An exchange clerk or money collector.
Queue = line (of people)
Drink Driving = Drunk Driving
chek is not a word.If you mean Check (a form of payment), the British spelling is Cheque.
No, the word "runners" is not an adverb.The word "runners" is a noun.
It's the same in British English as it is in North American English.
It's the same in British English as it is in North American English.
It's the same in British English as it is in North American English.
The British speak English. "Wheat" is an English word.
If you mean an underground railroad, the usual word in the U. S. is "subway." (Not to be confused with subway in England, which is an "underpass" in the U. S.)
It was a joint British-French project. The English word 'concord' and the French word 'concorde' mean 'working together.'
The British word "jam" can mean a couple of things. If you mean the food, a sweet paste of fruit, Americans also use the same word to mean that food. If you mean "jam" as in "stuck together," Americans use that word in the same context, but also use the word "cram."
It's the same in British English as it is in North American English.