I love how he gets excited about random British things❤😊
Leng 😂 close enough mate
Its Jamaican yes but you got to remember the primary black people in this country for about 30 odd years was carribean people, they’re the oldest and most entrenched black community in this country. Hence, a long of language crossover occurs. They’re the most consistent in youth subculture too, from their influence on skinheads all the way down to grime and drill and all that. American influence has come and gone but Jamaican has remained consistent and had its imprint on every youth culture since the 60s.
The British accent he uses for "I'm from south-west" sounds cute and is spot on!
hearing patois in the American accent is SENDING ME 😩😩😩
Never seen someone so happy to be in the ends 😂
I don’t know why but watching you makes me smile and the videos you do the more and more British you seem, we are rubbing off on you bruv 😂
If you like quid for pound you’ll like shrapnel for coins.
Quid comes from "quid pro quo"/ "that before which" i.e. the thing you have to give/ get before a service or product is rendered. And Jamaican slang is London slang.
Please it’s Leng* love this though 🤣
Leng killed me😂
Gyal dem😂❤❤. We hv a big Jamaican community here in the UK
You're talking Roadman south mate. East we talk different - very much where you're based in London😂 "Peng" blast from the past🤣🤣🤣
Last three are mostly unique to the greater London metro. Waffling and quid are universal though. P used to be pence, guess that's inflation at work on the slang xD
Most of this is Londonism. We don't use a lot of those in the rest of the UK. Waffling we do though, that's pretty common.
It’s interesting how some slang words are understood all over Britain, while some are very localised. Quid and waffling are used everywhere, but the others are rare in the north (working class town full of factories before you all start telling me I’m “posh”! 😂).
Lol. We still use “peng ting”. 🇰🇪
LANGGG! 💀 i’m dead
😂😂😂😂 it's the way he drops it 😂😂
@wispa1a