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Thread: Help please?

  1. #16
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    Jun 2000
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    Windham, Vermont, USA
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    The accent, of course, like "hour" being pronounced as "Ahhh" -
    "This is Owen Bennett-Jones of News ahhh" on the BBC.

    Which remind me - double last names - Owen Bennett-Jones,
    Jonathan Rhys-Davies (I know, he's technically Welsh) and the like, often seem very English.

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Dorset, England
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    Quote Originally Posted by Karen
    The accent, of course, like "hour" being pronounced as "Ahhh" -
    "This is Owen Bennett-Jones of News ahhh" on the BBC.

    Which remind me - double last names - Owen Bennett-Jones,
    Jonathan Rhys-Davies (I know, he's technically Welsh) and the like, often seem very English.
    Karen, you don't have to be English to be British
    Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish are just as British as English

    thanks k9krazee for the signature!

  3. #18
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    Jul 2005
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    Ontario/Canada
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    Those big London buses I forget what they are called but they are red and two story.

    Gaurds who wear big tall helmets and can't laugh.


    And of course Big Ben.

    Eww and bangers and mash.
    See ALL my pets here
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  4. #19
    Quote Originally Posted by Karen
    The accent, of course, like "hour" being pronounced as "Ahhh" -

    Im sitting here saying hour and its coming out as owwer Ive been told by people who dont live in london that I sound cockney.


    Been thinking of more.

    Big red buses!

    red phone boxes

    purley king and queen

    Tom Jones

    Harrods

    the london underground

    Millenium dome

    London eye

    Tower of london

    Big ben

    Museums

    Big lion statues

    London zoo

    red post boxes

    Pie and mash and jellied eels

  5. #20
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Victoria, Australia
    Posts
    1,758
    Sir Francis Drake and Sir Walter Raleigh.

    Royal Ascot.

    The Grand National.

  6. #21
    I always think that bad weather and afternoon tea is British things. I also think that an British accent it british because it is!


  7. #22
    British humor, both the extra-dry "is she pulling my leg?" variant and the broad, earthy, potty-joke, unconvincing-drag silly version!

    Morris dancing and mumming

    Guy Fawkes Day

    Fox hunting

    English style riding

    And of course ENGLISH ALE!

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Apr 2002
    Location
    Cleveland, Ohio
    Posts
    5,486
    Hugh Grant.
    You're the one sure thing I've found so you better stick around...
    Best Fireman in da House´10
    dedicated to the kindest,loveliest and always helpful man that one would be honored and proud to know........R.I.P. Dear Phred


  9. #25
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    Jun 2000
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    Windham, Vermont, USA
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    40,861
    Folks, don't forget she needs the "why" part - why you associate such things with being English!

    Muddy4Paws, the funny thing is is that people sometimes guess Paul as having an English accent, which he does not at ALL - but he did watch a lot of Dr. Who when he was a kid!

    And there was a receptionist where Paul used to work who thought I was two people - "that British lady who calls" and Paul's wife. I don't know why she thought I sounded British on the phone, I mean, how much of an accent can one convey in 7 syllables "May I speak to Paul Watts, please?" is just about all she ever heard me say before she transferred the call!

  10. #26
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
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    Freedom: Sorry I shouldnt actually call it RE.... (used to be called religious education)... it is now PR (Philsophy and Religion)

    ES: Love the photo

    Columbine: PMed you

    And everyone: thank you
    -Ellie

    'If everyone else's opinion is what matters, then do you ever really have one of your own?'- Jodi Picoult, Nineteen Minutes

  11. #27
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
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    ----Bump----
    -Ellie

    'If everyone else's opinion is what matters, then do you ever really have one of your own?'- Jodi Picoult, Nineteen Minutes

  12. #28
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Bexhill, UK
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    Talking about the weather and queues!!!
    Give £1 for a poundie www.songfordogs.co.uk

  13. #29
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    Belgium, near Ghent
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    "MIND the gap!!Mind the gap!!" ah, I heard it so often on the underground of London
    Red phone boxes
    Lady Di
    fish'n chips, wrapped in a newspaper
    Bobbies
    Sherlock Holmes
    Wet London
    etc... I know more, I will post them later
    I miss you enormously Sydney, Maya, Inka & Zazou Be happy there at the Rainbow Bridge

  14. #30
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Gran Canaria, Spain
    Posts
    2,291
    And something, I think it was called a Farmer's lunch? Bread, cheese, apple, and CHUTNEY! Oh yes, chutney is defininteely British.
    It is called a ploughman's lunch.

    Burberry Clothing- the plaid is very British!

    The London underground- The only way to travel in London

    Buckingham Palace-where the queen lives

    Rock music- for reasons already listed

    The way they call lunch dinner, and supper tea-time. Oh and they call brunch elevensies!

    Bisto Gravy-they serve it on everything

    The classic double decker buses

    The bear skin hats the guards where at Buckingham palace

    Soccer games- the British are football mad (you could also say hooligans are VERY British, but I am going to concentrate on the good things)

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