Blackout@feddit.uk to Casual UK@feddit.ukEnglish · 1 year agoHow I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visitfeddit.ukimagemessage-square187fedilinkarrow-up1550file-text
arrow-up1550imageHow I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visitfeddit.ukBlackout@feddit.uk to Casual UK@feddit.ukEnglish · 1 year agomessage-square187fedilinkfile-text
minus-squareHardeehar@lemm.eelinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·1 year agoI’m sure they’re both correct. Maybe it depends on where the speaker is from? I had a friend in undergrad who was British and always phrased it like “cuppa”. “I could reeeeally go for a cuppa” she would say like every other hour.
minus-squareoneiroslinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·1 year ago(You seem sincere, so at the risk of killing the joke, I want to point out that both of my comments are deadpan humor! The phrase is indeed “fancy a cuppa”, and I’m intentionally getting it wrong, like the tea preparation instructions in the OP.)
I’m sure they’re both correct. Maybe it depends on where the speaker is from?
I had a friend in undergrad who was British and always phrased it like “cuppa”.
“I could reeeeally go for a cuppa” she would say like every other hour.
(You seem sincere, so at the risk of killing the joke, I want to point out that both of my comments are deadpan humor! The phrase is indeed “fancy a cuppa”, and I’m intentionally getting it wrong, like the tea preparation instructions in the OP.)