Sure, no problem.
The suggestions below add more information to it, but your expression is fine.
Your use in the question "in British English" is better than your example "on British English", but I think you could argue for using either "in" or "on".
...because I was not able to absorb the English <-- past "am" --> "was" tense maybe is even better here too, though I guess you mean it is still true.