an essential guide to visiting the UK .. hope all my American friends will find this

Vocabulary
The Brits have peculiar words for many things. Money is referred to as “goolies” in slang, so you should for instance say “I’d love to come to the pub but I haven’t got any goolies.” “Quid” is the modern word for what was once called a “shilling” – the equivalent of seventeen cents American. Underpants are called “wellies” and friends are called “tossers.” If you are fond of someone, you should tell him he is a “great tosser” – he will be touched. The English are a notoriously demonstrative, tactile people, and if you want to fit in you should hold hands with your acquaintances and tossers when you walk down the street. Public nuzzling and licking are also encouraged, but only between people of the same sex.

Habits
Ever since their Tory government wholeheartedly embraced full union with Europe, the Brits have been attempting to adopt certain continental customs, such as the large midday meal followed by a two- or three-hour siesta , which they call a “wank.” As this is still a fairly new practice in Britain, it is not uncommon for people to oversleep (alarm clocks, alas, do not work there due to the magnetic pull from Greenwich). If you are late for supper, simply apologize and explain that you were having a wank – everyone will understand and forgive you.

Universities
University archives and manuscript collections are still governed by quaint medieval rules retained out of respect for tradition; hence patrons are expected to bring to the reading rooms their own ink-pots and a small knife for sharpening their pens. Observing these customs will signal the librarians that you are “in the know” – one of the inner circle, as it were, for the rules are unwritten and not posted anywhere in the library. Likewise, it is customary to kiss the librarian on both cheeks when he brings a manuscript you’ve requested, a practice dating back to the reign of Henry VI.

One of the most delighful ways to spend an afternoon in Oxford or Cambridge is gliding gently down the river in one of their flat-bottomed boats, which you propel using a long pole. This is known as “cottaging.” Many of the boats (called “yer-I-nals”) are privately owned by the colleges, but there are some places that rent them to the public by the hour. Just tell a professor or policeman that you are interested in doing some cottaging and would like to know where the public yerinals are. The poles must be treated with vegetable oil to protect them from the water, so it’s a good idea to buy a can of Crisco and have it on you when you ask directions to the yerinals. That way people will know you are an experienced cottager.

Food
British cuisine enjoys a well deserved reputation as the most sublime gastronomic pleasure available to man. Thanks to today’s robust dollar, the American traveller can easily afford to dine out several times a week (rest assured that a British meal is worth interrupting your afternoon wank for). Few foreigners are aware that there are several grades of meat in the UK. The best cuts of meat, like the best bottles of gin, bear Her Majesty’s seal, called the British Stamp of Excellence (BSE). When you go to a fine restaurant, tell your waiter you want BSE beef and won’t settle for anything less. If he balks at your request, custom dictates that you jerk your head imperiously back and forth while rolling your eyes to show him who is boss. Once the waiter realizes you are a person of discriminating taste, he may offer to let you peruse the restaurant’s list of exquisite British wines. If he doesn’t, you should order one anyway. The best wine grapes grow on the steep, chalky hillsides of Yorkshire and East Anglia – try an Ely '84 or Ripon '88 for a rare treat indeed. When the bill for your meal comes it will show a suggested amount. Pay whatever you think is fair, unless you plan to dine there again, in which case you should simply walk out; the restaurant host will understand that he should run a tab for you.

Transportation
Public taxis are subsidized by the Her Majesty’s Government. A taxi ride in London costs two pounds, no matter how far you travel. If a taxi driver tries to overcharge you, you should yell “I think not, you charlatan!”, then grab the nearest bobby and have the driver arrested. It is rarely necessary to take a taxi, though, since bus drivers are required to make detours at patrons’ requests. Just board any bus, pay your fare of thruppence (the heavy gold-colored coins are “pence”), and state your destination clearly to the driver, e.g.: “Please take me to the British Library.” A driver will frequently try to have a bit of harmless fun by pretending he doesn’t go to your requested destination. Ignore him, as he is only teasing the American tourist (little does he know you’re not so ignorant!).

Speaking of the British Library, you should know that it has recently moved to a new location at Kew. Kew is a small fishing village in Wales. It can be reached by taking the train to Cardiff; once there, ask any local about the complimentary shuttle bus to Kew. (Don’t forget that buses are called “prams” in England, and trains are called “bumbershoots”–it’s a little confusing at first. Motorcycles are called “lorries” and the hospital, for reasons unknown, is called the “off-license.” It’s also very important to know that a “doctor” only means a PhD in England, not a physician. If you want a physician, you must ask for an “MP” (which stands for “master physician”).

For those travelling on a shoestring budget, the London Tube may be the most economical way to get about, especially if you are a woman. Chivalry is alive and well in Britain, and ladies still travel for free on the Tube. Simply take some tokens from the baskets at the base of the escalators or on the platforms; you will find one near any of the state-sponsored Tube musicians. Once on the platform, though, beware! Approaching trains sometimes disurb the large Gappe bats that roost in the tunnels. The Gappes were smuggled into London in the early 19th century by French saboteurs and have proved impossible to exterminate. The announcement “Mind the Gappe!” is a signal that you should grab your hair and look towards the ceiling. Very few people have ever been killed by Gappes, though, and they are considered only a minor drawback to an otherwise excellent means of transportation. (If you have difficulty locating the Tube station, merely follow the signs that say “Subway” and ask one of the full-time attendants where you can catch the bumbershoot.)

One final note: for preferential treatment when you arrive at Heathrow airport, announce that you are a member of Shin Fane (an international Jewish peace organization – the “shin” stands for “shalom”). As savvy travellers know, this little white lie will assure you priority treatment as you make your way through customs; otherwise you could waste all day in line. You might, in fact, want to ask a customs agent to put a Shin Fane stamp in your passport, as it will expedite things on your return trip.

Bollocks to your mum! (“farewell and good health to your family”)

Aren’t you supposed to indicate when you’ve cut and pasted something directly from another site?

if this is from another web sight then I apologies …I was sent it by a friend and we were discussing it and the fact that some Americans are so insular and inward looking that they probably wouldn’t get the joke so I posted it to see what the reaction would be

The sad thing about this is that I’m sure there are going to be some people that take this as gospel - no matter the source.

:rolleyes:

Perhaps you would favour us with the barrel story, Mr Hoffnung. I have long been an admirer, but thought that your death in the late 50s would prevent us from conversing.

ugh. Preview button is my friend:

“some people” - not directed at Americans solely - just speaking about people who perhaps don’t know much (if anything) about the UK etc.

do you mean per-chance such great world leaders as George- Dubya- Bush the man who is so inept he couldn’t find his arse with both hands let alone point to a countrie outside the borders of the good ol US of A and with any certainty name it .

Directed to me?

heh, nope. I was actually thinking about tourists. :wink:

What an appropriate username you’ve chosen…! :wink:

I was just going to say the same thing.

Incidentally, wtf is that “grab your hair and look upward” thing about? Is there something pasted to the ceilings of Tube stations I’d never noticed?

Nah, anyone who has been remotely near the net will have read it many times before, I think.

A quid is a shilling?? I thought it was a pound. Perhaps I’m being whooshed?

Not that it’s unheard of for the same slang term to mean different amounts of money in different contexts. In pre-Euro German, a Groschen was an Austrian penny–a hundredth of their unit, the schilling, and hence worth next to nothing. I doubt if they’d even made any since WWII. I was familiar with that meaning of the word when I arrived in Germany. But I didn’t know that, over the border in Germany, a Groschen was a 10-pfennig piece. So the first time I had to do my laundry and was told that I needed to put 11 “Groschen” in the machine, I was puzzled that (a) the cost was so little and (b) there seemed to be no slot on the machine that would accept Pfennigs!

http://www.britishexpat.com/fun/touristadvice.htm
http://www.bermuda.org.uk/tourist.htm
http://www.shanemcdonald.com/laughs/l-tourist-advice.html
http://www.denning.org.uk/jokes/TravelTips.shtml

Hard to say who initially wrote this, but I rather doubt you’ll have many American friends left anyway, even among the ardent Bush-haters, after they read this really, really stupid Pit thread.

The whole thing is one giant, nay humungous, whoosh. Try using any of those words/phrases in the supplied context and you’ll probably find yourself a) being laughed at hysterically, or b) decked.

Thankyou, thankyou, thankyou! I have been looking for that text since I don’t know when (when I accidentally deleted it).

You shouldn’t be posting things to see how people react, either.

What is the fascination this guy has with ass grabbing?

whippingboy you wouldn’t happen to be sublimating would you?

Gotta admit you had me qoing, only with a slight quizzical response to gay public nuzzling, until I got to “Sorry I’m late, I was having a wank.” It was at this point I ejaculated a laugh. :smiley:

So basically you posted it in the hopes of finding people you could ridicule?

Sounds like jerk behavior to me.

Well, whipping boy, if you believe this is a place to air your Americans Are Dumb views with your brilliantly stolen essay of someone else’s jokes, then let me congratulate you with an American saying you may not be familiar with. This, um, factual information you present is “twenty pounds of shit in a ten pound bag,” which means it is very, very helpful and accurate and I’m sure a lot of people will welcome you for providing it.