My love for British words

Posted on 9 October 2009 in England | 4 comments

When I moved to the UK a year and a half ago, I was immediately struck by how many different ways there are of saying the same thing. What I didn’t realize is that they don’t all mean the same thing and the English spoken here is more articulate.

In particular, I’m a fan of the adverbs (both formal and informal!) spoken in the UK. I’m sure I’ll be corrected on these, but below are five different ways of expressing hunger, in order of intensity:

  • I’m rather hungry. I’m hungry to some extent.
  • I’m quite hungry. I’m hungry to some vague degree.
  • I’m well hungry. I’m hungry to an appropriate extent.
  • I’m awfully hungry. I’m exceptionally hungry.
  • I’m right hungry. I’m hungry to the extreme.
  • I’m bloody hungry. I’m hungry to the extreme.

There are a bunch of verbs that I have fallen in love with as well. I knew some of these before moving here, but I didn’t really use them in speech.

  • prod - to poke or jab with or as if with something pointed
  • nick – steal
  • bodge - make a mess of, destroy or ruin
  • tread - to step, walk, or trample so as to press, crush, or injure something
  • leg it – run!
  • waffle – ramble on about nothing

I’m sure there are more, but that’s all I can think of at the moment…

Tagged adverbs, British, English, verbs |

4 comments

Battling the “designer ego”

Posted on 2 October 2009 in Design | 3 comments

I was in my friend Jemma’s art gallery today (shameless plug!) and she made a statement about artists who think they’re better than they are. Not her artists, if any of you are reading!

I got thinking about how that applies designers as well. The designer ego is essential and we all have it. If we thought our design skills were crap and that our work wasn’t worth being proud of, we wouldn’t make websites.

The trick is, then, to keep our swollen heads from exploding. I’m no saint, but here’s how I handle it. Continue reading →

Tagged clients, critiquing, designers, ego, teamwork |

3 comments

Recycling in the UK

Posted on 16 September 2009 in England | 10 comments

20 years ago, Canada embarked on a program to cut waste by 50% by the year 2000 using the three R’s: Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle.  As a young school child at the time, I was encouraged forced to recycle. We had intense recycling within the school, with prizes for classes with the least amount of waste. Each classroom had its own bins for aluminum, glass, plastic and paper/cardboard and realizing what could be recycled was ingrained from an early age.

Though gaining more and more importance in today’s world, day-to-day recycling still seems to be a low priority for most British people. I suppose this is because it is still seen as voluntary rather than compulsory and heck, 20 years ago Britain wasn’t as concerned – they just chucked everything in a landfill in China rather than educating the younger generation (maybe that explains the apathy here?).

2973069710 a2016af7a4 Recycling in the UK

"Warm up to recycling" by Toban Black

In Canada it’s not uncommon to see public recycling bins accompanying regular garbage ones along the streets and in parks. From what I’ve gathered in the UK (in my area, anyways), there are no public recycling bins except in privately run parks. This is something that is being introduced in London at the moment, but how long before it catches on nationally?

pb Recycling in the UK

As well, many supermarket items in Canada are sold in larger, plastic containers as opposed to smaller, glass ones. Take, for example, peanut butter (Fig. 1). Here we have the most delicious peanut butter in the world, Jif (510g in a plastic container) vs. Sun-Pat (sold most commonly in 227g but in this diagram, 350g in a glass container).  Manufacturers in the UK must spend a fortune and produce a heck of a lot of waste… Shouldn’t there be some laws governing that?

And, even though 9/10 households in the UK have kerbside recycling, most if not all of the Britons I know don’t actively recycle. Perhaps they’re lacking incentive to do so. Perhaps they were never taught how?

Canadians seem to, especially in places where garbage bags have to be marked with a pricey sticker in order to be picked up on the curb.  When you buy beer / liquor bottles in Canada, they tack on a “bottle deposit” fee, which you get back if you bring your bottles back to the store. Incentive…

wasteeu Recycling in the UK

Despite recent efforts, there’s no doubt that the UK is significantly behind in the green movement (Fig. 2).  I’ll do my part, but I sincerely hope things change drastically over the next few years. If not, I’m moving to Austria! icon wink Recycling in the UK

Further Reading

Tagged green, landfills, recycling, reduce, reuse, waste management |

10 comments