Our Vendor Manager Adrian Asks: What’s the damage?
Jun 25 in Language
In our series “Common English Phrases and their meaning” our team shares their experiences with very British phrases that confuse non-native speakers. The start makes our Vendor Manager Adrian Cruz with “What’s the damage?”
I arrived in the United Kingdom in 2009, and due to the financial problems that the world was going through, it was particularly difficult to find a job in my field. So I took the plunge and got a job as a waiter in a pub in the north of England. Despite my basic knowledge of English language (intermediate level, I was told) I didn’t feel confident enough to hold a conversation or to understand the radio, TV or group conversations. I was hopeful that working in a pub as a waiter would allow me to ask the same questions again and again. Naturally, I had to learn about British gastronomy, which is amazing (yes!). Well, my most frequent key phrases were welcoming customers, asking if they would like to order drinks, what they would like to order, if everything was okay, if they would like anything else, etc.
That was when I learned that this new English expression “what’s the damage” means, what’s the cost, price, bill, total of something. Two morals to this story: you learn completely unexpected phrases in unexpected places, and secondly, if you want to learn a language, you need to get out there and start using it!
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