 TLO what's poppin? We are on kick KICK calm We are not live, but you can leave a like comment subscribe turn your post notification bills Let's continue to grow the family from Chicago to the UK This above me is the channel that If you miss it live, and you want to see if there's any highlights from that live It'll be here, but you can also replay the whole live fast forward front to back on kick calm Under my profile we do watch exclusive things on there that are only watched on there such as you know Gonna start top gear on there Along with like three other things that we're gonna be watching exclusively over there So participate This is patreon. We also watch stuff here that does not make it to From YouTube these are the good shows though. These are the main shows that we can't watch on YouTube kick gets the runoff Don't forget we do got page. I mean the merch TLO Sheepers shirt on there is 17 pounds so Probably less in the UK, but yeah, man. Check it out, man The link to all of this is down below in the description inside of something called the link tree Click the link tree. I think a pop-up gang go top 10 Americanisms that really annoyed British people Okay, first off. I want to start by apologizing and fight the fanny pack Welcome to watch Mojo UK and today we'll be counting down our picks for the top 10 Americanisms that really annoy British people How are you doing in England? Remember an elevator is called a lift a mile is called a kilometer and Bachelors is called steak and kidney pan before we begin if you enjoy this video be sure to clunky colloquial isms content for this list We're rallying against the words phrases and clunky colloquial isms have slipped into the English language or thanks to our American cousins So get your red pens out the trash talk stops here. I hate that the flats are no called Apartments I hate that sweets are no called candy and I hate that instead of nipping it to the shops You know put to the convenience store. I hate him number 10 waiting on something Waiting on something in general US prepositions can be pretty awkward But wait on seems to have caught on in the UK too Physically speaking you can wait as in delay or dally on anything you like on the platform the doorstep Even on the car if you intend to recline on its roof But with non physical things like decisions bank transfers and movie releases You definitely wait for them. Of course waiters really do wait on but most of the rest of us really don't If gotten were a noun which it isn't then you can conceivably have it I mean like words. Okay. I'm low. Okay. Now. I got it got it Maybe on toast or somewhere in your kitchen, but have we really got an excited anxious or suitably a rate? And when we splash out on designer t-shirts and tell our friends all about it the following day We haven't gotten new clothes. We just got them in fairness. I don't use the word gotten So hearing it is it's kind of cringe. I don't use that word I don't I can't picture a time where I've used the word gotten. I don't even sound right coming out my mouth I think that's a like Some of these are geography You gotta be in certain places to use certain some of these words This most linguists agree that this sneaky suffix is rooted in traditional British English Think ill-gotten gains, but it's a mostly American habit nowadays Yes, I might have gotten away with it too. It wasn't for these blasted kids and their dogs Then you kids deserve a big thanks. Number eight. You do the math Right, let's do the math. This one just doesn't add up I used this before by studying mathematics plural just to be told to do the math singular Given that this phrase is usually dropped at the end of a debate as some kind of all-conquering Conversation ender an insurmountable point-prover we Brits can be quick to bristle whenever it's issued our way We would suggest going back to school But that throws up the whole college University who are and they just aren't enough hours in the day one way or another. It's a mathematical fact It's like Vegas. Number seven. Which pants are you wearing clumsy line of questioning on an x-rated phone line or innocent inquiry about another person's stress code Of course the underwear or trousers talk all depends upon which side of the Atlantic you're asking from Interchangeable nouns can often lead expats to embarrassing situations Remember your car needs petrol unless it needs gas, which isn't the same fuel used for older style ovens Sneakers are trainers although there's nothing especially sly about them and band-aid means plaster But it's also a seminal 80s charity single in case you forgot Number six finding the first floor to another small but significant difference between British and american english And one which having crept over from the states can cause Understandable confusion in the uk when you walk into a building at street level You're on the ground floor not the first floor the first floor is one flight of stairs upwards But the americanism says that that level is the second floor It's not but you can start to see why it's vital that the lifts in full working order In most buildings it do go one two three four five six seven, but in high rises There's a g and she and like in high rises in america So we some of high rise buildings are g the ground ground level and then it goes one two three four Number five have a nice day. Thanks. Have a good day. Don't tell me what to do in general Most brits bork at americans apparently unbridled enthusiasm, but it's difficult to criticise their commitment to peppy customer service But phrases like good job and have a great day can sound forced and insincere when muttered with the moodiness of a brit called caller Why the f*** do you keep asking me that it's all in the delivery this one Of course, everyone should try to be good to everyone else and wishing someone well is a lovely thing to do But let's say it like we mean it. So that's why y'all just say cheers Number four quite right I've never understood this one either quite right. What do you mean? I'm quite right. I'm right, right I'm either right or I'm wrong. I can't be quite right Not quite my temple again This americanism mostly frustrated because of the misunderstandings it can inspire We brits mostly use quite as a middle ground between not at all and absolutely for words like dangerous Delicate or difficult if something's quite damaged. It's not completely beyond prepare So with the dispatch of the sergeant We were nobody able to concentrate on the eradication of our hoodie infestations But the us uses quite as a blanket substitute for very So if something's quite extraordinary then it really is extraordinary But problems come if you're described as quite intelligent or quite beautiful for self-esteem's sake, which is it? I've never used quite anyway, doesn't matter quite right Number three alternative facts. Did you throw Jeremy Paxman out of a window? Oh well kind of A term from the top this idea was first formed following former us press secretary Sean Spicer's insistence that donald trump's presidential inauguration ceremony was well attended despite photos seemingly showing that it wasn't Counselor to the president kelly and conway famously defended spicer claiming that his version of events was built not on falsehoods But on alternative facts and they're giving Sean spicer our press secretary gave Alternative facts to that but the she didn't even want to believe what she was about to say She's I'm not really about to say this. All right I mean Sean spicer our press secretary gave Alternative facts could be even get it out to that but the point remains It's jargon worthy of the british writer george orwell But we can thank america for making it mainstream and for providing the buzzword for post-truth politic Number two the least worst option i'm doing this for the city not you You're the least worst option i'll run a rough round on another apparently diplomatic double negative and three words Which really mean nothing at all because what can a least worst option ever really be? It's true If there's something worse than the worst possible something then the first worse something was never the worst in the first place We have a better bad idea than this That's true This is the best bad idea we have sir By far it's really simple really anything that i think people say in only comedic comedic ways It's less worse than anything else can't possibly be labeled the worst and the least worst of those things that are less Worse is actually the best option available hallelujah number one i could care less I use this one I just want to do my job Delivered when someone's passed the point of caring and if you're stuck with this video then this but i think i say i couldn't care less Presumably isn't you so bravo i couldn't care less makes perfect sense lose two letters and an apostrophe however And it definitely does not I really couldn't care less I could care less implies that there's still some caring to be had which is really what the person speaking wants to convey I could care less is like conceding that worse things have happened But with regards to american english they rarely have because that as an expression for not all hardly caring just makes no sense Do you More stuff i gotta be careful of when i go to the uk that's tough. Yeah, let me with like comment i'm down