'Stiff upper lip' a thing of the past

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London : The famous British "stiff upper lip" has become a thing of the past, according to a new survey.

The survey found Britons are no longer embarrassed to shed a tear or be affectionate in public.

Nearly three-quarters of Britons now greet others with an air kiss or hug, an increase of a third over the last 15 years, while 63 per cent of the 1,000 people surveyed said they had cried in public.

"The British stiff upper lip is finally wobbling as more and more Britons wear their hearts on their sleeves," said Richard Hayes of Warburtons bakers, who carried out the research in connection with an upcoming advertising campaign.

Britons are also prone to getting carried away when they are excited, the research showed, with 47 per cent waving their arms in the air, a third jumping up and down and three in ten throwing their arm around someone nearby.

Plotted on the "passion index", which measures how often people display emotion, Britain averaged 69 out of 100, with people in the south most likely to show how they feel while the Welsh were the least emotional.

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