Everyday Phrases
- Cheers — thanks / goodbye / cheers with drinks
- Ta — thanks (northern English/Scottish)
- You alright? — hello. Don't answer honestly; say "yeah, you?"
- Lovely — good / okay. Used for everything.
- Brilliant — very good. Used constantly.
- Mate — friend / stranger. Gender-neutral informal address.
- Innit — "isn't it?" but used as generic sentence ender. London/SE slang.
Pub & Food
- Pint — 568ml beer. Order "a pint of..."
- Half — half a pint. "Half of lager please"
- Round — you buy drinks for the group; next person does the same
- Local — your nearby pub
- Chippy — fish and chip shop
- Takeaway — food to go (not "take-out")
- Scran — food (Scottish/Northern)
- Chuffed — pleased. "I'm chuffed with my meal"
Slang
- Knackered — exhausted
- Gutted — disappointed
- Fit — attractive (not just "healthy")
- Mingin' — disgusting (Scottish)
- Proper — very / really. "Proper nice"
- Wicked — cool/great
- Sound — good / no problem (Mancunian/Scouse)
- Gobsmacked — amazed
- Skint — broke
- Dodgy — suspicious / low-quality
- Cheeky — playfully audacious. "Fancy a cheeky pint?"
- Daft — silly
- Quid — pound sterling (£). "Five quid"
- Fortnight — two weeks
Regional Variation
- London/SE — "innit", "proper", "wicked", "mate"
- Scotland — "aye" (yes), "wee" (small), "bonnie" (pretty), "ken" (know)
- Liverpool (Scouse) — "boss" (great), "la" (mate), "sound"
- Manchester (Mancunian) — "mint" (good), "sound", "buzzin'"
- Yorkshire — "tha" (you), "neet" (night)
- Welsh English — "tidy" (good), "butty" (mate/sandwich), "cwtch" (hug)
- Newcastle (Geordie) — "canny" (good), "howay" (come on)
What to Avoid Saying
- "England" when you mean "UK" — Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland are separate. "UK" or "Britain" is safer.
- "English" for Scottish/Welsh people — they're "Scottish" or "Welsh" or "British"
- "Fanny pack" — "fanny" is a vulgar word in UK English. Say "bum bag".
- "Pants" — means underwear. Say "trousers".
- "I'm stuffed" — means full in US; in UK means full too, but locals might smile. Safe.
- Loud voice in pubs — UK pub volume is moderate. Americans notoriously loud.
💬 How are you? reality: "How are you?" is a greeting, not a health check. Answer: "Not bad, you?" / "Yeah, good thanks" / "Alright, you?" Never "I've had a tough week because..." unless they ask twice.