I shall not ask whether that’s really how people talk in America, because I’ve seen/heard it. I know there will be minimal overlap between (a) Yanks with a passport and (b) the kind of people who’d say “gimme a beer” and expect to be given a beer, but allow me suggest that if you tried that in a pub in England (or worse yet, Scotland), it wouldn’t matter how old you looked or what ID you could produce, you’d be lucky if you were just thrown out.
billseymoursays
sonofrojblake, what’s wrong with “gimme a beer”? It’s rude because it’s a command, but is there something else that I don’t get?
jrkrideausays
@ 5 billseymour It’s rude
Exactly. Canadian here, but same reaction. Person probably/y would not get thrown out but staff and regular patrons would discourage the person. Besides, anyone that rude can be expected to be a troublemaker.
Jazzletsays
The pubs I go in you would be expected to ask for a specific amount (half or pint) of a specific beer (the number served varies but there are few pubs these days that sell only one beer) and, yes, to say “please”.
ahcuah says
Yeah. I thought Trudeau really hit it out of the park with this one.
Owosso Harpist says
Difficult to buy beer for an underage teen, but super easy for the said teen to buy an assault weapon. That’s today’s Rethug-infested America for you.
Reginald Selkirk says
Off topic:
Police rumble fake ‘IPL’ cricket league
sonofrojblake says
I shall not ask whether that’s really how people talk in America, because I’ve seen/heard it. I know there will be minimal overlap between (a) Yanks with a passport and (b) the kind of people who’d say “gimme a beer” and expect to be given a beer, but allow me suggest that if you tried that in a pub in England (or worse yet, Scotland), it wouldn’t matter how old you looked or what ID you could produce, you’d be lucky if you were just thrown out.
billseymour says
sonofrojblake, what’s wrong with “gimme a beer”? It’s rude because it’s a command, but is there something else that I don’t get?
jrkrideau says
@ 5 billseymour
It’s rude
Exactly. Canadian here, but same reaction. Person probably/y would not get thrown out but staff and regular patrons would discourage the person. Besides, anyone that rude can be expected to be a troublemaker.
Jazzlet says
The pubs I go in you would be expected to ask for a specific amount (half or pint) of a specific beer (the number served varies but there are few pubs these days that sell only one beer) and, yes, to say “please”.