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Young people in Britain are very different • of • from their parents, and the country • has • did changed a lot • in • since the last twenty years.
Young British people • doesn't • don't like to • wore • wear suits and ties: they wear the clothes that they want • wear. • to wear.
These are usually old clothes, or clothes with • much • a lot of colour.
They • leave • leave for their • parent's • parents' home when they're eighteen or nineteen.
Most of them • are going • go to London, where they live in 'bed-sits' or with • other • another people in a flat.
They like London because they want to live • different • differently from their
parents, and, in London, everybody can live • in • by his own way: nobody asks questions • for • about anybody else.
The man • of • in the bowler hat isn't rude • of • about the man in the • red and yellow • red, yellow trousers and the man • in •of the red and yellow trousers isn't rude • of • about the man • in •of the bowler hat.
Young British people are very imaginative. Records of British 'pop' music are • sold •sell everywhere in the world, and most clothes •of • for young people • come from • are coming from London.
In the nineteen-sixties, when the Beatles and Carnaby Street • become • 'became famous, foreigners began to call London 'Swinging London'.
Swinging music is music that goes very • fast, • quick, and they thought that everything in London • went • gone very fast, • to! • too!
Today, only tourists go to Carnaby Street. Some young Londoners go to King's Road •of • in Chelsea, where there are • a lot of • a lot boutiques.
But they don't often • buy • bought clothes there: they go there • for• to walk • along • across the road and show • to other people • other people what • they're •are they wearing.
On Saturday afternoons, you can see some of the strangest clothes (and people) • of • in the world in King's Road!
Most young people • are buying • buy their clothes • cheaply • cheap in the 'markets'.
A market is usually several stalls that are • putting up • put up by people on the pavements of streets.
But these new markets are large buildings full of • much • very small shops where you can • buy • to buy rings, clothes and records.
The • most • more well-known is Kensington Market.
Because • too • so many young people live in London, there are discotheques everywhere.
There are also concerts of 'pop' music in the big parks.
Thousands of people • are coming • come from everywhere in Britain to •sit • sitting on the grass and • listen • listen to the music.
One of the most interesting things in London is the famous street market in Portobello Road.
The stalls in this market • are selling • sell antiques: • some • some of the antiques are very good and some of them are strange things • that • what old ladies have had • since • for fifty years.
The market's on Saturdays and a lot of young Londoners come to it.
• They buy •They're buying cheap rings and old photos, and they sit • in front • in front of the pubs and • talk • speak and play guitars.