These kids come from very socioeconomically mixed backgrounds. FBS is a special place and the kids that they select to be on Jolly are just lovely. |
| I saw this thread title and thought “thank God I don’t know anyone who uses the word “posh”. |
| I taught 10 minutes from that school. A few things. 1) This is Fulham. Yes it’s a free school. Yes there will be kids from housing estates. However, a good majority of those kids will still come from a UMC background. 2) We had absolutely zero tolerance for rude or disrespectful behavior at my school 3) Uniforms. When every child is wearing the exact same suit and tie, it’s amazing how much more respectful they are to each other and their teachers. 4) Accents. Even chavvy accents sound more posh to Americans than an American accent. |
It’s a British word. You rarely hear it in the US. Hence the thread. |
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British kids take a lot more hard drugs and drink a lot more alcohol than American kids.
Ever met a Brit on four pills of ecstasy? Total degenerates. |
| Most American kids don’t have manners, can’t make eye contact and carry on a coherent conversation. It’s a result of the American culture and education. |
Do you seriously think I don’t know the origin of the word posh? Are you surrounded by idiots or something?
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Nope. Merely responding to your post about your relief and not knowing anyone who uses the word posh. I mean, why would you hear that word in the US…when nobody uses it here? But that’s the point of the thread, right? We use different words and speak in very different ways—with Americans being far less formal. Honestly, your post is rather helpful insofar as demonstrating the typical American aversion to fancy language…to the point of feeling compelled to hurl insults. Well done, pp! |
| It’s a different country. Why would we expect our people to speak the same way? |
+1 |
| I noticed that most adult Brits also have good manners. Everyone says, yes, please, thank you, etc. and are calm and measured. (Not drunk soccer hooligans but in other situations.) |
This video is staged. The food is from Popeyes an American chain with many locations in the UK. |
Are you talking about actual table manners, though (take small bites, chew with your mouth closed, sit up straight), or is this the tedious British fixation with Americans who don't eat by pushing all their food onto the back of their forks, mixed up so it looks like dog food? |
Hmm...mmm. It's possible no country in the world has changed as much as the UK has, demographically, in the last 25 years. Alcohol and drug usage among youths have fallen sharply in Britain. As it is, the notion of poshness has faded substantially in Britain as a meaningful factor, it doesn't carry the same connotations it did in, say, 2005, and especially not in the 1980s-1990s. Class dynamics are different these days. The kids in the video are cherry picked by the school and told to be have nicely and I am sure they are nice kids. Just like there is no shortage of nice American kids either. |
Manners are important to the Brits whereas Americans have no use for manners. |