- Today we are going to challenge each other
to be a very difficult lesson for us
because we have some different British idioms
that we are going to ask each other
and see if we can figure out what they mean,
and I'm pretty sure I'm gonna do bad.
We're gonna try to do our best to guess them.
- Alright, so do you wanna ask me one of yours first?
- Yes.
isn't that kind of like a commotion
- I thought you said you were gonna be bad at this.
- I think I've heard of kerfuffle.
- Yeah it is. - It's like I'm British.
- It's a really good word though,
- It says, a skirmish or fight
(laughs)
maybe you'll get it if you work through it.
he's all mouth and no trousers.
- Is this similar to like if somebody's
bark is louder than their bite,
- Kind of, like yeah. - So does it mean--
- Somebody's like, just all talk,
(chuckles)
- Yeah, no that's exactly what it says,
Are you all mouth no trousers?
- Oh yeah, like I think many times
(laughs)
Is it, it's really cool, it's great,
- Yeah, kind of. - This lesson is knees up?
- Yeah, I hope we're using that the right way,
it just says adjective for liveliness.
Like, dancing, like your knees are up
- I guess that makes sense, yeah.
Okay, your next one, blinding.
- Like if something's very bright
gave a blinding inauguration speech.
- So this could either be very good
- I mean, or you could say like,
I'm trying to think of something more recent.
The royal wedding was blinding?
- Yeah, it's not making it any easier.
Well I'm guessing it means like amazing
or something really cool? - Maybe I'm using it wrong.
- Excellence, it says. - Oh.
- Interactive english is a blinding channel.
- We're so blinding. - We're so freakin' blinding.
I gotta say, I think British idioms are better
- The ones we've done thus far, yes.
- Yes.
Okay, so one is to know your onions
I'd just say, is it like to know your stuff,
and you're aware of what's goin' on?
this guy doesn't know his onions.
- Yep.
- Really?
- That's exactly what it is. - Alright,
well that was pretty easy based on the context.
- But how much better is to know your onions
- It's so much better. - Yeah.
I think you'll get the next one
'cause this is, this is a little bit a review,
- Chuffed.
- (laughs) I remember this one - Chuffed.
'cause we did this one with Allie.
- Yeah.
- But do I remember the meaning is the question.
- We did another idiom challenge with
- He said chuffed to bits. - I think the idiom he gave,
like excited or happy or delighted?
- Yeah.
(laughs)
- No, yeah to be very pleased about something.
- Okay.
- The sentence was, I just, it's like,
Reginald was chuffed about the football match
and I just thought like-- - Very British and simple.
seems like such a stereotypical
- This one I think you should know
- Okay.
- I might surprise you and be very wrong.
- Miffed?
- Miffed.
pissed off about something, you know you're miffed.
I'm laughing because, because the example is,
he got all miffed about the football match.
- Sure people in the UK get miffed.
- Reginald, stop getting-- - About the football match.
Miffed about the football match.
- I imagine people were very miffed
- Reginald is miffed. - People were not chuffed.
Reginald especially, super miffed.
- Okay, we need to stop with this name okay.
- This, go away. - How can you see?
- Yeah, well I don't want you to see,
'cause you're trying-- - Well I can't.
- I am-- - You're trying to cheat.
- What?
- Corker.
- Like, like does he have to something
he would like put a cork in it or something?
- No.
- Corker, I, this I don't think
- Yes.
- You're probably still not gonna get it,
or a good sport or something good?
- Unless, unless this source is wrong.
Someone or something that is outstanding, a stand out.
There's like a Reginald watching this right now,
like, screw you guys. - I'm sorry,
we're not picking on you. - Sorry, you know.
- We actually do like the name, it's really--
- I am somebody who should not
be making fun of anybody's name.
- I mean, to be fair-- - Yeah.
- Me neither, because nobody's heard of my name.
- So we're with you, Reginald.
- We understand.
- Okay.
and then you give me a sentence.
who is lazy, kind of like a bum,
sloth, they're not working hard,
but also kind of, I mean you're right
on the connotation of the word.
- Why wouldn't, okay, alright.
- Oh, if somebody's a numpty?
- That's somebody's a numpty, somebody's--
- Somebody's numpty.
with the concept of adjectives today.
- Numpty.
- You and your numpty friend should apologize.
- You and your stupid-- - That is such a good one.
- You and your stupid friend should apologize?
- Yeah.
- Yeah.
(laughs)
- We're gonna bring some of these idioms
back to America and start saying,
hey numpty, what are you doin'?
Numpty friend, that numpty shirt.
(laughs)
This is another, this is a good one.
British idioms are much better.
- Doofer.
- D-O-O-F-E-R, doofer.
- No.
- What?
- Kind of, but there's a little more to it.
What do you call that doofer over there?
- Thing?
(laughs)
- Thingy?
- It says, it's an unnamed object,
so if you don't-- - Oh, so like a thing?
- Yeah, a thing, like if you don't know the name
oh, what's, what's that doofer?
I think a lot of people in the US
Whatchamacallit, I think of the,
that was like the old commercial.
- You don't know your onions, apparently.
- Apparently about Whatchamacallits.
Okay, oh I think you know this one.
- No, I'm like, odds and sods,
- Okay, You lot got first picks
and left with nothing but odds and sods.
- That you like, odds and sods,
I got all a bunch of of rubbish.
this particular sentence wasn't the best.
- Did you wanna give me another sentence?
- Like at the flea market,
you, you, you could find a bunch
- Unnamed. - It's an unnamed thing.
- Yeah, miscellaneous things.
- Okay.
- But what I didn't want it to think,
- Okay.
Another good one, I thought, an earwig.
- What?
- Earwig?
- Earwig.
you might be able to get it based on the context.
Don't earwig on my personal phone calls.
- Oh, is it like to eavesdrop? - Don't earwig.
it's like, like kind of like wiggling your ear,
of like a wig you put on your head.
- That's what I first thought of when I heard it.
Okay, the next one from me is spawny.
- Spawny.
and gangly, like they're spawny.
- No.
can you give me a sentence? - It's an adjective.
That was a spawny outcome for you.
- Okay, a positive, great, unexpected?
- That's a good connotation-- - That's, that was--
- It's the right kind of connotation.
- You know, that was a spawny outcome,
- Lucky.
Well I don't wanna give you a hint.
- What?
- Do you want me to give you a hint
before I give you the sentence?
- Yeah.
it's basically exactly what it sounds like.
- I don't know, eating spinach?
- Eating irons, like no. - Spinach is iron.
- Somebody would ask or something like,
don't we have any clean eating irons?
- Uh huh, yeah, cutlery, eating utensils.
- I wonder how common this one is.
- I just assume somebody is eating iron,
so that's why I was like, what?
Like is it vitamin deficiency thing?
Okay, the next one is steaming.
- Steaming if you're steaming? - Steaming.
- Steaming?
- No, but that's a good guess.
- Okay, can you use a sentence?
- Steaming, the drunk Reginald
- Is that really the sentence?
- Reginald, he's everywhere.
In that case, it'd be like an adverb of degree,
now I see the second part of the definition.
the state of extreme drunkenness
so maybe you were right in the beginning,
but steaming I think does add excessiveness
to whatever is that you're doing.
- Okay.
- Really?
- Yeah, how would I know the fuzz?
- Because there was a movie called Hot Fuzz.
- Don't let the fuzz catch you.
There's any problem, call the fuzz.
- Yeah.
- Oh.
I've heard that quite a bit. - I mean I may have heard it.
like people thought the fuzz, the cops.
- Now you know your onions. - Mmhm.
- Okay, I'm gonna say to wag off is to like,
just gonna go out there and say it,
- No.
- No.
(laughs)
but it means something else. - To wag off.
- No.
I had nothing to do, but wag off at work.
- Just do nothing of importance?
I don't know, you're bored, you wag off,
you screw around, you don't do much?
- Kind of.
- It kind of means to waste time.
that's easy, that's a real word.
what, I mean, can you like give me some kind of hint?
- I can give you an example sentence.
- Reginald.
- Ew.
- I'm gonna check where we got these,
like a site, just to challenge each other.
- I wonder if, yeah, I wonder if the person who kind of
- If their name is Reginald. - With all of these,
I believe because I've heard it before,
but this one goes, warts and all.
- Just, you're not feeling good about your appearance,
like warts and all, or like just--
I've heard it in the US too, I thought.
- I've never heard of warts and all.
- Alright, I'll keep the cat, warts and all.
you'll, for something for better or for worse?
Like, you'll keep it with all the defects
and problems that something might have, warts and all?
I've never heard warts and all.
I think people have said it in the US before.
(giggles)
- I don't think I've heard it,
but it's good, it sounds good.
- Most homes have an idiot box.
No.
- What?
Why would that be an idiot box?
- Well you're acting like I'm supposed to know,
- Oh.
So if you learn some new idioms,
please hit that like button down below,
also, write to us in the comments
and tell us which one was your favorite
or if you know of some other British idioms,
because yeah, we think they're just better
- Thank you guys so much for watching
- Bye.