martinlivings: (Zombie Tube)
Martin Livings ([personal profile] martinlivings) wrote2006-09-22 06:59 pm
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Is this the same English???

This week's Alien Loves Predator comic is highly appropriate for us here in the UK. You wouldn't think there would be that many differences from Australia, with only 200-odd years of slight separation, but they keep hitting me in the face.

Is this the same English language? Sometimes I wonder...

Some examples:
  • PANTS - in Australia, this refers to trousers or slacks. In the UK, pants are underpants. Very confusing.
  • VEST - Izz hit this one the other day. Here, a "vest" is what we'd call a tank top or a singlet, at least in women's fashion.
  • THONGS - everyone knows this one. Back in Oz, I wore thongs all the time. Here, they'd be called flipflops, and thongs are g-strings.
  • DADDY LONGLEGS - now this one confounded me. I heard UK people talking about all the daddy longlegs this year, and I was very confused, because I hadn't seen a single one. Then I saw something on the BBC about them, and realised that in Australia a daddy longlegs is a spider, but here it's a freakin' fly! And not just any fly. It looks like a mutant mosquito, with long legs (well duh!). Here is what the British call a daddy longlegs, and here is what we sensible Australians call one!
There's heaps more, but they'll do for the moment. Does anyone else have examples to suggest? [livejournal.com profile] splanky? [livejournal.com profile] speshal_k?

[identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/_illumina_/ 2006-10-03 03:11 pm (UTC)(link)
It's light bulb here in the UK.

Some areas of the UK do use 'daddy-long-legs' for spiders - in the North-east for example.
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[identity profile] shrydar.livejournal.com 2006-10-04 12:02 am (UTC)(link)
That would be why I was bemused at Martin's comments about giant mosquitos then - I was living in Gateshead :)

[identity profile] ariaflame.livejournal.com 2006-10-10 07:08 am (UTC)(link)
I grew up in Scotland and always thought of the daddy-long-legs as the spiders. They're the ones with the massively concentrated venom... in quantities too small to affect a human.

Also
quilt or duvet in the UK = doona in Australia.

receipt in the UK = docket in Australia (or did when I emigrated, it may have fallen out of favour recently)

I still use 'the hole in the wall' for the ATM, at least when talking to my family.