@mudfingersaid Clearly you love to exhibit your discourse "skills". It's a habit you should curb.
Now by Americans is it your intent to denigrate South America? Canada?
Or by your actions and words is your intent to portray all Brits as existing and residing at your sublevel?
Hardly seems fair to the rest of your country's patriots.
American means someone from USA.
Do you have a better word for them?
(Careful cos you may get banned)
@ghost-of-a-dukesaid I have a circulation problem (Raynaud's phenomenon) which only really becomes a issue in the winter months. For most people with this condition it is the cold that triggers their symptoms (cold hands, chilblains etc) but for me it is the central heating and the sudden change of temperature when I go indoors that is the trigger.
As a result, I am often found sittin ...[text shortened]... that I am among the 7,000 British people who sit outside in the snow to drink their cappuccino.
👻
Sheer insanity.
At least take up smoking or something to justify such behavior.
@fmfsaid Nope. Like any nationality, the British have their fair share of snobs. But there are plenty of grotty little clueless nobodies with enormous chips on their puerile internet-empowered shoulders like you - who are not "snobs" at all - amongst the British. No offence intended.
Oh, lordie lawks, no. All Britons sre class-ridden, either snobs or (worse) reverse snobs. Some (much) more than others, but none of them not at all, and those who claim not to care about class usually more than average.
I cant eat kippers because of all the bones, my father use to eat them with a slice of brown bread to help get them down, ps up north kippers are called Bloaters.
@badradgersaid I cant eat kippers because of all the bones, my father use to eat them with a slice of brown bread to help get them down, ps up north kippers are called Bloaters.
Why didn't your father just remove the bone? Seems silly to try and swallow them down with a slice of brown bread.
What is the difference between a sardine and a herring?
The answer to the amount of bones in a herring 365 on a regular year, 366 on a leap year!!! 😉