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Americans and others! Your favorite British English phrases?
Posted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 7:41 am
by Josef K_Archive
Chapter Two wrote:Help ma boab!
Scots people: do people really say 'help ma boab?'
No, only members of the Broons
http://www.thatsbraw.co.uk/ and Oor Wullie use that kind of expression these days.
Americans and others! Your favorite British English phrases?
Posted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 7:42 am
by night_tools_Archive
Chapter Two wrote:Help ma boab!
Scots people: do people really say 'help ma boab?'
Haven't heard it much outside the pages of 'Oor Wullie' - however one might say "help ma
boabie" had one been kicked in the baws by a radge.
'Bent as a bottle of crisps' - that's fantastic!
I also really like the word 'shitehawk'.
Americans and others! Your favorite British English phrases?
Posted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 7:52 am
by Kyle Motor_Archive
Wot's all this then?
Americans and others! Your favorite British English phrases?
Posted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 7:55 am
by Peripatetic_Archive
I, too, enjoy "innit".
One time when rysie was going on vacation he said:
and I couldn't be arsed to send a postcard so you lot can fuck right off
cunts.
All that stuff is funny, innit?
Americans and others! Your favorite British English phrases?
Posted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 7:57 am
by fantasmatical thorr_Archive
Oi! pleases one of my american friends immensly.
Americans and others! Your favorite British English phrases?
Posted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 7:59 am
by scott_Archive
simmo wrote:In the contemporary vernacular one says "innit?" or "wunnit?" my friend.
Yes yes. I know. But pretty much all of the Brit I hear is from my boss, who is old and more proper than that.
I am a big fan of the 'mercan equivalents, "idnit" and "wudnit". I would love to know how often I say "wasn't" versus "wudn't". I would be shocked to find that I ever say "wouldn't have" in favor of the way-awesomer "wouln'ta". But I digress! Back to the Britisms!
If I said "Moises Cooper Errrrr..." would people in jolly olde England know I was saying "aluminium" via rhyming slang?
Americans and others! Your favorite British English phrases?
Posted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 8:26 am
by Rodabod_Archive
Chapter Two wrote:Scots people: do people really say 'help ma boab?'
I've said it a few times.
night_tools wrote:I'm also a big fan of 'radge'.
I occasionally uses the word radge, but sometimes prefer "bam" or "bampot".
Here is a news story about a pure mental radge - there are some funny bits in it (apart from the murder) :
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/edi ... 754791.stm
Americans and others! Your favorite British English phrases?
Posted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 8:31 am
by daniel robert chapman_Archive
Bus drivers in the North East will use the endearment 'love' with men and women without discrimination as people board. It's great to watch the faces of male students from the south as the male bus driver tells them
"won't be bus while ten minutes, love".
Americans and others! Your favorite British English phrases?
Posted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 8:34 am
by Chapter Two_Archive
"What? No, no, stop, stop. Stop saying all those things at me. I just want a coffee. A cup of coffee, with some milk in it. Okay? Please. And anyway, I thought a barista's what you hold on to when you go up the stairs"
Americans and others! Your favorite British English phrases?
Posted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 8:39 am
by daniel robert chapman_Archive
Favourite northern expression of surprise:
"Bugger me gently!"