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-   -   What makes you think of England? (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/what-makes-you-think-of-england-580027/)

david_west Jan 9th, 2006 07:27 AM

Plastic beer glasses with wasps in

The smell of cut grass

Leather on willow.

The sound of a Merlin engine

The smell of linseed oil

The smell of bacon sandwiches.

The hot dog vans outside White Hart Lane (you must never eat the hot-dogs but the frying onions is a nice smell on a cold winters night)

Bovril

Brass band music (but not the oompah kind)

Cider (possibly in a plastic glass with a wasp in it).

Darts

Morris Dancing (foreigners: Don’t ask)

Men dressed as women for comic effect

People not taking themselves too seriously

MissPrism Jan 9th, 2006 07:29 AM

It's actually about icons as in images
see
http://www.icons.org.uk/
so smells don't count.


oldie Jan 9th, 2006 07:33 AM

It's also not an invitation for lazy Americans to send in tired cliches about the UK

degas Jan 9th, 2006 07:35 AM

oldie, can americans who are not lazy send in active cliches about the UK?

david_west Jan 9th, 2006 07:36 AM

Actually that thread about the rules of english behaviour pretty much covered all the relevant ground.

MissPrism Jan 9th, 2006 07:39 AM

Wasn't there an American film producer who was told that a script was full of old cliches.

"Ok", he said. "Go out and get me some new cliches"

TorontoSteven Jan 9th, 2006 07:59 AM

As a Canadian,
1. watching the Queen accept flowers from a little girl,
2. a proper butcher wearing the proper hat,
3. warmish beer,
4. women who wear hats in Church.

JudyC Jan 9th, 2006 08:19 AM

gardens

P_M Jan 9th, 2006 08:46 AM

Scones with a huge blob of clotted cream. :-)

Snoopy Jan 9th, 2006 09:15 AM

I like the goofy answers that people have given that presumably they must think about in order to think of England (". . .real ale") OR they are actually in England and they see them (". . . the Scenery")

-- Music to the Brit-coms on public television and the theme from Thames Productions

-- Two-lane blacktops in wooded areas

-- Bentleys

-- Older men walking small dogs

-- Crooked yellow teeth (it may make some of you FEEL better to think that this is a 'tired cliche about the UK')

-- long-sleeved soccer (yes, I know) jerseys

-- a plain, pint glass of beer without a head

-- BP gas stations

-- cloudy, cool, wet days

kmowatt Jan 9th, 2006 09:17 AM

red telephone boxes

sheila Jan 9th, 2006 09:25 AM

I thought, when I heard this, this morning, it wasn't so much "what makes you think of England?" as "what does England make you think of?"

And I'd better not answer that:)

cocofromdijon Jan 9th, 2006 09:25 AM

Top of the pops!((8)) (we have a pale copy in france called the same)

cmt Jan 9th, 2006 09:35 AM

"Lazy American" reporting here....


monarchy
common law
Shakespeare
many many novels
much poetry
precise language
books, in general
the "accent"
flowers
well loved dogs
appreciation for pets, in general (I read too much J. Herriot many yrs ago?)
cottage gardens
good tea
bad food
Magna Carta
good manners
restraint, or stereotype of restraint in speech
excess alcohol drinking
humor (but clashes with another stereotype of stuffiness)
stereotype of appreciation for eccentricity (clashing with stereotype of conformity)
orderliness (lines, etc.)
mystery movies with rain scenes
traditional Christmas
sweet bucolic scenes
wartime courage of residents


willit Jan 9th, 2006 09:58 AM

When I lived away from the UK, the one thing that made me think of England more than any other, was Test Match Special.

This is a rather eccentric program that provides commentry on Cricket test matches , but combines the cricketing theme with a great number of eccentric characters.

Otherwise I would agree with most of David's list - Except to put Fox hunting in the negative section (But if you see a picture of a hunt, where else most people associate such an activity but England- and I do know they hunt in Celtic regions as well).

lobo_mau Jan 9th, 2006 10:10 AM

Jose Mourinho

LCBoniti Jan 9th, 2006 10:29 AM

Watching my "Secret Agent" and "Prisoner" DVD's!

Yes, I know Patrick McGoohan is a Scot. :-) Nevertheless, these shows remind me of those crazy 60's when anything British (esp. London or Liverpool) was exceptionally groovy!

walkinaround Jan 9th, 2006 11:52 AM

>>>>
to send in tired cliches about the UK
>>>>

isn't an "icon" a cliche by definition?
"tired cliche" is redundant.

ira Jan 9th, 2006 11:58 AM

>"tired cliche" is redundant.<

Hmmmmmm. When does a fresh, new turn of phrase become a cliche', and when does a cliche' become tired?

If a cliche' is still in constant use, is it tired?

((I))

thebugsbittenme Jan 9th, 2006 12:01 PM

- Roundabouts
- Pay and Display (in the Lake District we did not "Pay" enough, "Displayed" too long and it ended up costing us 30 pounds!)


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