Coffee plunger! I’ve never heard that but it doesn’t mean it’s incorrect. I laughed when I saw this as I have always called this a French coffee press.
A quick search says that 'coffee plunger' is in New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa. Given the American English terms for everything else, I would say this video is wrong on that one.
Depending on where you live, some of these objects can have different names. So you aren't wrong if you use a different name - the coffee plunger is also know as a French press or a Cafetière, the latter not being used much since many struggle to pronounce it but a search of the internet will give plenty of results.
Exactly. There are people on here from all over the world, and even in the US, some things are called different names, depending on what country you are from. Lots of things have more than one name.
Need size references, missed SD card, never used one. Bath pouf not loofah, Last item is a garden fork not a pitch fork; used for digging in garden. Pitch fork has thin curved tines used for pitching hay hence the name.
I'm with you on the loofah and garden fork. In the UK a loofah is a long thing that looks like a cross between a baguette and a sponge, and a pitchfork has 3 widely spaced, long, thin prongs. The picture is a garden fork in the UK.
I've never heard the word Catetiere, we always called it a french press and even though everyone calls them loofahs, a real loofah is not made out of plastic, it's a type of gourd that people use the insides of to scrub themselves with. I got 25 right.
I've never heard of a tuktuk in my life. I do not drink coffee so I didn't get the French Press/"coffee plunger." I don't know what an SD card is. I got the others, although two of them were like, "You are going to say that is a loofah, but it's not" and "I bet you are going to call that a pitch fork even though it's not."
@@Gmackematix Exactly--that's where I've seen them too, but I got it wrong because I couldn't remember what it was called and as soon as the answer came up I was like oh yeah!!! That's what those things are called!!
C'mon guys! Be a bit more cultured will you! Someone has already pointed out that a Loofah is a natural product, whereas the picture you showed is just a plastic body scrub. Also, Coffee Plunger - Really! It's called a Cafetiere!
@@alexaelliott2598 That is so interesting!! I don't even like coffee and I use mine every day for my tea. I've never heard it called anything but a French press, but that doesn't mean the other names are wrong!
1. cufflinks 2. paper cutter 3. tuning fork 4. vuvuzela 5. carabiner 6. disk drive 7. fez 8. fleur de lis 9. unicycle 10. contact lens 11. tamagotchi 12. metronome 13. aglet 14. oven mitt 15. magic 8 ball 16. satellite dish 17. car thing? 18. potion flask 19. balance beam (as someone who used to do gymnastics, i remember the name of this.) 20. cinnamon 21. bowling pin (as an avid bowler i approve this) 22. kettle thing 23. stethoscope (i see those everytime i go to the doctor) 24. bunsen burner 25. sd card 26. trowel 27. binoculars 28. loofah 29. thermometer 30. pitchfork
The only real objection I have is calling the bundle of plastic netting for showering a loofah, even though I've heard other people call them that too. A loofah is a specific kind of gourd. Inside the gourd is this sort of rough type of material and people use that for scrubbing themselves in the bath or shower. It may have other uses, I don't know. But whenever i hear someone call the plastic thing a loofah, I tell them what a loofah really is. I don't know...maybe I'm turning into the loofah police!! LOL!~!!
Hi there, That was a garden fork and not a pitchfork, A bowling ball is actually called a Skittle. The correct name for a coffee plunger is French Press. Hope this helps. Loved the quiz, played it with my family.
1. Cufflinks, which I wore when I was a Technical Account Manager for Microsoft in the 90s. 2. Stapler remover, part of the office supplies I stole when I had an office job. 3. Tuning fork, which I used in the school band as a teenager. 4. Vuvuzela, which I blasted when cheering Brasil in the FIFA World Cup several times. 5. Carabiner, which I used for mountain climbing and now as a key ring. 6. Cassette tape, which I played tons of music at home and in the car in the 70s-80s. 7. Fez, which I bought as a souvenir hat in Morrocco. 8. Fleur de Lis, or the logo for the NFL New Orleans Saints. 9. Unicycle, which is all to familiar to circus clowns. 10. Contact Lens, which I know but never needed. Now you just get LASIK surgery. 11. No idea what that children's toy is, but looks like something Japanese from the '90s. 12. Metronome, I used them briefly as a drummer way back when to keep time. 13. No clue whatsoever. 14. Oven mitt, which my sainted mother had and I still have in the kitchen. 15. Magic Eight-Ball, which was popular in the 70s, about the same time as Mood Rings. 16. Satellite dish, so we kids could watch porn back in the early 80s. 17. Tuk Tuk, cheap public transport in southeast Asia (I currently live in Thailand, it literally means "cheap cheap" in Thai). 18. Ink well, which predates the #2 pencils we kids used in school way back. 19. Balance beam, which I practiced on as a male gymnast back in the '70s. 20. Cinnamon quills (sticks) which I used to buy fresh in Vietnamese markets. 21. Bowling pin, come on give me a break, too easy ;-). 22. Coffee plunger, although I prefer the term "French Press". 23. Stethoscope, used by doctors and those played on TV. 24. Bunsen burner, not a very good picture of one, but we used them in high school science class. 25. SD memory card, or could be any sort of static flash memory card. 26. Trowel, which I use frequently on my little farm in Thailand. 27. Binoculars, which I use several of to spot 100s of birds every day. 28. Loofah, not a very representative photo, but yeah we get it. Swedish body scrubber. 29. Thermometer, shove it up your butt or in your mouth, 98.6°F/37C. 30. Pitchfork, did I mention I'm a farmer, but in Thailand we use something slightly different. ;-)
I missed the weirdly named horn; I called it a New Year's noisemaker. The Bunsen burner was a stumper - it looked different than the ones we had in the 1960's high school science class - it was more streamlined and so clean! I guess you could call the coffee thing a "plunger', but it is commonly known as a French Press coffee maker. The "pitchfork" is actually a garden or muck fork - a pitchfork has a much longer shaft with no handle and a more rounded set of tines. What you called a loofa is a shower sponge or scrubby. A loofa is made from a gourd in the cucumber family.
@@alunchurcher7060 A French press, is also known as a cafetière, cafetière à piston, caffettiera a stantuffo, press pot, coffee press, or coffee plunger. It just depends upon your location. Whatever it's called it puts grounds into your coffee and I prefer filtered coffee.
I guess it could be called a New Year’s noisemaker, but a vuvuzela horn is used by soccer fans to distract the opposing team. The vuvuzela comes from South Africa and was originally made from tin but now plastic. In 2014 it was banned from the FIFA World Cup Soccer tournament and more and more organizations and stadiums are banning them. If you find one especially one made out of tin it could soon become a collectors item. Good luck hope this helps.
@@harrywatt6452 Those damned horns made watching the World Cup in S. Africa just awful. Had to turn off the sound and rely on the closed captioning for info. Worst World Cup ever.
28/30. What is a magic 8 ball, never heard of it. Too old? Good quiz but…. More seriously Q28. Is a bath puff or whatever. A loofah is a natural product, the fibres left from a vegetable. You can grow them yourself if you want to. That purple thing was plastic, not natural. Surely it is not just Brits who know this? 👍👍🇬🇧🇬🇧
Cassette tape?! Really? Yeah, I'm old. I guess some people are just too young to know. Sad. I call the vuvuzela a bugle, like the snack shaped like a bugle; we'd get those at the fall fair.
I got perfect, except I called the coffee maker a French Press,, which it is, and the loofah is wrong in the video. The tuktuk is also called a rickshaw in China.
I never have seen that tamagotchi item so I got that wrong and 2 others we just called it a different name...the last one we called a potato fork because that is what we used to harvest them from our garden. of course, one was the French press.
Greetings from Ireland 🇮🇪 . Wow! "Another Memory { "goJ" } - video" . Personally : No. 5 = "KeyRing" or "Safety Hook" ! No. 8 = "a Royal Crest" or "a Military Crest ! No. 10 = "LENS for Normal Glasses" ! No. 13 = "Lace Ends" or "Lace Binders" ! No. 15 = "an Original Wooden Bowling Ball" ! No. 17 = "Driving Buggy" or "Driving Cart" ! No. 20 = "Cigars" or "Sticks of Dynamite" ! No. 22 = "an Old HandHeld Lantern" or "a Mining Underground Lantern" ! No. 24 = "a Party Balloons Inflator" or "a Car / Automobile ~ Wheel ( s ) Changer JACK" ! No. 28 = "a PowderPuff for Women's Face Highlights" ! 🤫🤭 "Loofah" = LargeBrush Body Scrubber 🤭🤫 ! 👏👏 "30 out of 30" or "26 out of 30" 👏👏 !
22 is a cafetiere in British English 28 isn't a loofah. Dunno what chicks call that shit but it isn't a loofah, which is a much firmer, organic structure. If you got hit with a wet loofah, you'd know about it. 30 isn't a pitchfork, it's a garden fork.
#4 I didn't know the word VUVUZELA, but knew what the object was. #5 I knew what it was used for but didn't know the word CARIBENER. #11 I couldn't remember the word TAMAGOTCHI #13 I have no idea what an AGLET is #16 I said PARABOLE instead of SATELITE DISH #20 I said Cinnamon STICK not QUILL #22 Is also called a CAFETIERE #28 Is not LOOFAH (a loofha looks like a long stiff spomge) #30 Is just a GARDEN FORK .. a PITCHFORK only has two prongs
That's a garden fork, not a pitchfork! A pitchfork is a two or three pronged tool with a long wooden handle/stick used to move hay or straw. For context, I used to work at a riding stables.
I'm so sorry, I just realized You're English, I'm American so some things are called differently here. like the coffee press is a French press coffee maker & the loofah is a bath pouf, a loofah is a real dried ocean sponge or synthetic one that looks like the real ones. but I missed the cufflinks, thought they were stamps like people who do a lot of signing mail would have a stamp made so they just inked it & stamped the letters & papers !!!
I missed the Bunsen burner and the SD card. Sorry to tell you, but that was a bath pouf, not a loofah. Those are organic sponges which grow inside a type of squash. They arrival in shape and tan in color. Bath poufs are a plastic knock-off of the real thing.
I waited and waited and never saw anything that was obscure. An oven mitt? Really? Names may vary county to country so items like hand spade and trowel are the same thing.
I think others have said most of what I have to say. The coffee plunger one should also offer the alternative name cafetière. That isn't a loofah which is long, brown and rough, as though a cucumber had a skeleton. That is a garden fork not a pitchfork. Finally, if you are going to put a carabiner in the thumbnail, at least spell it correctly when it comes up.
Fun fact. I knew all the names in english but not in my mothertongue. To be fair they are called: spinki do mankietów, rozszywacz (had to check), kamerton, wuwuzela, karabińczyk, kaseta magnetofonowa, fez(i got it mixed up with biret), stylizowana lilia, monocykl/rower jednokołowy, szkło kontaktowe, tamagotchi ;) (I'm old, I had one), metronom, skuwka, rękawica kuchenna, magiczna kula (its not a thing here), antena satelitarna, tuktuk, kałamarz, równoważnia, kora cynamonowa, pin (didnt know that), prasa francuska, stetoskop, palnik laboratoryjny, karta sd, łopatka ogrodowa, lornetka, myjka, termometr, widły :)
Coffee plunger! I’ve never heard that but it doesn’t mean it’s incorrect. I laughed when I saw this as I have always called this a French coffee press.
Definitely a French press.
I would call that a cafetiere which is undoubtedly a French word. There should be a grave accent on the second e.
I make my tea everyday with my French press.
A quick search says that 'coffee plunger' is in New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa. Given the American English terms for everything else, I would say this video is wrong on that one.
I've always called it a cafatiere but I've also heard it called a French press. NEVER have I heard it called a coffee PLUNGER.
Depending on where you live, some of these objects can have different names. So you aren't wrong if you use a different name - the coffee plunger is also know as a French press or a Cafetière, the latter not being used much since many struggle to pronounce it but a search of the internet will give plenty of results.
Agreed. Tuk tuk in india is called auto rickshaw
Exactly. There are people on here from all over the world, and even in the US, some things are called different names, depending on what country you are from. Lots of things have more than one name.
I mean what part of the country you are from.
The last one is a garden fork where I'm from. A pitchfork has two tines only.
Need size references, missed SD card, never used one. Bath pouf not loofah, Last item is a garden fork not a pitch fork; used for digging in garden. Pitch fork has thin curved tines used for pitching hay hence the name.
I'm with you on the loofah and garden fork. In the UK a loofah is a long thing that looks like a cross between a baguette and a sponge, and a pitchfork has 3 widely spaced, long, thin prongs. The picture is a garden fork in the UK.
I've never heard the word Catetiere, we always called it a french press and even though everyone calls them loofahs, a real loofah is not made out of plastic, it's a type of gourd that people use the insides of to scrub themselves with. I got 25 right.
The trowel was a garden spade (a hand tool) and the pitchfork was a garden for. A pitch fork doesn't have a t-handle.
I just missed one, the vuvuzela, I guessed Dr. Seuss Horn.
I've never heard of a tuktuk in my life. I do not drink coffee so I didn't get the French Press/"coffee plunger." I don't know what an SD card is. I got the others, although two of them were like, "You are going to say that is a loofah, but it's not" and "I bet you are going to call that a pitch fork even though it's not."
Totally agree with you on the loofah and pitchfork. I did get Tuktuk though.
Never heard of a tuktuk? I take it you've never seen an Asian travel documentary. 😉
@@Gmackematix Exactly--that's where I've seen them too, but I got it wrong because I couldn't remember what it was called and as soon as the answer came up I was like oh yeah!!! That's what those things are called!!
C'mon guys! Be a bit more cultured will you! Someone has already pointed out that a Loofah is a natural product, whereas the picture you showed is just a plastic body scrub. Also, Coffee Plunger - Really! It's called a Cafetiere!
17\20. 🐘
It’s called a coffee plunger in Australia
@@alexaelliott2598 That is so interesting!! I don't even like coffee and I use mine every day for my tea. I've never heard it called anything but a French press, but that doesn't mean the other names are wrong!
We call it French Press as well
I've always known that as a loofah. And a coffee press.
A loofah is a gourd not a piece of scrunched up plastic netting. Bath scrunchy would be a better name.
1. cufflinks
2. paper cutter
3. tuning fork
4. vuvuzela
5. carabiner
6. disk drive
7. fez
8. fleur de lis
9. unicycle
10. contact lens
11. tamagotchi
12. metronome
13. aglet
14. oven mitt
15. magic 8 ball
16. satellite dish
17. car thing?
18. potion flask
19. balance beam (as someone who used to do gymnastics, i remember the name of this.)
20. cinnamon
21. bowling pin (as an avid bowler i approve this)
22. kettle thing
23. stethoscope (i see those everytime i go to the doctor)
24. bunsen burner
25. sd card
26. trowel
27. binoculars
28. loofah
29. thermometer
30. pitchfork
1- random thingys
2- staple remover
3- tuning fork
4- trumpet thing
5- clip. Backpack clip.
6- cassette. Tape cassette
7- fez
8- French thing
9- unicycle
10- contact lens
11- tamagotchi
12- metronome
13- aglet
14- oven mit
15- magic 8 ball
16- satellite dish
17- it’s a small car thing
18- black liquid in a jar maybe it’s ink or nail polish
19- balancing beam
20- cinnamon stick
21- bowling pin
22- French press
23- stethoscope
24- some chemistry thing I guess
25- game cartridge? Floppy disk?
26- spade
27- binoculars
28- loofa
29- thermometer
30- small rake
I think my nicknames are satisfactory lol
"French thing."
The French only invented one thing and that was it.
The only real objection I have is calling the bundle of plastic netting for showering a loofah, even though I've heard other people call them that too. A loofah is a specific kind of gourd. Inside the gourd is this sort of rough type of material and people use that for scrubbing themselves in the bath or shower. It may have other uses, I don't know. But whenever i hear someone call the plastic thing a loofah, I tell them what a loofah really is. I don't know...maybe I'm turning into the loofah police!! LOL!~!!
- A plastic bath scrubby is NOT a loofah any more than a Suzuki is a pony.
- The right name is French Press for the whatever name you called it.
I googled. It's a loofah 😁
@@mistiinseattle ...and Google has NEVER been wrong?
Words have meanings and popular misuse isn't the same as being correct.
@@puirYorick lol not interested in bickering with strangers on the internet 😁
@@frankmurray1549 " ca·fet·i·ère
A French press coffee pot."
I hope this makes you feel better about yourself Frank.
Hi there, That was a garden fork and not a pitchfork, A bowling ball is actually called a Skittle. The correct name for a coffee plunger is French Press. Hope this helps. Loved the quiz, played it with my family.
I missed 13!! That’s too many! I knew what some of them were but I couldn’t think of their names!
1. Cufflinks, which I wore when I was a Technical Account Manager for Microsoft in the 90s.
2. Stapler remover, part of the office supplies I stole when I had an office job.
3. Tuning fork, which I used in the school band as a teenager.
4. Vuvuzela, which I blasted when cheering Brasil in the FIFA World Cup several times.
5. Carabiner, which I used for mountain climbing and now as a key ring.
6. Cassette tape, which I played tons of music at home and in the car in the 70s-80s.
7. Fez, which I bought as a souvenir hat in Morrocco.
8. Fleur de Lis, or the logo for the NFL New Orleans Saints.
9. Unicycle, which is all to familiar to circus clowns.
10. Contact Lens, which I know but never needed. Now you just get LASIK surgery.
11. No idea what that children's toy is, but looks like something Japanese from the '90s.
12. Metronome, I used them briefly as a drummer way back when to keep time.
13. No clue whatsoever.
14. Oven mitt, which my sainted mother had and I still have in the kitchen.
15. Magic Eight-Ball, which was popular in the 70s, about the same time as Mood Rings.
16. Satellite dish, so we kids could watch porn back in the early 80s.
17. Tuk Tuk, cheap public transport in southeast Asia (I currently live in Thailand, it literally means "cheap cheap" in Thai).
18. Ink well, which predates the #2 pencils we kids used in school way back.
19. Balance beam, which I practiced on as a male gymnast back in the '70s.
20. Cinnamon quills (sticks) which I used to buy fresh in Vietnamese markets.
21. Bowling pin, come on give me a break, too easy ;-).
22. Coffee plunger, although I prefer the term "French Press".
23. Stethoscope, used by doctors and those played on TV.
24. Bunsen burner, not a very good picture of one, but we used them in high school science class.
25. SD memory card, or could be any sort of static flash memory card.
26. Trowel, which I use frequently on my little farm in Thailand.
27. Binoculars, which I use several of to spot 100s of birds every day.
28. Loofah, not a very representative photo, but yeah we get it. Swedish body scrubber.
29. Thermometer, shove it up your butt or in your mouth, 98.6°F/37C.
30. Pitchfork, did I mention I'm a farmer, but in Thailand we use something slightly different. ;-)
17. Tuk tuk is also found in the East Africa.
We just put thermometers under ones arm... All this mercury and thin glass in the mouth? Brrr.
I would venture to guess that 99% of staple removers in American homes started their life in corporate America.
The thermometer shown here was for u dear the tongue. The anal thermometer had more of a bulbous end. 😁
@@von1glik - I grew up with glass thermometers. We used them in both ends, but NOT THE SAME THERMOMETER for both. 😱
I missed the weirdly named horn; I called it a New Year's noisemaker.
The Bunsen burner was a stumper - it looked different than the ones we had in the 1960's high school science class - it was more streamlined and so clean!
I guess you could call the coffee thing a "plunger', but it is commonly known as a French Press coffee maker.
The "pitchfork" is actually a garden or muck fork - a pitchfork has a much longer shaft with no handle and a more rounded set of tines.
What you called a loofa is a shower sponge or scrubby. A loofa is made from a gourd in the cucumber family.
Cafetiere in the UK not a coffee plunger
@@alunchurcher7060 A French press, is also known as a cafetière, cafetière à piston, caffettiera a stantuffo, press pot, coffee press, or coffee plunger. It just depends upon your location. Whatever it's called it puts grounds into your coffee and I prefer filtered coffee.
I guess it could be called a New Year’s noisemaker, but a vuvuzela horn is used by soccer fans to distract the opposing team. The vuvuzela comes from South Africa and was originally made from tin but now plastic. In 2014 it was banned from the FIFA World Cup Soccer tournament and more and more organizations and stadiums are banning them. If you find one especially one made out of tin it could soon become a collectors item. Good luck hope this helps.
@@harrywatt6452 Those damned horns made watching the World Cup in S. Africa just awful. Had to turn off the sound and rely on the closed captioning for info. Worst World Cup ever.
This was fun! Some of the words were different then what I know, however, it worked well. Coffee Plunger vs. French Press, etc. - 28/30.
28/30. What is a magic 8 ball, never heard of it. Too old? Good quiz but….
More seriously Q28. Is a bath puff or whatever. A loofah is a natural product, the fibres left from a vegetable. You can grow them yourself if you want to. That purple thing was plastic, not natural. Surely it is not just Brits who know this? 👍👍🇬🇧🇬🇧
u haven’t heard of a magic 8 ball? Wow
I'm 71 years old & I had an eight ball when I was a kid!
INTERESTING FACT: The logo for Yamaha is not a wheel for a motorcycle but tuning forks in a circle as their original business was piano manufacturing,
I got them all correct! I thought you said that this would be hard. It was easy, fun but easy.
I'd have to argue the "loofah," but I got the rest. Are these supposed to be obsolete, or just random?
not a pitch fork, it's a garden fork.
A couple of items got lost in translation. Nations divided by their common language.
Item 26 is not a trowel, it's a "hand spade" used for gardening/
Different in different countries…in the UK, it is a trowel.
It's proper name is a trowel tho.
The thing they called a loofah is not a loofah, it is a shower puff. A loofah is natural plant material and is off -white in colour.
I got two wrong one of them was the Tuktuk. I drove one once, but didn't know what it was called. #5 is specifically a locking carabiner.
What!?
Tuk-tuk (Transportation in Thailand)?
I think that's Bajay (Indonesian ancient transportation).
I've never seen some things in the video.
Called a Tuk-tuk in Cambodia, Thailand, etc. They even have road races and rallies, with many enjoyable collisions and capsizing. Hilarious.
Cassette tape?! Really? Yeah, I'm old. I guess some people are just too young to know. Sad. I call the vuvuzela a bugle, like the snack shaped like a bugle; we'd get those at the fall fair.
It's actually called a compact cassette.
Got everything except for Aglet
I got perfect, except I called the coffee maker a French Press,, which it is, and the loofah is wrong in the video. The tuktuk is also called a rickshaw in China.
It's Carabiner not Caribener
Q haces aquí diego
I never have seen that tamagotchi item so I got that wrong and 2 others we just called it a different name...the last one we called a potato fork because that is what we used to harvest them from our garden. of course, one was the French press.
It's a scrunchy not a loofer. The last one is a garden fork a pitchfork has a longer handle and the tines are curved
Scrunchy is a tie for your hair. What they showed was for use in the shower.
Greetings from Ireland 🇮🇪 .
Wow! "Another Memory { "goJ" } - video" .
Personally :
No. 5 = "KeyRing" or "Safety Hook" !
No. 8 = "a Royal Crest" or "a Military Crest !
No. 10 = "LENS for Normal Glasses" !
No. 13 = "Lace Ends" or "Lace Binders" !
No. 15 = "an Original Wooden Bowling Ball" !
No. 17 = "Driving Buggy" or "Driving Cart" !
No. 20 = "Cigars" or "Sticks of Dynamite" !
No. 22 = "an Old HandHeld Lantern" or "a Mining Underground Lantern" !
No. 24 = "a Party Balloons Inflator" or "a Car / Automobile ~ Wheel ( s ) Changer JACK" !
No. 28 = "a PowderPuff for Women's Face Highlights" !
🤫🤭 "Loofah" = LargeBrush Body Scrubber 🤭🤫 !
👏👏 "30 out of 30"
or
"26 out of 30" 👏👏 !
22 is a cafetiere in British English
28 isn't a loofah. Dunno what chicks call that shit but it isn't a loofah, which is a much firmer, organic structure. If you got hit with a wet loofah, you'd know about it.
30 isn't a pitchfork, it's a garden fork.
#4 I didn't know the word VUVUZELA, but knew what the object was.
#5 I knew what it was used for but didn't know the word CARIBENER.
#11 I couldn't remember the word TAMAGOTCHI
#13 I have no idea what an AGLET is
#16 I said PARABOLE instead of SATELITE DISH
#20 I said Cinnamon STICK not QUILL
#22 Is also called a CAFETIERE
#28 Is not LOOFAH (a loofha looks like a long stiff spomge)
#30 Is just a GARDEN FORK .. a PITCHFORK only has two prongs
That's a garden fork, not a pitchfork! A pitchfork is a two or three pronged tool with a long wooden handle/stick used to move hay or straw. For context, I used to work at a riding stables.
A pitchfork has a long handle
Coffee plunger? How about calling it a French press?
I'm so sorry, I just realized You're English, I'm American so some things are called differently here. like the coffee press is a French press coffee maker & the loofah is a bath pouf, a loofah is a real dried ocean sponge or synthetic one that looks like the real ones. but I missed the cufflinks, thought they were stamps like people who do a lot of signing mail would have a stamp made so they just inked it & stamped the letters & papers !!!
I am in US and it is a loofah 😁
@@mistiinseattle I'm in the US, too, and no, it isn't.
Actually, loofahs aren't sponges. They come from Luffa plants, a gourd in the cucumber family.
Okay thanks, I now know
@@mistiinseattle not where I'm at it's a bath pouf
The pictures were so small and cropped in. I had a difficult time seeing them even if I knew what they were. I didn't know some of them anyway though.
Some of them I knew what they did, but I didn’t know the name of them. As for the ones that I didn’t know, they should explain what they do.
Ear trumpet 🤣
Fun one
28 is not a loofah!
Lace
I got all except for bunsen burner. Insteaf of "tuk tuk" I said "auto rickshaw" and "coffee plunger" was "French press."
both of those are the same thing, so you’re good 👍
I missed the Bunsen burner and the SD card. Sorry to tell you, but that was a bath pouf, not a loofah. Those are organic sponges which grow inside a type of squash. They arrival in shape and tan in color. Bath poufs are a plastic knock-off of the real thing.
Fez
No. 17, Bahay or Rickshaw counts
#8 we got Quebec here lol
23/30 thanks for the quiz.
26/30 Though you said trough, I said spade... thanks for the quiz! 🙃
Cufflinks
Bowl
I waited and waited and never saw anything that was obscure. An oven mitt? Really? Names may vary county to country so items like hand spade and trowel are the same thing.
26/30 Amazing. 🇨🇦🇬🇧👍😎
25 out of 30
got all except binoculars .
I think if you recognise the object but use a different word, give yourself a point anyway.
#21 - this is a “Ten Pin”. There are also “Duck Pins” or “9 Pins”. So “Bowling Pin” is too general.
Oven glove
Pack man
Carabiner
I think others have said most of what I have to say. The coffee plunger one should also offer the alternative name cafetière. That isn't a loofah which is long, brown and rough, as though a cucumber had a skeleton. That is a garden fork not a pitchfork. Finally, if you are going to put a carabiner in the thumbnail, at least spell it correctly when it comes up.
Metronome
Radar
Carabiner, not carabener (at least in American English)
25/30
Vuvuzela? Really? #27 looks more like field glasses, no prisms.
?
17/30 My ative language
12/30 English
Music cassette
Contact lens
Uni cycle
Tuning fork
I call bullshit on the loofah...
NOT a loofah
So as tired as I am @ 3.34 am I got them ALL, SO WHAT THEBHELL WAS SO HARD ? 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
0/30
Fun fact. I knew all the names in english but not in my mothertongue. To be fair they are called: spinki do mankietów, rozszywacz (had to check), kamerton, wuwuzela, karabińczyk, kaseta magnetofonowa, fez(i got it mixed up with biret), stylizowana lilia, monocykl/rower jednokołowy, szkło kontaktowe, tamagotchi ;) (I'm old, I had one), metronom, skuwka, rękawica kuchenna, magiczna kula (its not a thing here), antena satelitarna, tuktuk, kałamarz, równoważnia, kora cynamonowa, pin (didnt know that), prasa francuska, stetoskop, palnik laboratoryjny, karta sd, łopatka ogrodowa, lornetka, myjka, termometr, widły :)
22 is not a "coffee plunger". It's a French Press. I use one every day.
I also use one daily and the coffee grinders at the store even show the picture of them and list the grind setting as French Press.
Für dellie
It's more like a rickshaw, not a tuktuk
Not sure about the Tuktuk, but I do know that a rickshaw is pulled by someone on foot.
The 17th one is mostly called as Auto Rickshaw
Carabiner