Nuances and Idiosyncrasies of the English Language
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@Giles said in Nuances and Idiosyncrasies of the English Language:
Cunt, used with the right inflection is the highest compliment you can give/receive......
I once worked with an Irish guy that used to say cunt lapping bitch. Was that a compliment.
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@ROman said in Nuances and Idiosyncrasies of the English Language:
Was that a compliment.
I suspect not.......
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@Giles laughing to Derek and Clive is one of my great memories from the 6th form common room at school.
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Mine and @Giles favourite word.
The C Bomb. A masterclass in the idiosyncrasies of the English language distilled into a single pure, beautiful, expressive word.
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@IrishHeart said in Nuances and Idiosyncrasies of the English Language:
@Giles laughing to Derek and Clive is one of my great memories from the 6th form common room at school.
I find it utterly unbelievable that this was broadcast in 1976......
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@Giles agreed, but thatโs what made it so hilarious. None of us had heard anything like it before, and we couldnโt stop using the same terminology on our mates.
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A quote for every occasionโฆ! ๐ซฃ
For some reason, โHamburger stands, but no fucking hamburgersโ (from Joan Crawfordโs ****) sticks in my head to this day!
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Bender..
Been out partying for 24 hours more, or weekend none stop
mash out of your head. -
@T4920 This has reminded me of a question I have never had answered by a (proper) American:
Why is Arkansas pronounced "AR-kan-saw" and not "Ar-Kan-sas", if Kansas is pronounced just "Kan-sas"?
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@EdH same reason some pronounce my state Missour-ee and some pronounce it Missou-rahโฆbecause we Americans donโt always make a lot of linguistic sense.
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Not saying us brits are any better... "Lieutenant" caught me out when reading aloud in English class at school:
Me: "... lieutenant ..." ("lew-ten-ant")
Teacher: "it's [lef-tenant]"
Me: "oh, it doesn't have an 'f' in my copy"
Teacher (getting angry already): "It's [lef-tenant] in English, [lew-ten-ant] is American"
Me: "oh, I must have an American translation"
Teacher: "stop being sarcastic"
Me: "I'm being sarcastic?"
Teacher: "That's a demerit"
Me: scratches head in confusion -
@T4920 hahah, yeah I've seen something similar. Maryland is close to KY but not touching.
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@EdH don't try to make sense of American pronunciation, we're super improper and make zero sense, wait till you hear me say "Maryland" at the party.
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My favorite is Appalachia pronounced regionally as "Apple-atcha" or by outsiders as "Apple-ay-shuh".