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Old 20 Jul 2010, 00:38   #1
duke knooby
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Smile American shit

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=raCbY...eature=related

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Old 20 Jul 2010, 00:40   #2
Wario
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I drive a shit car.
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Old 20 Jul 2010, 18:04   #3
The Flying Mouse
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Dave Allen was a f*cking legend.

To this day I still say he was the only man who could swear and be funny.
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Old 20 Jul 2010, 21:34   #4
meat_loaf2008
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Dave Allen and George Carlin. Bloody Legends
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Old 20 Jul 2010, 22:25   #5
Vickip
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Quote:
Originally Posted by meat_loaf2008 View Post
Dave Allen and George Carlin. Bloody Legends
Robin Williams is great too .. but sometimes he can be too over the top
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Old 20 Jul 2010, 22:30   #6
meat_loaf2008
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If you dont go over the top, youll never see whats on the other side
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Old 02 Aug 2010, 03:32   #7
Breeze
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From an American.
I know what shag means,and ~~~~er, pram,and know bloody has always been used as slang, but what exactly does bloody translate over to in American? perhaps you have a list of slang and how it translates over. serious:) oops i see one word got edited. I guess that is one like the f word over here.
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Old 04 Aug 2010, 06:45   #8
carole
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Quote:
Originally Posted by The Flying Mouse View Post
Dave Allen was a f*cking legend.

To this day I still say he was the only man who could swear and be funny.
Billy Ccnnolly is funny too, especially when he swears. I laugh more at how he says things, than what he's actually saying. He did a few specials over here a few years ago travelling all around the country, and at the end he would always run naked wherever he was, it was hilarious.

carole
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Old 04 Aug 2010, 11:31   #9
CarylB
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Breeze View Post
From an American.
I know what shag means,and ~~~~er, pram,and know bloody has always been used as slang, but what exactly does bloody translate over to in American? perhaps you have a list of slang and how it translates over. serious:) oops i see one word got edited. I guess that is one like the f word over here.
It's just a fairly mild adjective/adverb Jackie (these days anyway) like saying "danged" or "darned" in the USA .. and doesn't readily translate into any American equivalent, as its roots aren't clear. Unlike gee, heck and gosh, it's uncertain where it comes from. For example Gor blimey is generally held to be a corruption of "God blind me", gee a scaled down version of Jesus, heck for hell etc. The argued origins of bloody range from "by Our Lady"; "by the blood" tracing back to the Wars of the Roses; coming from "bloody drunk" meaning drunk enough to fight; or corruption of a Dutch word bloote which means naked, so used as absolutely.

Back in the fifties it was the kind of word your parents would use but you weren't meant to repeat :) .. in the 60s considered a "strong" word to use on TV, then fairly quickly became a mild and pretty inoffensive word in everyday language to all but the most sensitve ears .. a bit like "b ugger" (which originally came from a French word referring to a Bulgarian sect of monks said to practise sodomy), or "sod" (probably from the same root, sodomite) both of which are used now as a mild expletive, or even affectionately ..
"he's a daft old b ugger" or "silly old sod" .. (although b ugger seems to offend the software here, whilst sod sneaks through, presumably because it also means a piece of turf .. like clod which can be used to mean lump of soil or fool .. I love the richness and vagaries of language :) .. and software which sees peril in "b uggery" but not "sodomy" :)

Caryl

Last edited by CarylB; 04 Aug 2010 at 11:42.
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Old 08 Dec 2012, 04:20   #10
Breeze
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Caryl, I never thanked you for that excellent explanation. You put quite a bit of thought into the post. I have been on several international Internet discussion boards since 02 and do hear a lot of slang. It is always fun to decipher it, when you can.
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