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Posts Tagged ‘americans moving london’

Relocation to London – Victual Vocabulary

Monday August 1st, 2011

Relocation to London – Victual Vocabulary..

Relocation to London – Victual Vocabulary - Image via Wikipedia

 

Your relocation to London will be easier if you have a good grasp of a victual vocabulary! Learning the different names for foodstuff can be a big help at the grocery store, where you’ll find that some things don’t even look the same. Having a firm grasp on the different phrases for food that many Londoners use will also help you at the office after you relocation to London. You won’t be wondering what a “chip butty” is for starters.

Relocation UK – Getting the hang of English food

Let’s start with chips. Many American moving to London spend quite a while figuring out that chips are actually French fries. English fries are much larger than the skinny chips of potato that you may be used to. They are also much fattier and usually come doused liberally in salt and vinegar from you local ‘chippy’. A chip butty is a sandwich made from white bread, lots of butter, hot oily chips and tomato sauce! It’s a treat to be sure, but not for the faint of heart or the strictly health conscious. It’s a guilty pleasure!

Tomato sauce is easy. It’s ketchup. You’ll never hear it called ketchup after your relocation to London and it’ll only ever be sold in the grocery store as Tomato Sauce.

Tea is not just a drink! Well it is of course, but the word tea can be used to describe the hot beverage, or the early evening meal that you may think of as dinner. Some people do call it supper or dinner, but a large majority of people living in London will refer to their evening meal as ‘tea’. This is not to be confused with ‘high-tea’ which is taken during the afternoon at posh establishments like The Ritz Hotel

Food Fables – Translating the Basics after your Relocation to London

Aubergine = Eggplant

Banger = Sausage

Beetroot = Beets

Biscuit = Cookie

Coriander/ Dhanya = Cilantro

Courgette = Zucchini

Jam = Jelly

Gherkin = Pickle

Pickle = does not have a relative term, but buy a bottle of Branston’s Pickle soon after your relocation to London and try it out.

There are many terms that you’ll need to know to help make baking and cooking easier for you after your relocation to London, these are just a few of the most commonly confused terms.

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Reward a London Recruiter’s Social Media Efforts!

Thursday February 25th, 2010

Hello all!  In this modern era of social marketing, people across the globe have been increasingly shedding paper to connect with one another over internet.  It’s the immediacy and multimedia that the web offers that makes this such an appealing means to market one’s self or business, and it’s obviously something that we at London Relocation Ltd. are partaking in more and more each day.  But this isn’t about us.

It’s time for casting votes for the Social Recruiting Awards (SOCRA), which seeks to recognize the outstanding online presence of recruiters.  Today, we want to give props to the social media efforts of a brilliant business that works in collaboration with us to assist North Americans with moving abroad.  As I’ve written in a previous blog post, Classroom Canada is an organization that assists Canadian and American teachers with finding employment in London schools.  Its owner and operator, Victoria Westcott, is a Canadian teacher who has had firsthand experience living and working in London, and her passion for both the education field and sharing her expat experiences with those making the move themselves has yielded a myriad of online resources, from blogs to e-books, aiming to assist others with their understanding of English culture, be it with regard to work or pleasure.  Her practical guidance offers an empathetic voice that knows both sides to the story, so we cannot applaud nor promote her efforts and superhuman energy more!

I can keep expressing this until I’m blue in the face, but the purpose of this post is to give YOU a say in it, too!  If you know of Victoria either through Classroom Canada or her e-published works or become familiar with these resources via the links provided here and like what you see, you can express your support by participating in the SOCRA Awards.  Here you will find information on Victoria’s Guide to Teaching in London:  A Survival Guide for Canadians and cast your vote.

Bravo, Victoria, for all the time and enthusiasm you devote to helping others–we can’t think of anyone else who deserves recognition more.  London Relocation Ltd. shares a common purpose and finds great solidarity with your mission!

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What You London Lettings Agents & Landlords Talkin’ ‘Bout?!

Tuesday February 23rd, 2010

Flat-searching in London and wondering what the heck these agents are talking about?  Perhaps not if you’re a local, but for anyone moving to London from the U.S., Canada, or elsewhere internationally, it can be a completely different language.  To reiterate our caution put forth in a previous blog post about flat searching in London, it’s no easy feat without a relocation specialist when the property market works differently here.

As much as the realtor (called a “lettings agent” or “negotiator” here) might not understand you when you reference your “condo” back home, you may not understand some of the terms that they put forth, such as a “mews” or that the “first floor” is actually what you know to be the second floor and not the ground level.  Perhaps the first and most frequent source of confusion is the quotation of rent prices, whether online or verbally–these will be in terms of PER WEEK as opposed to per month, which can serve to tease your expectations.  If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is, as they say.  So, to convert that per week figure to a monthly one that is more conducive to your budgeting, multiply it by 4.33 (which is the equivalent of multiplying it by the 52 weeks of the year and dividing by 12 months).

With that monthly figure in mind, add to that 6 times the weekly rent to capture the first month’s rent and 6-week deposit that you will have to pay up front to the agency representing the property.  This does not yet include any additional administrative fees the agency may tack on (which London Relocation Ltd. will cover if you go through us so that it would be no extra cost to you).  Of particular outrage especially during the summer months is when students are asked to fork over up to 6 months’ rent in advance unless they can provide a UK-based guarantor of the funds–and even then, there is no guarantee the landlord will accept them under that condition.

This is a case where the art of negotiation must come into play to find compromise with demanding landlords or risk losing the property.  Also necessary to negotiate are aspects like furniture (what will be provided/replaced/put in storage by the landlord) and whether the rent price also includes utilities—and brace yourself, because whereas landlords in the States would not pass on their property taxes to their tenants, such is not the case here with the council tax.  YOU, the tenant, bear the responsibility of paying that bill, not the owner of the property.  That one stings expats every time when they’re not accustomed to that practice in their home country.

But getting back to negotiating items like furniture, you must be wary of your lettings agent—unless the landlord is there in person to vouch for it (which is rare), it is very common for the agent to make promises that the landlord can not or will not deliver.  It is so cynical to say, but so many in the industry will say whatever they need to in order to make the commission.  If they make a white lie that you discover will not be followed through on only after you’ve already signed the tenancy agreement and paid your upfront costs if not already moved in, no matter how much you kick and scream, that agent will have still made money off you, so why should they care?  They’ll have already moved on to their next source of cash.  Our advice if that happens?  You probably won’t make much progress with the landlord if they didn’t agree to whatever the agent promised to begin with, so go straight to their supervisor and lodge a complaint.  Don’t be shy about going over their heads—they need to learn some way.

While the lease itself will likely look standard to what you’ve seen at home (and they typically are), just be advised that there is no industry-wide standard, so the terms may vary agency to agency.  As I also addressed in my previous post, “M.L.S. = M.I.A.,” you might want to include a break clause in your contract that will give you an optional out after a specified duration of time (typically 6 months), with no penalty.  You may also want to read through the language thoroughly to make sure that it holds landlords accountable for respecting your tenant rights should any maintenance and repairs be required within the property.  What is reasonable for you to expect with regard to their responsibilities should be clearly defined at the outset.

One aspect in working with lettings agents that can be tricky to gauge is their inevitable sense of urgency—especially if you’re relocating from another country, they know that you probably feel a sense of impulsiveness in just wanting to get your living situation sorted already, and they’ll prey on that for certain.  That being said, however, their repetition of how the property will probably fly off the shelf by the next day if you don’t put forward an offer soon is not entirely unfounded.  Property does move fast in London, and we have had clients who lose their top choices due to hesitance.  If you are offering less than what the landlord is asking, not taking them up on a preliminary acceptance might indeed mean losing your London flat the next day to a higher bidder.  And in the summer, even if you’re willing to meet the price, an offer could have flown in just after you toured the flat and been accepted on the spot.  This can be terribly nerve-racking and filled with much second-guessing when there is so much money on the line and it’s a decision that will impact your standard of living for the next year or so!

This is why London Relocation Ltd. prides itself on our selection of 18-25 properties that you will view in one day—the quantity ensures you are seeing the spectrum of what you could reasonably expect for your budget in a given locale, and the one-day timeframe ensures you can make the comparisons and conduct your process of elimination expediently to arrive at a decision that you’re comfortable with by the end of that same day.  Don’t believe that that’s possible?  Just ask our previous clients!

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London Literacy

Friday February 19th, 2010

THE CITY OF LONDON

Early morning after a thunderous night I can breathe easy.
If I’m quiet I may hear the sound of birdsong.
Sometimes there is a mist. It hangs over London like a veil.
Soon empty streets will heave with massing crowds,
but until then all London is at peace.

The gentle tinkling of milk bottles breaks the quiet
and the smell of bacon and fried bread
waft through the chill morning air.
Distant sounds of sirens fill my head and
concrete rises heavenward filling my eyes,
crushing their foundations through my soul.
A sickness seeps through me,
everything beautiful has gone.

“Morning paper, read all about it! ”

Girls hurry buy in tight blue jeans,
men in suits, some in Mac’s, high-heeled ladies,
clicky, click, clack.
Poor old tramp, fingernails black,
stirs on the floor beside a closed door,
‘Got the price of a cuppa luv’, he calls.
The girl quickens her pace.
A couple kiss in tender bliss
A young man sighs, a baby cries,
an old lady dies on the streets of London.

Early morning after a thunderous night you can
breathe easy, all London is at peace……..If you’re
very quiet you may even hear the sound of birdsong.

“The City of London, during working hours is a bustling hive of activity but just before the ‘rush hour’ there is peace.  I wrote this in the middle of the night, many years ago. My mind went back to those times when I was young and used to go, with my brother to London to visit my Grandfather. We would always stop to walk through the City and my brother would point out places of interest being much older than me, 14 years older in fact!  There was a mist that morning and a fine rain that seemed to lick at my lips.  The tranquillity of the early morning streets was rudely broken by people coming into the City to work [...]”

Ruth Walters

(from PoemHunter.com)

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London Relocation is an all-inclusive UK relocation service specializing in helping corporate professionals relocate and finding London student apartments for international students. American owned and operated, London Relocation is adept at finding you the right apartment at the right price - and with fair UK apartment finder fees. See what our clients say about relocating to London, England from America with our UK relocation specialist, and find your London flat today.
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