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Americanisation of the UK

(144 Posts)
Babs03 Tue 13-Aug-24 10:35:40

Am sure anyone over 60 will realise how far down the road of adopting American language, customs, and eating habits we have come.
From saying movies instead of films, cookies instead of biscuits, pants or panties instead of knickers, to celebrating proms, trick or treating, or buying fast food from McDonalds, KFC etc., or numerous British takes on the burger or fried chicken fast food outlet.
I understand we have a special relationship but I doubt very much you will find fish and chip shops in every US state or Americans celebrating bonfire night.
Am just wondering how much further this is going to go?

Fae1 Wed 14-Aug-24 11:46:12

I'll be joining you on the moon Sarnia! Had a holiday in China just before COVID. (We were stopped from flying home via Wuhan !!) I've travelled far and wide over the world and China is one country I would never return to I'm afraid.

lixy Tue 13-Aug-24 22:18:47

NotSpaghetti

I confess I don't like the Ma'am and Sir, Tenko.
I didn't like it when we lived there and still don't.

I’m not a huge fan of the ‘Sir’ and ‘Ma’am’ either, but would rather that than the ‘luvvy’ my local butcher uses or the ‘hun’ from the petrol station attendant in New York.

I’d forgotten to mention the flags. I do wish I could put up a St George’s flag without the far right connotations. It was good to have the Union flag in evidence during the Olympics.

NotSpaghetti Tue 13-Aug-24 22:06:31

I confess I don't like the Ma'am and Sir, Tenko.
I didn't like it when we lived there and still don't.

Tenko Tue 13-Aug-24 21:38:53

lixy

It would be lovely if we could adopt the American natural good manners, the smiling courtesy, the lack of litter, the care for the space outside your house/apartment, the good road manners and upkeep and the ‘of course we can’ attitude though wouldn’t it?
Travelling around the States, most recently up the East coast, I have rarely heard a swear word in the street, had people help me in so many small ways and admired the clean litter free streets. I’d like to adopt all that please - but maybe that’s how the UK used to be?

I agree , I also like that they are very proud of their country and are proud to have their flag on their front lawns and buildings .
We’ve travelled a lot around the US and have had some wonderful road trips . We’ve always found Americans to be very friendly and very polite . When we toured the southern states , even young people called us Sir and Mam.

Elrel Tue 13-Aug-24 21:00:28

Missinterpreted Re ‘janitors’, in LCC schools in the 1960s we had neither janitors nor caretakers but school keepers.

Elrel Tue 13-Aug-24 20:54:32

Vintagejazz In the Netherlands in the early 1970s I noticed that many of the younger people spoke fluent English (as do most of the Dutch) but with an American accent. They put it down to the films they watched on television.

Shrub Tue 13-Aug-24 20:13:23

As someone who has lived in the US, I couldn’t have said that better lixy

Deedaa Tue 13-Aug-24 19:56:43

My son in law is American, but he's been over here for over 25 years and we've worked hard on anglicising him! He knows the difference between crisps and chips now.

My daughter's friend married an American and has been living in Boston for some years. She certainly showed us the reality of the US health system. She spent some weeks in hospital with placenta previa and ended up having an emergency C section which she and the baby were lucky to survive. Her treatment was being covered by her husband's insurance but, during the pregnancy he started a new job. It turned out that the insurance that came with the job wasn't as generous and she had to go home with her premature baby after a few days. The Americans are convinced they have the best health care in the world, but it's not much good if you can't afford to access it.

lixy Tue 13-Aug-24 19:47:44

It would be lovely if we could adopt the American natural good manners, the smiling courtesy, the lack of litter, the care for the space outside your house/apartment, the good road manners and upkeep and the ‘of course we can’ attitude though wouldn’t it?
Travelling around the States, most recently up the East coast, I have rarely heard a swear word in the street, had people help me in so many small ways and admired the clean litter free streets. I’d like to adopt all that please - but maybe that’s how the UK used to be?

Babs03 Tue 13-Aug-24 19:29:51

Yes, not sure how the old seizing back control thing is going when the US says 'jump' and we ask 'how high?'

Fleurpepper Tue 13-Aug-24 19:25:13

Fleurpepper

Agree, hate it. And much more of a threat to British culture than anything else often mentionned.

hence my earlier message.

Fleurpepper Tue 13-Aug-24 19:22:35

TillyTrotter

This has been happening slowly over a couple of decades now.
I find it odd that we left the EU with Brexit, saying we wanted our Sovereignty back, yet we are now mimicking America.

Indeedy- mind boggling.

merlotgran Tue 13-Aug-24 18:43:53

Casdon

We can still take the mickey out of them though. Michael McIntyre has a point.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=UCo0hSFAWOc

Brilliant!

Casdon Tue 13-Aug-24 18:25:51

We can still take the mickey out of them though. Michael McIntyre has a point.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=UCo0hSFAWOc

TillyTrotter Tue 13-Aug-24 18:17:50

PS I worked for a large American company and they can be ruthless.

TillyTrotter Tue 13-Aug-24 18:17:01

This has been happening slowly over a couple of decades now.
I find it odd that we left the EU with Brexit, saying we wanted our Sovereignty back, yet we are now mimicking America.

LOUISA1523 Tue 13-Aug-24 18:14:13

JaneJudge

It is the work culture that worries me more. The ruthless die hard mentality and immediate sackings. The dog eat dog and work until you drop, that just doesn't happen in the same way in European companies.

Anyway as for the language...I blame spongebob and spatula

Agree ...and very poor holiday and sick entitlement ....and no statutary mat leave ....its like a 3rd world country when it comes to employment law

LOUISA1523 Tue 13-Aug-24 18:10:09

Maerion

I agree that some American celebratory customs are now becoming commonplace in the UK but promenading is nothing new c/f our Proms music series and its origins. Prom night in colleges seems to have originated at Princeton in the early 1900s; Baby showers were given by American church ladies, again in the early 1900s. These customs have taken a long time to get here.

Language is another matter. I think cookies and biscuits has been discussed before with cookies very much a Scots term that was taken to America.

Knickers is interesting as it originates in America via a novelist and a Dutch colonist.

Knickers is a colloquial contraction of knickerbocker(s) - a loose fitting garment gathered at the knee. Knickers is now used in the US for the shorts worn by boxers and footballers. The Liverpudlian kecks for trousers derives from knickers or knickerbockers.

Harmen Jansen Knickerbocker was a Dutch colonist most associated with Albany, New York.

American writer Washington Irving (1783-1859) used the surname to create the fictitious Diedrich Knickerbocker, the pretend author of Irving’s novel A History of New-York from the Beginning of the World to the End of the Dutch Dynasty published in 1809. The character dresses in baggy-kneed trousers referred to as knickerbockers, later shortened to knickers.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diedrich_Knickerbocker

Knickerbocker is also used to refer to people who live in Manhattan and the short-form adopted for the city’s professional basketball team who are called the Knicks (and wear knickers to play in).

In 1900, The Times reported The Imperial Yeomanry.. in their well-made, loosely-fitting khaki tunics and riding knickers.

The earliest written British use of knickers for womens’ undergarments was in 1882. I recommend flannel knickers in preference to a flannel petticoat. (From The Queen - an illustrated journal that was published from 1861 to 1970.)

Pants comes from mid 14C to early 17C Middle French panatalon - also the Italian dramatic character Pantaloon (pantaleon) who worn long, straight close-fitting breeches.

Pants became trousers of any kind. In early use, the word was applied to men's trousers, but in the 20C extended to include those worn by both men and women. Panties were men's or boys’ short trousers.

Panties for women's or girls' underpants; especially short-legged pants with an elasticated waist - is a relatively modern term first used in the early 1900s in Australia.

In summary: Pants is French. Panties comes via Australia. Knickers comes to us from American fiction via a Dutch colonist. It’s all very international but if you insist on knickers as the correct term you were already using a word that originated in America.

If you live in NW England ( as I do).....all trousers are called pants

LOUISA1523 Tue 13-Aug-24 18:08:25

I notice it with my 3 school age GC ....I blame youtube .....they call a dummy a paci....a wardrobe , a closet....they say trash for rubbish .... I could go on...Iim 59 , I've never been a baby shower despite being invited ...just think they are too 'grabby'..... have no desire to ever visit US although been Canada a few times

watermeadow Tue 13-Aug-24 17:56:38

America is the unacceptable face of capitalism. An entire country entirely centred on money. No thanks.

Cossy Tue 13-Aug-24 16:30:48

Baggs

Go along with the bits (if any) that you like. Don't go along with the bits you don't like. It's the same as fashion: no-one has to wear the latest fashion just because that's what it is.

Wear what you like, use diction that you like, eat food that you like, etc. We could hardly have more choice!

Back in the nineties I was amazed that even in a non-tourist part of Thailand where I was working, KFC was opening stores. Why would a Thai or a Malaysian person want to eat KFC when their own version of fried chicken was so much better?

That said, change is constant – culture, climate, fashion, you name it – and adaptability is a great thing too and the reason why human beings have been so successful.

Even more mad than this when we holidayed in Jamaica they had the biggest Pizza Hut in the world attached to a large KFC!

Their street food was amazing! Why?

NotSpaghetti Tue 13-Aug-24 16:21:20

MissInterpreted

I hate it, I have to say. I loathe the creeping Americanism into our language, the culture etc.

I don't like the language changes either - but I do know they speak an "older" English than I do.

I suppose their language is more English than mine is!

mae13 Tue 13-Aug-24 16:20:20

The fabled "Special Relationship", unfortunately, only seems to work one way. Not ours.
And if I had Magic Wand I would wish away baseball caps.

petra Tue 13-Aug-24 16:17:10

In Eastern Europe a lot of young people speak with an American accent, why, they learn their English from American films.

petra Tue 13-Aug-24 16:14:37

Whitewavemark2

What happens when China becomes dominant?

China will not dominate ( well not for a very long long time )
They are on a downward trajectory.