
American living in the UK says she was mortified after using a 'normal' US word that has a very different meaning in Britain
An American woman has revealed three of the 'spiciest' US-based slang words that would leave most Brits mortified.
California-born Devin, has spent the last two years living in London, where she has picked up on subtle language differences between the US and the UK.
In a video shared to TikTok, Devin, who uses the handle @devinguccii, admitted she ha 'learned the hard way' that certain words have vastly different meanings in the UK to back home in the States.
Offering her advice to fellow Yanks, she began the video by announcing that there were three words in particular that had landed her in hot water in Britain.
'These are three American words I've discovered you should not be using in the UK, and what to use instead,' she said at the start of the clip.
Introducing the first word, which she prefaced was the 'most PG' one was 'pants', typically referring to trousers in the States, but more commonly used to describe undergarments in a British context.
'In the US, it's a more general word for trousers, so it can be used in terms of tracksuit bottoms, jeans, slacks, khakis, anything that's a long version of a trouser,' she explained.
'But in the UK, it generally refers to men's boxers, so if you say 'Oh, I like your pants,' they'll take that as you can see my underwear, and you like my underwear'.
Though, some in the comments disputed the claim that Brits don't refer to pants as trousers.
'Pants mean trousers in the north of the UK,' one wrote, while another pointed to a third meaning, when pants is used derogatorily.
'Pants can also mean something is rubbish. eg this film is pants,' the linguaphile wrote.
Second on the list, and one which Devin said was 'a little spicier', was a phrase used by Americans to describe a bum bag - or as the they refer to it, a 'fanny pack'.
'In the UK the term is bum bang,' she retorted, explaining that 'fanny in the UK refers to a woman's genitalia'.
'Although, now they're more popular, you can usually get away with using the word fanny pack in the UK,' she added.
Third and final on the list was one term that she discovered through 'trial and error' in the UK, and one which is perfectly normal when expressed in the States.
'Its the term that Americans use when you're holding two drinks at the bar or party or something and that is ... You're 'double fisting',' the TikToker explained sheepishly.
British viewers were in stitches after hearing of Devin's dialectal blunders, with many expressing themselves in the comments
'Obviously it means something way dirtier in the UK and you should not use it, that's not the term.
'The term they do use is 'double parked',' she said, referring to the phrase commonly used to refer to an individual who has two drinks at the same time.
'Now of course, there's lots of other words that English and American people use differently but these are a little bit spicy that you could get yourself in a bit of trouble if you say them in the UK,' she concluded.
British viewers were in stitches after hearing of Devin's dialectal blunders, with many expressing themselves in the comments.
'We say what we want in UK,' one joked.
'Definitely thought you were going to say the whole rubber/eraser thing! But yeah, double fisting doesn't sound great to a British ear,' said another
'Holding 2 drinks is Irish handcuffs,' a third said.
Amused by what they'd discovered, one Brit wrote: 'I think it was a world record. How far I spat my coffee when you said double fisting.'
'May I thank you for causing me to spray a perfectly good mouthful of red wine across my keyboard and desk with your third one,' another joked.
A fellow America sympathised with the linguistic faux pas, writing that she had made a similar mistake while travelling.
'My Europe hostel group have multiple chats called 'double fisters' now because they were so shocked by it but ended up using the phrase the whole rest of the trip because they loved it so much,' she said.
Pointing out that pants had multiple meanings, another viewer wrote: 'Pants are underwear, not just boxers. Like when they say to girls, 'he just wants to get into your pants'.'
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