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Post by MattyJam on Jul 15, 2021 6:04:28 GMT
Just for fun.... Bloke In The Mirror Dosh Chav In My Life Do You Know Where Your Sprogs Are Stranger In Milton Keynes In The Wardrobe Little Floozy If Michael was a Brit, would DS have been called Twat? And if so, how would it be pronounced? "Wanker" is more British. It'd still be called DS though, the lyrics would just go "Tom Sneddon is a wanker" instead of "cold man".
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Post by pg13 on Jul 15, 2021 9:41:03 GMT
Bread and honey β Money
Quid
Brassed Off - Scream
Bugger Off - LMA.
Sod off - LMA.
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Post by pg13 on Jul 15, 2021 21:16:53 GMT
Stranger In Glasgow
This Is Blighty
I Just Can't Stop Snogging You
British Part Of Me
Toerag (Cheater)
She Drives Me Bonkers
Mind The Time
Sod Song
Keep 'er Lit (DSTYGE) originates in Northern Ireland and means keep going.
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Post by pg13 on Jul 15, 2021 21:21:14 GMT
Just for fun.... Bloke In The Mirror Dosh Chav In My Life Do You Know Where Your Sprogs Are Stranger In Milton Keynes In The Wardrobe Little Floozy In The Cupboard. I remember an article about the filming of ITC with the headline "Macho Jacko's Cupboard Love!". Wee Susie. In Northern Ireland, we have a tendency to say "wee" a lot rather than "little". More than in the rest of the UK, I think.
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Post by pg13 on Jul 16, 2021 15:14:53 GMT
The British have loads of amazing insults that would be perfect for DS!
Tom Sneddon is a bawbag! Tom Sneddon is a munter! Thomas Sneddon is a wanker!
Tom Sneddon is a wab! Tom Sneddon is an auld tube! Tom Sneddon is a wee gack!
Thomas Sneddon is a slabber!
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Post by MattyJam on Jul 16, 2021 15:17:24 GMT
Wee Susie. In Northern Ireland, we have a tendency to say "wee" a lot rather than "little". More than in the rest of the UK, I think. I always thought that was a Scottish thing?
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Post by pg13 on Jul 16, 2021 15:33:51 GMT
Wee Susie. In Northern Ireland, we have a tendency to say "wee" a lot rather than "little". More than in the rest of the UK, I think. I always thought that was a Scottish thing? It's both, but more Northern Ireland as it travelled from there to western Scotland. You don't hear "wee" in the Highlands at all. But you do across Northern Ireland.
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Post by NatureCriminal7896 on Oct 6, 2023 3:01:03 GMT
if Michael was he wouldn't have his thick Indiana accent anymore.πππ
i have a thick southern accent as well but i'm not from Indiana.πππ
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Post by elusivemoonwalker on Oct 6, 2023 12:50:07 GMT
Wee Susie. In Northern Ireland, we have a tendency to say "wee" a lot rather than "little". More than in the rest of the UK, I think. I always thought that was a Scottish thing? Yeah it is but βallβ the protestants in NI are originally from scotland
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Post by pg13 on Oct 6, 2023 13:29:57 GMT
I always thought that was a Scottish thing? Yeah it is but βallβ the protestants in NI are originally from scotland It actually isn't - historically, there's always been very strong cultural links between eastern Ulster and south-west Scotland. So, definitelynotof exclusive Scottish origin. "Wee gack" is a Northern Ireland insult. In the Highlands, you don't hear "wee" in this way at all. Hell, the Scots even think the well-fired rolls came from Scotland. It originates in Belfast in the 1840s during the famine. Even Gaelic and the name Scotland ("Land of the Irish") actually came from Ulster.
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Post by elusivemoonwalker on Oct 6, 2023 14:37:43 GMT
Yeah it is but βallβ the protestants in NI are originally from scotland It actually isn't - historically, there's always been very strong cultural links between eastern Ulster and south-west Scotland. So, definitelynotof exclusive Scottish origin. "Wee gack" is a Northern Ireland insult. In the Highlands, you don't hear "wee" in this way at all. Hell, the Scots even think the well-fired rolls came from Scotland. It originates in Belfast in the 1840s during the famine. Even Gaelic and the name Scotland ("Land of the Irish") actually came from Ulster. Its most commonly known as something the sterotypical scots says. Hence mattys comment. But of course the links are strong as the scotts were shipped over to Ireland to change the demographics of the country. An old type of ethnic cleansing if you like.
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Post by pg13 on Oct 6, 2023 14:53:09 GMT
"Billie Jean is always slabbering, telling lies & rubbing shoulders so they told her wind yer neck in!"
"Yer boggin'...yer boggin'....!"/"Yer a melter!"
"And the world we once believed in will be some yoke...."
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Post by pg13 on Oct 6, 2023 14:58:44 GMT
It actually isn't - historically, there's always been very strong cultural links between eastern Ulster and south-west Scotland. So, definitelynotof exclusive Scottish origin. "Wee gack" is a Northern Ireland insult. In the Highlands, you don't hear "wee" in this way at all. Hell, the Scots even think the well-fired rolls came from Scotland. It originates in Belfast in the 1840s during the famine. Even Gaelic and the name Scotland ("Land of the Irish") actually came from Ulster. Its most commonly known as something the sterotypical scots says. Hence mattys comment. But of course the links are strong as the scotts were shipped over to Ireland to change the demographics of the country. An old type of ethnic cleansing if you like. It is often assumed to be of Scots origin, but actually isn't. It's of northern English Anglo-Saxon origin. As for the links itself, it predates the Plantation by CENTURIES which is seen in the history of Gaelic in Scotland as well as the Kingdom of Dalriada. So, more than 1,500 years old in reality and not 400 odd. π€¦ββοΈ Several Scottish clan crests have the Red Hand on them which tells you their ancestors came from Ulster itself. So, the genes flowed in both directions. What is now Northern Ireland was the literal centre of the Gaelic world with Scotland, Isle Of Man and Republic of Ireland revolving around it. Ulster Gaelic was the bridge between Scottish and Munster Gaelic.
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Post by pg13 on Oct 6, 2023 15:38:18 GMT
"Piss off! Piss off! No-one wants to be a pussy!"
"They don't give a shiny shite about us!"
"Wank together! Right now...over me!"
"Jam! Spread it, spread it on yer toast! Not too hard for me to spread jam!"
"Do you ken when we fell in love?"
"Glasgow Bird....you know that you came, baby and gave a Glasgow kiss!"
"You knock me off my plates of meat now, baby! Yeeeeooooo!"
Last one is a combination of Cockney rhyming slang with a Northern Ireland word that is an exclamation of excitement. Similar to Aaow, really.
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