Always best to try and speak to people in their own language. You demonstrate that you DO know how to speak American....so why not just get on with it.......or.....if you must demonstrate your `southern englishness` (northerners don`t generally have the same problems) make some attempt to clarify what time the champagne tasting session starts..... .... But its only a story.......I hear you cry.......shame they didn`t all end up living happily ever after.
There was an item on telly a while ago with an educated Belgian, a diplomat I think, trying to work out the rules involved with buying drinks in an English pub. He made what we take for granted sound very complicated.Reading a book titled Watching the English. The hidden rules of English behaviour by Kate FOX........
His story reminds me of an occasion in Halmstad in Sweden years ago when we met a Swedish fellow HR owner. His was much bigger, a 39, and he said that he would love to have a chat with us and learn a bit about tides since he was planning to come to the Channel. Would we like to come aboard that evening and have coffee and some fruit. We duly went aboard, enjoyed coffee and discussed tides, about which he hadn't a clue. All this time, we stared at a bowl of delicious-looking cherries in the middle of the table, but after an hour or so we were dismissed, after a fruitless evening.
Always best to try and speak to people in their own language. You demonstrate that you DO know how to speak American....so why not just get on with it.......or.....if you must demonstrate your `southern englishness` (northerners don`t generally have the same problems) make some attempt to clarify what time the champagne tasting session starts..... .... But its only a story.......I hear you cry.......shame they didn`t all end up living happily ever after.
Do you think that Birdvik was an English teacher. He / she writes like one. Elegantly but nonsensically that is.
Part right Bosun. Teacher, but not English. (Physics, since you ask)
Actually, I'm quite proud of your 'elegant but nonsensical. Thankyou
Do you think that Birdvik was an English teacher. He / she writes like one. Elegantly but nonsensically that is.
The image he describes is the image that some Brits like have of themselves. It isnt the crudity and uneducated aggression of many of the younger generations. It ignores the Costas peopled by Brits eating fish and chips and wearing string vests. The reality is that the average Brit abroad is more likely to say to that American "thats a f00king big boat you have sunshine - my name's Wayne, whats yours?"
Reading a book titled Watching the English. The hidden rules of English behaviour by Kate FOX........
Loved it! As a Brit, I feel for you with all my toes curled.....