Car boot sales are not common in America at all. At least I've never seen one. Swap meets or flea markets are more common and are sometimes held in car parks around the area. Other options for finding hidden gems are antique malls or thrift stores.
The part of the car used to hold items you won't need access to without stopping the vehicle is called the boot in the UK, and the trunk in the US. These words may be different, but their meaning is incredibly similar when taken back to their origins.
While Americans hold garage sales and the French have flea markets, the English have a distinctly British activity in which to sell one's personal second hand goods.
A jumble sale (UK), bring and buy sale (Australia, also UK) or rummage sale (U.S and Canada) is an event at which second hand goods are sold, usually by an institution such as a local Boys' Brigade Company, Scout group, Girlguiding group or church, as a fundraising or charitable effort.
If you can't resist a big yard sale and hand-lettered "Garage Sale" signs have you slamming on the brakes and turning out of your way in a flash, then a British car boot sale should be right up your alley. In the UK, people rarely set out garage or yard sales in front of their own houses.
The nouns shop and store are used somewhat differently in American and British English. In general, Americans use store the way the British use shop — to describe any room or building where people can buy things or pay for a service.
It's not illegal as such, in the sense that you would be committing a criminal offence by doing it. (Well, technically you could, in theory, be charged with criminal damage, or fined for a breach of planning law. But that's extremely unlikely in practice).
The flea markets, second hand markets and car boot sales are very popular in France especially in the summer and before Christmas, in fact, that's an understatement – it seems to be the national pastime to spend weekends visiting the different types of second hand markets.
What are you not allowed to sell at a car boot sale?
Fire Arms, Knives, Tobacco, Alcohol and Controlled Substances, Unless fully licensed to do so, with permission from National Car Boot sale organisers, it is strictly forbidden to sell any of the above items and any items that may fall into the above categories.
It is an offence to hold a temporary market, or permit your land to be used for a temporary market, without giving notice. If you do so, you can be fined up to £2,500.
The British refer to the cover for the engine space as a bonnet, while the Americans call it a hood. Think of Red Riding Hood! If you ask a Brit to lift the hood, they'll think you're asking them to lift their cloak.
The word "boot"(which is commonly used by the English), goes back to 18th century horse-drawn carriages where the coachman sat on a chest, which was used to store, among other things, his boots. This storage space came to be termed as the "boot locker", which soon became the "boot".
A glove compartment or glove box is a compartment built into the dashboard of an automobile, located over the front-seat passenger's footwell, and often used for miscellaneous storage. The name derives from the original purpose of the compartment, to store driving gloves.
Bloke. This widely used British slang terms is not only common in the United Kingdom, but also in Australia, New Zealand and Ireland. The American equivalent of “bloke” would be “guy” or “dude”, which is simply another word for “man”.
In other words, in common U.S. usage, "grocery store" is a synonym for supermarket. The Oxford English Dictionary notes that the term "grocery store" in American English is often used to mean 'supermarket'".
Among U.S. consumers the two most popular categories for online purchases are Clothing and Shoes. 43 percent and 33 percent of consumers respectively chose these answers in our representative online survey.
British shoppers pay more than twice as much for the same goods as Americans, a Sunday Mirror probe found. The savings are so great that families could do their shopping Stateside and save enough cash to cover most of the flights.
The history of grocery begins with a dealer who sold by the gross—that is, in large quantities at discounted retail prices. A grocer in medieval England was a wholesaler, and the name is derived from an Anglo-French word having the same meaning, groser.
What's the difference between a flea market and a car boot?
Stalls at flea markets are run by retailers as well as by ordinary people selling their own private possessions. Car boot sales are a similar form of market where, usually, private individuals come together to sell their own possessions, often from the boot of their car.
4 Days, 690 Miles, Countless Stalls: Behold the 'World's Longest Yard Sale' Everyone loves a bargain. But can anyone survive the entirety of the 127 Yard Sale, an annual four-day event that stretches from Michigan to Alabama? A mother and her children at a sale in Russell Springs, Ky.