Yes
Clearly not
The BBC didn't say that, that's you reading invisible ink
This is what the BBC said...
Which part of it isn't true and point me in the direction of where it says scary
C'mon you can do better than that, there's Upper Thong, Penistone, Booze, Crackpot, The Land of Nod, Kirkby Overblow, Great Fryup Dale and Thornton Le Beans
This is one of my favourites in my collection
it is a dub of
I have them both in a double CD package. Which incidentally is one of those Cds that isn't worth 10p
If it calms you down any, this new "OMG its a wild mutant" variant of the virus that is "OMG easier to catch", appears to be less deadly. That is common in viruses, if a mutation is more transmissable, it's very often (like most of the time) less deadly. The more deadly mutations tend to die out really quickly (because it killed the people it infected and can infect no more) the more transmissable tend to be weaker
You want to have a look at arguments between the French and French Canadians on French grammar. The Canadians insist their version of French is more "pure" and to be fair they have a point.
But back to your point, a lot of Americanisms aren't at all. Soccer as we all know is as British as you can get, as is the use of Fall instead of Autumn
Faucet is English too as it happens
Gose to Hollywood by Danish brewer Øl
Bugger me the sour fruit taste hits you like train A lowly 3.8% by volume but a huge sledgehammer to the tasebuds
This is nonsense, the efficacy of a vaccine is not comparable to tossing a coin. You can't compare a pseudo random event over 5 cycles to the testing of a vaccine (not pseudo random) using tens of thousands of subjects
The reasons for "failure" in the vaccine tests will not be random chance