How to Order in a Pub - Learn About Phrases, Slang, Idioms and Ordering

121,121 views ・ 2019-01-25

Oxford Online English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:01
Hi, my name’s Olivier, and welcome to Oxford Online English.
0
1170
3780
00:04
Hey Oli, I’m going to the UK soon.
1
4950
3260
00:08
What can I do to get a taste of real British culture?
2
8210
2800
00:11
How about going to the pub?
3
11010
2640
00:13
There are around 60,000 pubs in the UK, so if you’re in the UK now, there is probably
4
13650
5740
00:19
one just around the corner!
5
19390
2710
00:22
Pubs are incredibly popular in the UK, and traditional pubs still offer a glimpse of
6
22100
5269
00:27
true British culture.
7
27369
1500
00:28
Maybe you’ve been out sightseeing all day and you’re looking for a nice place to relax.
8
28869
6120
00:34
No trip to the UK is complete without a visit to the local pub.
9
34989
4000
00:38
In this lesson you’ll learn how to order in a pub, and also how to sound like a real
10
38989
4510
00:43
local while you’re in there.
11
43500
3840
00:47
Imagine: you’ve found a beautiful old British pub; you walk in and go to the bar.
12
47340
7420
00:54
The bartender asks: ‘What can I get you?’
13
54760
3500
00:58
What do you do?
14
58260
1460
00:59
Hello.
15
59720
780
01:00
Hi, what can I get you?
16
60500
1460
01:01
Um…. beer.
17
61969
1710
01:03
Which beer?
18
63679
1000
01:04
Umm..… this one Pint or a half?
19
64680
2320
01:07
What?
20
67000
920
01:07
Big or small?
21
67920
1600
01:09
Big, please Anything else?
22
69530
1980
01:11
What?
23
71510
1000
01:12
Do you want anything else?
24
72510
2280
01:14
Umm yes...wine, please..
25
74790
2830
01:17
Red or white?
26
77620
1100
01:18
Red.
27
78720
680
01:19
We’ve got Merlot, Cab, or Pinot.
28
79409
2811
01:22
That one.
29
82220
1100
01:23
Large or small?
30
83320
1009
01:24
Small.
31
84329
1000
01:25
Okay, anything else?
32
85329
2900
01:28
Eight pounds forty please.
33
88229
1651
01:29
Cheers.
34
89880
1000
01:30
Thank you.
35
90880
1160
01:32
Okay, let’s be honest, that didn’t go so well.
36
92040
4100
01:36
Why not?
37
96140
1300
01:37
There were many issues with understanding and using the vocabulary you need in the pub.
38
97440
4280
01:41
But, there’s good news!
39
101720
2069
01:43
The vocabulary that you need in the pub is actually quite limited.
40
103789
3411
01:47
Let's see how that could have gone better.
41
107200
2400
01:49
Hi, what can I get you?
42
109600
1440
01:51
A pint of Kronenbourg and a small glass of Merlot please.
43
111040
2960
01:54
Here you are.
44
114009
1000
01:55
Anything else?
45
115009
1000
01:56
No thanks, that’s all.
46
116009
1311
01:57
That’ll be eight forty.
47
117320
1460
01:58
Here you are.
48
118780
900
01:59
Cheers.
49
119680
740
02:00
Thanks.
50
120420
1000
02:01
I think you can see that was much better.
51
121420
3180
02:04
But what was different?
52
124600
2060
02:06
Mostly, she was more specific with the order.
53
126660
3400
02:10
That meant I didn’t have to ask her so many questions, and the whole order didn’t take
54
130060
4539
02:14
much time.
55
134599
1781
02:16
Pubs are informal places, so it’s fine to use very simple, direct language.
56
136380
5990
02:22
You can simply list the drinks you want, like this: ‘one pint of IPA and two small glasses
57
142370
6370
02:28
of house white, please.’
58
148740
3490
02:32
You can use phrases like I’d like… or Can I have…?, but they aren’t necessary.
59
152230
6860
02:39
This is true for the bartender, too.
60
159090
2260
02:41
You should expect to hear shortened questions, like these: ‘Ice?’
61
161350
5469
02:46
‘Anything else?’
62
166819
2611
02:49
‘Draft or bottle?’
63
169430
3010
02:52
You should be ready for this, and not just in the pub!
64
172440
4010
02:56
Shortened questions like these, for example ‘Ice?’
65
176450
3610
03:00
instead of ‘Do you want ice?’ are very common in informal English.
66
180060
5710
03:05
Now you know the basics, let’s look at how to order all the different kinds of drinks
67
185770
4359
03:10
you can find in a typical British pub.
68
190129
5411
03:15
Beer is by far the most popular drink ordered in pubs.
69
195540
4080
03:19
Generally, you can choose from ale or lager.
70
199620
4130
03:23
‘Ale’ includes many kinds of beer.
71
203750
3489
03:27
Light ale is often called ‘bitter’, while dark ale is often called ‘stout’.
72
207239
4321
03:31
Ale is especially popular in the UK, while in some countries it isn’t a common drink.
73
211560
6690
03:38
‘Lager’ is the standard, light, fizzy beer that is popular around the world.
74
218250
7450
03:45
So, a pub might have ales like Guinness, London Pride, or Doom Bar, and lagers like Kronenbourg,
75
225700
8700
03:54
Fosters, Stella Artois, or Heineken.
76
234400
3610
03:58
Both ale and lagers come in bottles and draft.
77
238010
4110
04:02
‘Draft’ means from the tap.
78
242120
2670
04:04
The last thing to think about is the size.
79
244790
2919
04:07
There are normally just two options: a pint, or a half-pint.
80
247709
5211
04:12
A pint is just over five hundred ml.
81
252920
3640
04:16
If you simply name the beer you want, the bartender will generally assume that you want
82
256560
4880
04:21
a pint of draft beer.
83
261440
2530
04:23
If you want a half-pint or a bottle, it’s better to say so directly.
84
263970
4870
04:28
Let’s see an example of ordering some beer.
85
268840
2880
04:31
Hi, can I have an Amstel please?
86
271720
2620
04:34
Pint?
87
274420
700
04:35
Just a half, please.
88
275120
1300
04:36
Here you are.
89
276420
1220
04:37
Easy, right?
90
277640
1700
04:39
Let’s look at one more example, where it’s a little more complicated.
91
279340
4230
04:43
Hi, two pints of Amstel, a bottle of Becks and half a Fosters please.
92
283570
5520
04:49
Sorry, the Amstel’s off.
93
289090
1850
04:50
How about Grolsch?
94
290940
1150
04:52
Sure, that’s fine.
95
292090
1050
04:53
So that’s two pints of Grolsch, one bottle of Becks, and a half of Fosters.
96
293140
4280
04:57
That’s right.
97
297420
1000
04:58
No problem.
98
298420
1000
04:59
Here you are.
99
299420
940
05:00
Sometimes, the pub will run out of one kind of beer.
100
300360
3060
05:03
If the bartender tells you that something is ‘off’, that means they don’t have
101
303420
4390
05:07
any more.
102
307810
1000
05:08
In the past the selection of wines in pubs was quite limited, but now you will often
103
308810
4791
05:13
find pubs with a large selection of wines.
104
313601
4199
05:17
If you want to see which wines the pub has, you could ask: ‘Do you have a wine list?’
105
317800
5040
05:22
You could also ask:
106
322840
2020
05:24
‘What red/white wines do you have?’
107
324870
3410
05:28
Do you have a Pinot Grigio?’
108
328280
2020
05:30
Let’s see an example of ordering wine.
109
330300
2960
05:33
Hi, what can I get you?
110
333260
1160
05:34
Yes, what red wines do you have?
111
334420
2100
05:36
We’ve got a Pinot Noir, a Sauvignon Zinfandel and a Malbec.
112
336520
4220
05:40
Two large glasses of Pinot Noir please
113
340740
2010
05:42
Okay, no problem.
114
342750
1210
05:43
That’s four fifty, please.
115
343960
1920
05:45
Are you sure?
116
345880
1000
05:46
That seems cheap…
117
346880
1000
05:47
It’s happy hour till six, so they’re two-for-one.
118
347880
3100
05:50
‘Happy hour’ is a time, usually early in the evening,
119
350980
3740
05:54
when pubs and bars have special offers on drinks.
120
354720
3560
05:58
Here, the wines were ‘two-for-one’, meaning you can buy one and get one free.
121
358280
5590
06:03
Let’s look at a slightly more complicated example of ordering wine.
122
363870
4630
06:08
Hi, what can I get you?
123
368500
1320
06:09
Hi, do you have a Pinot Grigio?.
124
369820
2040
06:11
No, sorry.
125
371860
1000
06:12
We’ve only got Chardonnay or Cabernet Blanc.
126
372860
2580
06:15
Hmm.
127
375440
1340
06:16
I don’t really like either of those.
128
376780
1940
06:18
What about rosé?
129
378720
2300
06:21
We only have one: a Syrah.
130
381020
1760
06:22
Okay, that’s perfect.
131
382780
1080
06:23
A large glass of Syrah and two small glasses of Chardonnay.
132
383860
3520
06:27
Anything else?
133
387380
940
06:28
No that’s all,
134
388320
1360
06:29
thanks.
135
389680
1000
06:30
That’ll be eleven pounds twenty, please.
136
390680
1760
06:32
Can I start a tab?
137
392440
1000
06:33
Of course.
138
393440
1000
06:34
I’ll just need to swipe a card.
139
394440
1960
06:36
Did you hear that phrase at the end: “Can I start a tab?”
140
396400
5260
06:41
Can you guess what it means?
141
401660
3440
06:45
A tab means that you pay for everything when you leave the pub.
142
405100
4460
06:49
Normally, you pay for food and drinks as you order them, but if you’re planning to stay
143
409560
6510
06:56
in the pub for some time, you might start a tab so that you can order food and drinks
144
416070
4930
07:01
quickly and conveniently.
145
421000
2760
07:03
You’ve seen how to order beer and wine; what other kind of drinks could you order?
146
423760
5580
07:09
You could also order spirits or mixed drinks.
147
429340
3110
07:12
‘Spirits’ includes hard alcohol like vodka, whiskey, gin, rum, and so on.
148
432450
7210
07:19
You can also order mixed drinks, like vodka and coke or gin and tonic.
149
439660
5090
07:24
Some pubs might serve cocktails, although it’s more common for bars to serve cocktails.
150
444750
5760
07:30
There’s a difference between pubs and bars in the UK!
151
450510
4960
07:35
Ordering mixed drinks is easy: put the spirit first, then the mixer, like this: vodka and
152
455470
6830
07:42
orange, whiskey and coke, rum and ginger beer.
153
462300
7630
07:49
Hi, what can I get you?
154
469930
1840
07:51
Two rum and cokes, a vodka lemonade and a gin and tonic please.
155
471770
4200
07:55
Anything else?
156
475970
1000
07:56
Oh, and a whiskey, please.
157
476970
1590
07:58
Straight?
158
478560
660
07:59
Yes.
159
479220
860
08:00
Ice?
160
480080
720
08:00
No thanks.
161
480800
1180
08:01
Do you remember what was ordered?
162
481980
2440
08:04
I asked for: two rum and cokes, a vodka lemonade, a gin and tonic and a straight whiskey.
163
484420
7880
08:12
In pubs, it’s common to leave out the word ‘and’ when ordering mixed drinks, so you
164
492300
4630
08:16
can say, ‘gin and tonic’ or ‘gin tonic’.
165
496930
4600
08:21
‘Straight’ here means without a any mixer.
166
501530
3680
08:25
If you want to sound like a real local, and you want ice with the drink, you can say ‘on
167
505210
5180
08:30
the rocks’.
168
510390
2120
08:32
For example.,
169
512510
1000
08:33
‘A Glenlivet on the rocks please.’
170
513510
4690
08:38
Of course, you don’t just come to the pub to drink!
171
518200
3910
08:42
In recent years the food in pubs has really improved, and you can often find some nice
172
522110
4630
08:46
traditional food.
173
526740
2360
08:49
Pubs aren’t restaurants, so you need to order food at the bar.
174
529100
4900
08:54
The menu will often be written on a blackboard near the bar somewhere.
175
534000
4180
08:58
Let’s see how to order food in a pub.
176
538180
3380
09:01
Hi, what can I get for you?
177
541560
1890
09:03
Can I order some food please?
178
543450
1490
09:04
Yes, of course.
179
544940
1600
09:06
What table number are you?
180
546540
1330
09:07
Sorry, I’m not sure.
181
547870
1870
09:09
It’s that table in the corner.
182
549740
1779
09:11
Okay, no problem.
183
551519
1151
09:12
That’s table 7.
184
552670
1169
09:13
What would you like?
185
553839
1000
09:14
I’d like a one fish scampi and chips and a steak and ale pie.
186
554839
4111
09:18
Anything else?
187
558950
1000
09:19
Yes, do you have anything for children?
188
559950
1810
09:21
Yes, just down here we have a few things for children.
189
561760
3160
09:24
Ah, excellent.
190
564920
1570
09:26
… And a spaghetti Bolognese as well please.
191
566490
1670
09:28
Okay, anything else?
192
568160
1860
09:30
No, that’s everything.
193
570029
1151
09:31
Great, that’s twenty-three seventy please.
194
571180
2060
09:33
Here you are.
195
573240
1270
09:34
Thank you.
196
574510
1290
09:35
Cutlery and condiments are over on the table in the corner; you can just help yourself.
197
575800
4000
09:39
Thanks.
198
579800
1659
09:41
Do you remember what I ordered?
199
581459
2370
09:43
There were three things.
200
583829
3171
09:47
I ordered a scampi and chips, a steak and ale pie and a spaghetti Bolognese.
201
587000
6990
09:53
‘Scampi’ is shrimp which is covered in breadcrumbs and deep-fried.
202
593990
5010
09:59
‘Steak and ale pie’ is a traditional English pub dish.
203
599000
3920
10:02
It’s a pie with thick pastry, with beef cooked in ale inside.
204
602920
5280
10:08
Do you remember the first question the bartender asked?
205
608209
4040
10:12
She asked, ‘What table number are you?’
206
612249
3931
10:16
Often you will see a number somewhere on the table.
207
616180
4420
10:20
You need to tell the bartender your table number when you order food.
208
620600
4080
10:24
The only other question Oli asked was, ‘Do you have anything for children?’
209
624680
5560
10:30
Very often pubs will have a specific menu for children.
210
630240
3459
10:33
If you can’t see it on the menu, you can always ask.
211
633699
3450
10:37
Finally, at the end of the dialogue, I mentioned some things on the table in the corner.
212
637149
5511
10:42
Do you remember what I said?
213
642660
2560
10:45
I said that the cutlery and condiments were on the table.
214
645220
3720
10:48
‘Cutlery’ means knives, forks and spoons.
215
648940
3860
10:52
‘Condiments’ could be ketchup, mustard, mayonnaise, or salt and pepper for example.
216
652800
5600
10:58
Right, now you have your drink, and you’re waiting for your food.
217
658400
4660
11:03
It’s time to do some talking.
218
663060
2520
11:05
Next, you’ll see some slang and idioms that you might hear and say in the pub.
219
665580
8760
11:14
I think you’ve got the basics now, but if you want to practice your English, you should
220
674340
4580
11:18
speak to other people besides the bartender.
221
678920
4149
11:23
Watch a dialogue and try to find the idioms and slang.
222
683069
4020
11:27
Is he alright?
223
687089
1000
11:28
He’s just had one too many.
224
688089
1800
11:29
He’s not drinking any more, is he?
225
689889
2591
11:32
No, no, he got cut off about an hour ago.
226
692480
2770
11:35
That’s probably for the best.
227
695250
1959
11:37
How about you?
228
697209
1111
11:38
Just a little tipsy, I got here late.
229
698320
2010
11:40
They’re closing soon, right?
230
700330
2009
11:42
Yeah, they just called last orders, but I think some people are going to John’s place
231
702339
3790
11:46
for a bit of a piss-up.
232
706129
1051
11:47
Hmm…
233
707180
1340
11:48
I’ll come for a bit, but I can’t stay long.
234
708520
2660
11:51
I’ve got work in the morning and I don’t want to be hungover.
235
711180
2760
11:53
That’s what everyone says.
236
713940
1709
11:55
Anyway, let’s go, bottoms up!
237
715649
3451
11:59
So, what did you hear?
238
719100
2770
12:01
At the beginning, I said, ‘He’s had one too many’.
239
721870
4640
12:06
This is used to describe somebody who is drunk.
240
726510
3790
12:10
There are many other words you can use here, like ‘pissed,’ ‘smashed’, ‘hammered,’
241
730300
6400
12:16
‘battered,’ ‘wasted,’…
242
736700
1040
12:17
Okay, we get it!
243
737740
2060
12:19
There are many slang words you can use here.
244
739800
2570
12:22
You also heard ‘he got cut off about an hour ago’.
245
742370
4240
12:26
‘Cut off’ means that the bar staff refuse to sell you any more alcohol, because you’ve
246
746610
5649
12:32
drunk too much already.
247
752259
1630
12:33
The next word was ‘tipsy.’
248
753889
3130
12:37
This is the feeling when you’ve had one or two drinks.
249
757019
3711
12:40
You aren’t drunk, but you can feel something from the alcohol.
250
760730
4810
12:45
I invited Stephanie to John’s house for a ‘piss-up’.
251
765540
3779
12:49
This is a very informal way to describe a drinking session with a group of people.
252
769319
4830
12:54
Don’t expect to be drinking a cup of tea at a piss-up!
253
774149
5240
12:59
At the end of the evening, the bartender will call last orders.
254
779389
4931
13:04
Sometimes they shout across the pub, or sometimes they ring a big bell.
255
784320
5759
13:10
This is your last chance to order drinks before the pub closes.
256
790079
4271
13:14
I said that I didn’t want to be ‘hungover.’
257
794350
3130
13:17
This isn’t really slang or an idiom, but is a very common event after a night in the
258
797480
5120
13:22
pub.
259
802610
1450
13:24
When you wake up feeling terrible, it’s because you are hungover
260
804060
4410
13:28
The last phrase was ‘bottoms up.’
261
808470
2960
13:31
This a way of saying, finish your drink and often said as you are getting ready to leave
262
811430
4460
13:35
the pub.
263
815890
1480
13:37
Now you should know how to order different drinks in a pub, so next time you’re walking
264
817370
4180
13:41
past an old traditional pub, why not stop for a quick drink!
265
821550
4510
13:46
You can find more free English lessons on many different topics on our website.
266
826060
4350
13:50
Check it out: Oxford Online English dot com.
267
830410
3409
13:53
Thanks for watching!
268
833819
1731
13:55
See you next time!
269
835550
709
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7