It depends. The Queen speaks a "posh" variety of Received Pronunciation which is one of many British dialects. "British English" covers a multitude of regional accents, although RP is considered by many to be the "most correct".
Cousin is the same as how you say it in America but with a British accent. British people speak English.
The spelling for Lexi remains the same in British English as it is in American English.
British is the same as English, so you can ask them in English if they want a sandwich.
English and British are not the same. English refers to someone from England specifically, while British refers to someone from the United Kingdom, which includes England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
In British English, "thank you" is pronounced the same way as in American English.
Spoiled.....It's the same thing as in English.
The British use the word 'warning' the same way we do. It means the same thing anywhere English is spoken.
its pronouns babysitter its the same thing.
There isn't its the same thing
They are NOT the same. There are various English accents but british is even more ambiguous as Britain refers to the whole of the british isles, so both Irish and scottish are british accents. English accents just refer to those originating in England, so Cockney (London) and Geordie (Newcastle) accents are English
Yes. The first is the American English way, and the second is the British way of saying the same thing.
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.
Cousin is the same as how you say it in America but with a British accent. British people speak English.
"Sterling" is the colloquial term for British Pounds, so thay are the same thing.
It's the same in British English as it is in North American English.