Explain yourselves britbongs

explain yourselves britbongs

one's meant to go in tea and the other isn't

it's a cookie, not a biscuit

no, a cookie is a specific kind of biscuit, that's a scone (scon) on the left

a scone has fruit in it

no one outside of america ever uses the word "cookie"

Yeah britbongs are right about this.
Fuck you american

...

i did NOT give you australians permission to post in my thread

No, explain YOURSELF for fucking up such a simple concept. A scone is not a biscuit and a cookie is a type of biscuit.

Why the fuck is there dog treats on the right?

>britbongs eat dog treats

explains a lot actually

I've only ever heard of blueberry scones. I have no idea why you think that's weird.

are brits subhuman animals?
the right literally looks like a doggy treat.

most scones don't have any fruit at all mate

if you tried one you'd know it's not a scone

>cookie
They are biscuits, you fucking idiot. American English isn't valid English.

Lost it hard

They also look the part. So..

Why wouldnt you call something by its proper name?

The rest of the world is fucking retarded, imagine not calling a cookie a fucking cookie

bit embarrassing for you then mate

this is a cookie, it will not be hard like a biscuit

>americans make up a word
>it's now the "proper name"

no one else uses your retarded terms

t. amerishart on holiday

That's a scone you dumb yank.

>seppos

what the fuck are you talking about, americans think scones are cookies, do you seriously think that thing is a fucking biscuit?

I have literally never heard anyone that doesn't work at subway call those cookies and not biscuits

We are the masters of English.

Your little backwater podunk slang isnt real English.

>Subway

Youve already lost, weve infiltrated you and are teaching your next generation the proper English one word at a time via our tactical Subway agents

>american banter

You give dogs chocolate? Thats a bad idea.

same word for a different thing you idiot

When I think of a britbong biscuit I think of something small and probably crisp/crumbly, like a wafer or a shortbread or something. Is that accurate? Do you have a different word for softer American-style cookies?

kek

hello sam hyde

It's not a scone, discount Australia. We have scones here and we call them scones. They taste different and are prepared differently from biscuits.

Get that biscuit away from those dog treats, that's unsanitary

>American English isn't valid English.

No sorry, European English isn't valid

American English is superior, even when we fuck up a la aluminum