Party-Ability4637

Do folks in the UK actually walk that far?

Posted by Emilie_Charles@reddit | AskUK | View on Reddit | 1456 comments

I have a remote job in Milton Keynes (office once a month). Salary 45k. Where should I stay in the whole of UK?

Posted by ab0651@reddit | AskUK | View on Reddit | 327 comments

Childfree Millennials, are you childfree by choice? If not, what happened?

Posted by CrazyCoffeeClub@reddit | AskUK | View on Reddit | 941 comments

Party-Ability4637@reddit

Almost 33 here (female). Chronic health issues have stopped me, specifically OCD. I have no reason to believe that I have fertility problems, but I'm not sure I will ever be well enough to carry a child. I would be interested in adoption.

Can I go to a private dentist for a checkup whilst I'm a NHS patient at another dentist?

Posted by ShabbatShalom666@reddit | AskUK | View on Reddit | 14 comments

Party-Ability4637@reddit

And even if they did know, they wouldn't take OP off their books as an NHS patient. I'm an NHS patient at a surgery but you do get the raw end of things sometimes. I had an appointment recently pushed back three times in one week and then ultimately cancelled and rescheduled for several weeks afterwards. I'm sure this was due to a staffing issue and priority would have been given to private patients. I'll take it though. It's worth having access to a dentist for £25ish pounds per check up or whatever it is, and then going privately when the NHS doesn't cover the treatment you want, or you want it more quickly than NHS dentist can provide.

How common is it for Brits to say zee instead of zed these days?

Posted by Perfect_Technology73@reddit | AskUK | View on Reddit | 1480 comments

Party-Ability4637@reddit

I think we say it sometimes if it's part of a longer phrase. I will say 'gen zee', not 'gen zed' because the term was first introduced to me via American media, and that just feels the more natural way to say it. I would never say 'zee' instead of 'zed' when spelling aloud or whatever, or just referring to the letter on its own.