would call an evening meal tea. Tea is definitely afternoon.
It's a regional thing. I personally call my evening meal "My Tea". Last night I had fish pie for my tea. "Dinner" to me is around noon. Dinner time. Dinner ladies at schools aren't lunch ladies!0 -
Tele/tellie(sp?)=TV
Knickers=undies/underwear/panties (as in, "Don't get your knickers/panties in a twist.")
Flat=Apartment
Petrol=Gasoline0 -
I was staying with an American friend and couldn't work the tap in the bathroom.
"Hey your tap's stuck!"
"My what?"
"Your tap, you know the thing over the sink the water comes out of."
"Oh, faucet!"
So I forced it and the damn thing came off in my hand.
I'm surprised at this one. We use the term "tap water" in the US all the time!! But we do generally call the faucets. Or in the midwest it's just a sink.0 -
When grocery shopping I use a carriage or cart
When driving around a round thing it is a Rotary
I'm in Maine now but grew up in Massachussetts.
The one I like is that the HOOD of a car is called a "bonnet" overseas. Cracks me up. A bonnet is a frilly white hat usually seen on baby girls or pioneer women with strings that tie beneath the chin.0 -
Candy = sweets
Popsicle = ice lolly!!! LOL this one is the best
Chips = crisps
French Fries = chips
Shopping buggy/cart = trolley
When you guys say,"They were all taking the piss!" meaning they were laughing... lol
"He made me mad, but I didn't tell him off." I believe telling someone off is yelling at them or getting angry with them.0 -
I can see how sometimes a child's meal is called tea, as they are usually hungry when they get out of school, so some children have a meal at 4 or 5 pm, which is tea time, but I don't think anyone would call an evening meal tea. Tea is definitely afternoon.
... but there is afternoon tea, and then there is high tea, a very different thing! Maybe it's regional - here in Glasgow / West Coast my friend might still say "let's have tea out" meaning go out for an evening meal. It definitely has connotations of earlier and less posh than dinner though. And it's probably less used that it used to be.0 -
And is the English equivalent to fanny to dirty or something to discuss on here? I really have no idea and am too nervous to google it here at work!!0
-
Question for the British: What do you call the cart you put your groceries in while shopping? We have a few variations between northern and southern US. In the north, it is either carriage or shopping cart. In the south I have heard people call them buggies.
I've lived in Georgia and Florida and I always hear the people with the Southern accents call them buggies. It's us Yankee carpetbaggers who call them carts. :-) So I hear both. I can't remember hearing anyone call a bag a sack, though. Not saying it isn't the case, I just haven't noticed it.
We definitely call them buggies in the south!!
HA.. If I ever run into you in Charlotte, I'll be sure to call it a buggy! Of course, I'm from a smaller town about an hour away from Charlotte.. though I have lived in Charlotte for the last 12 years.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions