" Cricket is a game which the English, not being a spiritual people, have invented in order to give themselves some conception of eternity." Lord Stormont Mancroft
Cricket is a game where you get sunburnt and trolleyed on a grassy embankment, while the kids run amuck and some cheating gits jog about in white pyjamas over there somewhere (Australian perspective).
A special part of me appreciates the use of Liverpool fans for the football team section, especially with it being a shot of the 2005 final (or at least i assume, anyway)
@@GophersVids make a 30 second short explaining aluminium, linking to this video, to draw more views. Then pretend you did not forget how annoying aluminum sounds and say it needed a seperate video all on its own. (Which it does)!
Speaking of which, I have been told that you all call what we Americans call 'napkins' serviettes? And you call diapers 'napkins?' Can somebody confirm or deny?
"A-Mer-ee-kan" ROFLMAO! I'm crying with laughter here. As a Canadian who still clings to their Euro-British background, this seriously hits the spot. :D I'm also reminded of an incident many years ago when I was a teen... My Dutch/German mother, who had learned her English in Britain, was in the chemist's (pharmacy, or drugstore here) with me, and we were buying school supplies. She could sometimes have a rather penetrating voice, and she called over to me by name, "DO YOU NEED ANY RUBBERS?" (To be very clear, she meant "erasers" NOT "condoms") Of course, naturally, there were a couple of people I knew from school in there at the time.... I never did live that one down. 😳
So sorry I missed this when it came out... This is some of your finest work. I love it! It ranks up there with the chapter preview for ...Richard? that has I'm a naked pirate in it. Love your work. Keep being excellent.
Absolutely Brilliant! Gotta send this link to my friends over in A-Mer-ee-ka, so its not just me explaining it to them all the time! As a commenter has said earlier, you left out Aluminium which is also a pet peeve of mine.
I just had the English language discussion last week with my Englishman husband. He was telling me about a boy "bouy" for sale in an auction (he's an auctioneer). I couldn't believe someone was selling a boy. I told him it was unusual for an estate with a boy for sale. It wasn't just unusual, it was illegal and disturbing. Of course you get where this conversation went 😂😂😂😂
I hadnt realised how much I needed this video until it posted. ... even if I'm now in the doghouse for waking my partner up from cackling. When are we getting episode 2?
Hey, it was the British who started the whole “soccer” thing! We only followed your lead, you can’t get mad just cause you guys changed your minds afterwards!
Thank you Gopher!!! That video made my day just before I finished work. And it's indeed a good reminder that BE is not the same as AE. I'm looking forward to your video which explains how to get FO: London running with the Steam version of FO. Keep it up. Love your vids. Greetings from Bavaria
Jolly good show chap! Time for spot of coff-tea with coo-biscuit. Okay, so I think i'm just gonna have to run around in power armor and max out endurance at this point.
As a proud Ammer-Reekan, I recall that we went to war with England twice for the right to speak the way we want. "No Vocalization without Representation" or something like that.
I’m probably more excited for this play through than I’ve been for anything you’ve done since Richard’s final chapter. (Also still hilarious to me that ‘soccer’ is originally a British term)
Oh, I've heard this before. I dated a lass from Liverpool. Her parents moved here to "Amereeka" when she was in High School. She educated me at every opportunity! 😆
Hello old chap are you alright?!. Oye I had tea with this posh Tory the other day it was brilliantly smashing mate. We went to a cheeky nandos full stop.
To be fair we got soccer from England and we just kept it. Was just watching the Olympics and you know what they call soccer? Soccer. All nit picking aside. This was hilarious. Well done. Looking forward to the series.
Thanks, Gopher. As an Australian I never realized how wrong all the current maps are. Time to drop the meat pies and beer and swap to piroshki and vodka 😋
To be fair, death is preferable to having to listen to a brit explain stuff. Also, British man uses 2 movie references, but they were both to the same movie, the only good movie to come out of Britain besides the others.
What a good way to start my day. Made me smile. When someone calls me out for "wrong" pronunciations or word choices, I usually say, "sorry, been watching too much Brit stuff."
Bertie Wooster: And what about the oof situation? Chuffy Chuffnell: The what? Bertie Wooster: The oof, the dibs, the do-re-mi, the happy cabbage, the oil of palm. Chuffy Chuffnell: Yes, yes, I do speak English. I love Jeeves & Wooster. Absolute favourite!
Aaaaand we are back to the start of the last TTW series, where I am going to desperately wish for a time machine, because every week is not going to be divided in the days of glory when Gopher posts a FOL video , and days of excruciatingly painful waiting in-between...
My dear chap, indeed, it was a positively splendid visual affair. I must convey my profound enjoyment and unrestrained admiration for its exquisite execution. Truly, it was a veritable feast for the senses, an epitome of artistic brilliance. Bravo, my good fellow, bravo!
My friend tried to survive just by using candles. Suffice to say, it wasn't really a bright idea. What do french fries do when they meet after a long time? They ketchup.
It's the temperature of the chip that really matters. Hot chips usually come in a cup bought at the servo. 'Cold' chips (or just chips) come in a bag and you eat them over the course of a week. (or, more likely, you binge the whole thing in one go and feel like crap after because you just ate an entire family sized pack of smiths what's wrong with you)
Now to be fair, I think most of America has shifted from calling them "French Fries" to just "Fries". I haven't heard anyone call em french fries since i last visited my grandmother.
I've saw something recently suggesting that English in the medieval times was probably way more phonetic, and that words such as "knight" would actually have sounded quite hilarious to us :)
@GophersVids indeed, as another Manchester boy, I find it funny that Manchester is roughly the horizontal line across england where Sch can be soft or hard, making schedule an interesting word in a conversation.
There was adocumentary someone did about fishing communities in Maine who have accents similar to how Shakespeare would have sounded. I remember there was a line in one of his plays about getting a 'room in Rome' and it was clever because back then both room and Rome were pronounced the same.
I realized I'd been subconsciously expecting Gopher to adopt a Londoner accent, for some reason. What makes this silly is the thought that I'd even know a Londoner accent if I heard it.
This is my all time favourite vlog! You wouldn’t believe how often my English pronunciation gets “corrected “ by our cousins from across the pond! A little gentle payback doesn’t go amiss!
The standard "Cricket explained to a foreigner" delivery: You have two sides, one out in the field and one in. Each man that’s in the side that’s in the field goes out and when he’s out comes in and the next man goes in until he’s out. When a man goes out to go in, the men who are out try to get him out, and when he is out he goes in and the next man in goes out and goes in. When they are all out, the side that’s out comes in and the side that’s been in goes out and tries to get those coming in out. Sometimes there are men still in and not out. There are men called umpires who stay out all the time, and they decide when the men who are in are out. Depending on the weather and the light, the umpires can also send everybody in, no matter whether they’re in or out. When both sides have been in and all the men are out (including those who are not out), then the game is finished. Now I hope that's made everything clear...
@@grumpyoldnord I prefer to think of it as baseball for the thinking man....both of course being invented in England! I think burgers can be at your discretion
Nice one me old china, i shall get in the jam jar drive home on the left side of the road see trouble and strife and up the apple and pears to play Fallout London.
Don't worry about the English OR the French getting you first for calling them French Fries. Worry about the "Bedlums" who border the French! They're Bedlum Fries, although the English might make their chips with a single dip in the fat, so I guess we can say they're distinct enough to call them their own thing.
My relatives came to America about a 100 years ago from England, we're able to trace our heritage back about 450 years there. Even though we've been here 100 years, our family still uses a lot of the same English Words that you talk about here. I guess you can't take the English completely out of your DNA even after 100 years.
I actually knew many of these terms. My mom liked watching old British comedies, especially "Keeping Up Appearances". Hyacinth and Richard reminded her of her sister and her sister's husband, even as a young kid I quickly understood why.
Gopher ive long appreciated your wit (and lets be honest, your cynicism) , but you were in absolute rare form. What a gem of an opening. Incidentally: American, I laughed until sound stopped coming out. The dog is now looking at me funny, but thats normal. The cat is also looking at me funny, when normally he ignores everything but food. Im very much looking forward to this!
Gopher, I’m doing a current run in BG3 as a Gnome bard “Lorebrarian”. Adapting this, small mousy librarian type as the base character, instead of the typical “hero” could be fun for a FO London run.
3:14 I'd also like to add that responding "Everton" to this question will instead cause them to laugh in your face resulting in death via embarrassment
While in Britain, I was often greeted with: "You alright?", and it would completely throw me every time. I would always immediately be filled with dread and ask: "Why? Is something wrong?" . . . . but the amazing fish & chips with mushy peas more than made up for it!
@@Jorduan100 fun fact, aluminum predates aluminium by a few years at least. It was changed to fit in more with the naming convention of other chemicals (Barium, Cesium, Beryllium, etc...) instead of like platinum.
I just love you (even more) for this one! My British is so confused through all these "A meeh ree cans"" but I know my chips and I am able to differ between a truck and a lorry. Also I love colour and armour and now want a sip of my tea.
"It's a lift, not an elevator, because it lifts things."
It elevates them too, you limey fuck.
You don't say? Really? :)
Instructions unclear, now there's tea all over the harbor.
Harbour*
kek
Noooooo not the tea...
GET HIM FIRST!
Amen brother all in the sea
" Cricket is a game which the English, not being a spiritual people, have invented in order to give themselves some conception of eternity." Lord Stormont Mancroft
Cricket is a game where you get sunburnt and trolleyed on a grassy embankment, while the kids run amuck and some cheating gits jog about in white pyjamas over there somewhere (Australian perspective).
We then taught it to everyone we ever invaded ("Do you have a flag?") and thereafter they beat us at it. Every time. It is bloody annoying!
@@DanielCoffey67 that was Eddie Izzard!
You, sir, have just provided the name of my new Wayfarer. Much obliged!
"If you got time to say elevate instead of lift you can take the bloody stairs" 😂😂😂
Instead of Nuka cola, I hope it's Alpine Dandelion and Burdock.
OMG ... I remember the Alpine truck. Nostalgia attack!
or carbonated eal sause..
It looks like they have imported some Nuka Cola before the war but there are also some home-grown beverages. 😊
What a fuckin' beauty of an intro that was. As an Aussie with very clear English roots, this all sings to me so hard.
A special part of me appreciates the use of Liverpool fans for the football team section, especially with it being a shot of the 2005 final (or at least i assume, anyway)
Best city on the island :)
@@GophersVidsAs a scouser born and bred, I wholeheartedly agree!
@@Murderous-Lordok... gotta ask, as an uneducated AmrEekan.
Why are people from Liverpool called "scousers"??
and aluminium!
OH! I forgot that one! OMG I cannot believe I did not put that one in!
@GophersVids Norfener detected, doesn't care for Lunden one bit! Didn't put aluminium... Wow
@@GophersVids make a 30 second short explaining aluminium, linking to this video, to draw more views. Then pretend you did not forget how annoying aluminum sounds and say it needed a seperate video all on its own. (Which it does)!
Speaking of which, I have been told that you all call what we Americans call 'napkins' serviettes? And you call diapers 'napkins?' Can somebody confirm or deny?
@@lasagnasux4934 ah ye old nappies indeed. Gots to change the nappy to fix that mess in the boot.
YES YES YES. I am dying for playing Fallout London and see your character.
As an Amereekan I appreciate this! Jolly good show old chap!
"A-Mer-ee-kan"
ROFLMAO! I'm crying with laughter here. As a Canadian who still clings to their Euro-British background, this seriously hits the spot. :D
I'm also reminded of an incident many years ago when I was a teen...
My Dutch/German mother, who had learned her English in Britain, was in the chemist's (pharmacy, or drugstore here) with me, and we were buying school supplies. She could sometimes have a rather penetrating voice, and she called over to me by name, "DO YOU NEED ANY RUBBERS?" (To be very clear, she meant "erasers" NOT "condoms")
Of course, naturally, there were a couple of people I knew from school in there at the time.... I never did live that one down. 😳
Hilarious, I still have to mentally correct my instinct to call them rubbers.
I'm already loving Mick, can't wait for this series!
00:39 ROFL. That Map.
Was about to say, I don't think Africa starts there 😅
@@aethority3870 It does now, apparently.
exactly being moved as we speak. Seems Hungary fallen RIP
Lol, just noticed that piece of gold!
switzerland is mordor now 😂
I love Gopher, I really really do. I needed this laugh so badly. Cannot WAIT to watch this.
This is glorious. Can't wait for your Fallout London series now
As an Amereekun, I was *dying*.
So sorry I missed this when it came out... This is some of your finest work. I love it! It ranks up there with the chapter preview for ...Richard? that has I'm a naked pirate in it.
Love your work. Keep being excellent.
As a Swedish person I am very offended by that map
Mission Accomplished :)
I promise you, us Danes aren't happy about it either
@@hvilluminati But no complaints from the Norwegians yet :)
@@GophersVids As a Brit living in the far north of Sweden I'm hoping the border takes a hard right above the top edge of the map. :)
@@GophersVids You´d better believe we Norwegians are not about to complain about this map!😁
Absolutely Brilliant! Gotta send this link to my friends over in A-Mer-ee-ka, so its not just me explaining it to them all the time! As a commenter has said earlier, you left out Aluminium which is also a pet peeve of mine.
I just had the English language discussion last week with my Englishman husband. He was telling me about a boy "bouy" for sale in an auction (he's an auctioneer). I couldn't believe someone was selling a boy. I told him it was unusual for an estate with a boy for sale. It wasn't just unusual, it was illegal and disturbing. Of course you get where this conversation went 😂😂😂😂
As a Texan who’s interacted with Brits online, this is legit. Especially regarding football fans. :3
3:09
As an Aussie, that is a soccer ball, used for the game of soccer.
You can't kill me, you'd melt in the heat I live in.
I hadnt realised how much I needed this video until it posted.
... even if I'm now in the doghouse for waking my partner up from cackling.
When are we getting episode 2?
Hey, it was the British who started the whole “soccer” thing! We only followed your lead, you can’t get mad just cause you guys changed your minds afterwards!
Thank you Gopher!!! That video made my day just before I finished work. And it's indeed a good reminder that BE is not the same as AE. I'm looking forward to your video which explains how to get FO: London running with the Steam version of FO. Keep it up. Love your vids. Greetings from Bavaria
As a Disneylander, I can confirm that map is accurate
Grazie mille
Skyrim belongs to the Norwegians!
One of the best videos I've seen in a while. Can't wait for your FO: London playthrough.
Don't anything or you'll kill me. Got it.
Especially don't call them Francis
Jolly good show chap! Time for spot of coff-tea with coo-biscuit. Okay, so I think i'm just gonna have to run around in power armor and max out endurance at this point.
In the immortal words of Nigel Thornberry..."Smashing!"
Oh good, someone else is thinking about Nigel Thornberry, lol.
That map of Europe is bloody hilarious!
As a french, I thank you dearly for all those rectifications. Specifically regarding chips.
As a proud Ammer-Reekan, I recall that we went to war with England twice for the right to speak the way we want. "No Vocalization without Representation" or something like that.
I’m probably more excited for this play through than I’ve been for anything you’ve done since Richard’s final chapter. (Also still hilarious to me that ‘soccer’ is originally a British term)
All of us Australians chilling here like yep we got our own words for most of them too!
Oh, I've heard this before. I dated a lass from Liverpool. Her parents moved here to "Amereeka" when she was in High School.
She educated me at every opportunity! 😆
I feel personally attacked with the "What'Ho" comment sir.
I was SO tempted to use the image of your character from the Forest thumbnails :)
Hello old chap are you alright?!. Oye I had tea with this posh Tory the other day it was brilliantly smashing mate. We went to a cheeky nandos full stop.
Finally, the video I've been waiting for
To be fair we got soccer from England and we just kept it. Was just watching the Olympics and you know what they call soccer? Soccer. All nit picking aside. This was hilarious. Well done. Looking forward to the series.
BUDDY! Oh my goodness this Canuck cannot wait for this series. (Also, aluminium. (having a giggle at my lovely American neighbours))
Can't wait to follow Mick through London, so excited! 😁
I already know this is going to be the best series yet
Thanks, Gopher. As an Australian I never realized how wrong all the current maps are. Time to drop the meat pies and beer and swap to piroshki and vodka 😋
1:55 these are chips 2:00 these are also chips
take it up with Australia if you have a problem with that.
To be fair, death is preferable to having to listen to a brit explain stuff.
Also, British man uses 2 movie references, but they were both to the same movie, the only good movie to come out of Britain besides the others.
LOL
What a good way to start my day. Made me smile. When someone calls me out for "wrong" pronunciations or word choices, I usually say, "sorry, been watching too much Brit stuff."
Bertie Wooster: And what about the oof situation?
Chuffy Chuffnell: The what?
Bertie Wooster: The oof, the dibs, the do-re-mi, the happy cabbage, the oil of palm.
Chuffy Chuffnell: Yes, yes, I do speak English.
I love Jeeves & Wooster. Absolute favourite!
@@ChasingTheEchoesOG I was just trying to remember the name of that show. Hilarious.
@@lasagnasux4934 Based on the books of P.G Wodehouse :)
@@ChasingTheEchoesOG I didn't know that. Those books must read like an actual acid trip.
Gopher's videos explaining to us and introducing us to new content is top notch elite level lol So damn funny.
I can't afford the hardware to play PC games anymore so I'll just watch your let's plays on it.
If you accidentally said that you like "soccer", you can still maybe save your life by pretending it was "snooker".
Aaaaand we are back to the start of the last TTW series, where I am going to desperately wish for a time machine, because every week is not going to be divided in the days of glory when Gopher posts a FOL video , and days of excruciatingly painful waiting in-between...
My dear chap, indeed, it was a positively splendid visual affair. I must convey my profound enjoyment and unrestrained admiration for its exquisite execution. Truly, it was a veritable feast for the senses, an epitome of artistic brilliance. Bravo, my good fellow, bravo!
My friend tried to survive just by using candles.
Suffice to say, it wasn't really a bright idea.
What do french fries do when they meet after a long time?
They ketchup.
Amrika? Sunken in the ocean? Oh! No no no mate, you're thinking of Atlanta!
I've got a good feeling some of these tips will bring real help with playing Fallout London.
As an Australian chips are chips are chips. It's all chips and that is on purpose as it's the context of the chip that matters.
It's the temperature of the chip that really matters. Hot chips usually come in a cup bought at the servo. 'Cold' chips (or just chips) come in a bag and you eat them over the course of a week. (or, more likely, you binge the whole thing in one go and feel like crap after because you just ate an entire family sized pack of smiths what's wrong with you)
@@Her_Imperious_Condescension Truth.
I had a jolly good time with this video!
Excellent introduction, but as a Monty Python fan, I'm firmly convinced that Mick should be named Nigel.
Now to be fair, I think most of America has shifted from calling them "French Fries" to just "Fries". I haven't heard anyone call em french fries since i last visited my grandmother.
Installing as we speak!!! So excited!
Where can i install it? Gog?
This is not a grandma, this is a nan. This is not a skirt, it's a kilt. This is not a subway, it's the tube.
So quaint are the British folk.
Quaint indeed. They even liked the language of America, English, so much they named one of their countries for it.
It's called a 'kilt,' because they "kilt" the first guy that called it a 'skirt'.
The tube is specifically for London. Other cities tend to call it a metro. However since we're talking about London here...
@@Tautolonaut A long robe. Not a dress.
Welp, this Texan has been schooled.
I swear if there’s no crumpets, toad in the hole, nor spotted d*** pudding in game… I might rage quit
What ho, old chap. Jolly good show. Pip pip and cheerio.
Fantastic work Gopher! i look forward to your shenanigans! :D
Rule of Thumb think each letters Phonetic sound not Desisignation sound. All right are kids. Lesson over
I've saw something recently suggesting that English in the medieval times was probably way more phonetic, and that words such as "knight" would actually have sounded quite hilarious to us :)
@GophersVids indeed, as another Manchester boy, I find it funny that Manchester is roughly the horizontal line across england where Sch can be soft or hard, making schedule an interesting word in a conversation.
Don't @ me with the word "phonetic" unless you want to actually use the International Phonetic Alphabet.
@MrSinjoy quick! get the flags, we have an uprising 😉
There was adocumentary someone did about fishing communities in Maine who have accents similar to how Shakespeare would have sounded.
I remember there was a line in one of his plays about getting a 'room in Rome' and it was clever because back then both room and Rome were pronounced the same.
Nicely done Gopher!
I realized I'd been subconsciously expecting Gopher to adopt a Londoner accent, for some reason.
What makes this silly is the thought that I'd even know a Londoner accent if I heard it.
Londoner accent? Cockney is the one that most foreigners know, but there are so many others.
Oh my god, that map is hilarious. Love it Gopher!
As soon as I'm home from work that shits happening
This is my all time favourite vlog! You wouldn’t believe how often my English pronunciation gets “corrected “ by our cousins from across the pond! A little gentle payback doesn’t go amiss!
Okay Gopher, I now need you to explain cricket to me.
Honestly? I couldn't. Seriously. I have no actual idea what is going on in that game :)
@@GophersVids
Missed opportunity to go “Ask the Indians or Pakistanis”
The standard "Cricket explained to a foreigner" delivery:
You have two sides, one out in the field and one in.
Each man that’s in the side that’s in the field goes out and when he’s out comes in and the next man goes in until he’s out.
When a man goes out to go in, the men who are out try to get him out, and when he is out he goes in and the next man in goes out and goes in.
When they are all out, the side that’s out comes in and the side that’s been in goes out and tries to get those coming in out.
Sometimes there are men still in and not out.
There are men called umpires who stay out all the time, and they decide when the men who are in are out.
Depending on the weather and the light, the umpires can also send everybody in, no matter whether they’re in or out.
When both sides have been in and all the men are out (including those who are not out), then the game is finished.
Now I hope that's made everything clear...
@@73North265 So... It's In-N-Out, but with flat bats and no burgers?
@@grumpyoldnord I prefer to think of it as baseball for the thinking man....both of course being invented in England! I think burgers can be at your discretion
Nice one me old china, i shall get in the jam jar drive home on the left side of the road see trouble and strife and up the apple and pears to play Fallout London.
Don't worry about the English OR the French getting you first for calling them French Fries. Worry about the "Bedlums" who border the French! They're Bedlum Fries, although the English might make their chips with a single dip in the fat, so I guess we can say they're distinct enough to call them their own thing.
Needed Pomp and Circumstance and a touch of Land of Hope and Glory, but you can't have everything.
My relatives came to America about a 100 years ago from England, we're able to trace our heritage back about 450 years there. Even though we've been here 100 years, our family still uses a lot of the same English Words that you talk about here. I guess you can't take the English completely out of your DNA even after 100 years.
My grandmother used garridge for garage, and a few others. Her ancestors mostly came in the 1600s.
This is going to be an awesome series lol
I actually knew many of these terms. My mom liked watching old British comedies, especially "Keeping Up Appearances". Hyacinth and Richard reminded her of her sister and her sister's husband, even as a young kid I quickly understood why.
Time to drink some irradiated tea! 🎉 😂
Sooo, where do you keep the tea? Oh, and where's the nearest harbor... What? Why? No particular reason.
🇺🇸
Gopher ive long appreciated your wit (and lets be honest, your cynicism) , but you were in absolute rare form. What a gem of an opening.
Incidentally: American, I laughed until sound stopped coming out. The dog is now looking at me funny, but thats normal. The cat is also looking at me funny, when normally he ignores everything but food. Im very much looking forward to this!
Gopher, I’m doing a current run in BG3 as a Gnome bard “Lorebrarian”. Adapting this, small mousy librarian type as the base character, instead of the typical “hero” could be fun for a FO London run.
3:14 I'd also like to add that responding "Everton" to this question will instead cause them to laugh in your face resulting in death via embarrassment
While in Britain, I was often greeted with: "You alright?", and it would completely throw me every time.
I would always immediately be filled with dread and ask: "Why? Is something wrong?"
. . . . but the amazing fish & chips with mushy peas more than made up for it!
God I love these little vids of you just rambling, ranting and just being yourself LOL as always mate, keep up the stellar work❤️
As a British person, this video is very funny
I dont think this will protect us from the ghouls and other weird creatures Gopher they dont speak but I appreciate it
I will remember to walk on the pavement there.
That was awesome.
I love that you put "Hall of the Mountain King" in the background, it gives this very special kind of urgency! ;-)
This is hilarious! Well done @gopher!
Mate, as a german, i use what ever eglish sounding word i want. Still better den have to listen to a french trying to speak english.
This video goes far beyond Fallout: London and should be required viewing for ALL Johnny Foreigners 😀
- - - ALU-MIN-I-UM! - - - (Not bloody "Aluminum") p.s Cant wait for this !!
@@Jorduan100 fun fact, aluminum predates aluminium by a few years at least. It was changed to fit in more with the naming convention of other chemicals (Barium, Cesium, Beryllium, etc...) instead of like platinum.
@@lasagnasux4934 well thats a good thing to learn today cheers :)
@@lasagnasux4934 Huh, was always wondering why it's spelled with one "i"
I would give this a hundred likes if I could. Thank you for being so funny Gopher ❤
I just love you (even more) for this one!
My British is so confused through all these "A meeh ree cans"" but I know my chips and I am able to differ between a truck and a lorry.
Also I love colour and armour and now want a sip of my tea.
was looking for a guide to install the mod but this is so much better
Wear Kevlar you never know when someone’s gonna shank you.
Your man resembles a long-lost cousin of the Ai chest burster! 😂
Brilliant!