Berlin - 16 June 2016
1. Sign at store reading (English) "Broken English"
2. Shop owner Dale Carr in her store
3. Carr talking to costumer
4. Carr talking
5. British teapots in store
6. Costumers inside "Broken English" store
7. Cup with British flag
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Dale Carr, British owner of "Broken English" shop in Berlin:
"The main reason is that we would still be inside Europe and that we would still have this wonderful right to live and work anywhere in Europe, also for my children of course. They may one day well they want to go somewhere else or have the opportunity to go somewhere else. We may too. But if my only opportunity is back to the UK it narrows things a little."
9. Carr at cashier
10. Carr with costumer
11. Customers at store
12. SOUNDBITE (English) Dale Carr, British shop owner:
"So if we have to fork out a chunk of money to pay all the VAT bills also on my shipping costs which I see no reason at all why I should be able to claim it back here, those days will be gone, that would automatically put prices up between 18 and probably 20 percent to start with and that puts it out of the reach of a lot of people."
Berlin - 19 June 2016
13. British and European flags
14. Public event about the referendum at Kollwitzplatz
15. Jon Worth with British flag at statue of artist Kaethe Kollwitz
16. "Hug a Brit" action during public event informing about the referendum
17. SOUNDBITE (English) Jon Worth, British citizen and pro-Europe activist who lives in Berlin:
"There is considerable nervousness because many people don't know what Britain's relationship with the European Union is going to look like if Britain leaves the EU and then what that will mean for the British living here in Germany and indeed anywhere else in the rest of the European Union at a personal level. There are people who wonder what would happen to student fees if they are studying, what happens to their pensions if they're retired. In my own situation I'm self-employed, those are the people who can never get a Visa if we ever needed a Visa to potentially stay in Germany. So we are the people who as British profited from EU freedom of movement and therefore we are very fearful about what would happen where that be taken away."
Berlin - 16 June 2016
18. Cups with London print
19. Claudia Arz shopping at "Broken English" store
20. SOUNDBITE (German) Claudia Arz, German citizen, journalist:
"I think Great Britain will make a big mistake if they leave the European Union also regarding Scotland, which would come closer to the European Union in such a case, a danger of a conflict could arise between Great Britain and Scotland. All in all I believe the British economy would suffer badly."
21. Claudia Arz talking to Carr
22. SOUNDBITE (English) Dale Carr, British shop owner:
"And so this idea of bringing back the Great Britannia as it was and going back somehow into the past or recreating the past - none of us can do that, Brexit or no Brexit you know."
23. British and Berlin flags and picture of Queen Elizabeth II
24. Puppet dogs and Queen Elizabeth II waving
If her compatriots back in Britain vote this week to leave the European Union, the only thing Dale Carr's sure about is that life's going to get far more difficult for her in Germany.
Carr runs two "Broken English" shops in the German capital, specialising in teas, marmalades and other goodies from the UK.
At the very least, Carr figures the import of some items could be blocked, others will be slapped with duties, and she'll no longer be able to deduct some of the taxes on shipping like she has in the past.
Beyond that, like the other 105,000 Britons living in Germany, the 63-year-old can really only speculate.
Carr came to Germany for what was supposed to be a three month trip in 1978 and never looked back.
But like many of her customers that means she's been away too long to be eligible to vote in the referendum.
Among her customers, there's a feeling of indignation that they cannot vote and have no say, especially among the veterans, she said.
But because she's lived in Germany so long as a taxpayer, there's another option open to Carr, her Scottish husband, and her two adult children who were born in Berlin but have British citizenship: dual citizenship.
She says the first thing she will do in the event of Britain leaving the EU is apply for German citizenship to give her and her family the opportunity to move wherever they want in Europe.
Things are a little different for Jon Worth, a native of Newport, in South Wales, who has only been in Germany for just shy of three years.
As a self-employed communications consultant, the 36-year-old may face further hurdles convincing the German authorities to allow him to stay with no company backing him.
And even if he met the prerequisites, Germany's immigration agencies are so backlogged processing the cases of the hundreds of thousands of Syrians and other asylum seekers entering the country that British applying for citizenship may find themselves in a long queue.
One Berlin district office, for example, already in March only had appointments available in January 2017 to even begin the process.
Like Carr, Worth's not sure what to expect because there has been so little information released on what comes next in the event of a British exit.
Amid the uncertainty, he's used social media to organise get-togethers of expatriates from around the country to discuss the possible scenarios.
Germany's own experience with how its unchecked nationalism in the 20th century helped cause two world wars means that today it is among the most committed to the European project, and Chancellor Angela Merkel's government has repeatedly emphasised it wants Britain to remain part of the European Union.
Recently that rhetoric has been sharpened slightly, to include comments suggesting that Britain would lose influence and opportunity if it tries to operate outside the European Union.
Echoing the sentiments of many, Claudia Arz, one of Carr's customers, said she was very European in perspective and believed that a British exit would be bad both for Europe and Britain.
For shop owner Dale Carr only one thing is certain. Britain's exit will not help bring back "the Great Britannia as it was and going back somehow into the past or recreating the past."
Carr said following the Brexit talk over the last months has convinced her that the EU needs to reform some of its rules and regulations, but that it would be better for Britain to work for those changes from within.