If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#91
|
|||
|
|||
In message ,
dirtylitterboxofferingstospammers writes Like who? Who doesn't love the Geordie accent? There must be some poor deluded soul somewhere, bonnie lass! ;-) It's one of my favourites! Whey thank you pet. Thaat's verry kind like. Porrs, I mean haawaay the laads, helen s My bestest friend's little boys are Geordies born and bred (she's Kentish through and through), and they call her "mam". -- Cathi |
#92
|
|||
|
|||
Steve Touchstone had some very interesting
things to say about Mom [OT]: Course, as we've already heard in this thread, a lot of times the accent doesn't mean much as you get farther away from "home". Lots of us 'Merikans can't distinguish accents within GB, heck some can't tell the difference between someone from NZ, Australia or GB. Don't feel too bad, some New Yorkers can pinpoint what neighborhood another New Yorker is from by their accent, while most West Coasters are clueless. As I discovered fast in tech support, the stereotypical New York accent is limited to the city. People from elsewhere in the state don't have that accent [but to me, New Jersey speakers sound very similar to NYC]. -- "Don't mess with major appliances unless you know what you are doing (or unless your life insurance policy is up-to-date)." - John, RCFL |
#93
|
|||
|
|||
In message ,
dirtylitterboxofferingstospammers writes Except that, as you point out, it's sometimes hip or cool to talk "down", and some who start out in what might be considered a "lower class" work hard to lose the accent and talk "up". But, IMHO, that is universal, not a British thing. Cue memory dragged from subconcious of a young Nigel Kennedy being in a TV interview when he was at the err... Yehudi Menhuin Music School? A very posh young man indeed. You'd never think it these days with his "working class" accent ;-) Cheers, helen s Strangely enough, I was thinking of quoting him as an example too! -- Cathi |
#94
|
|||
|
|||
Yowie wrote:
I couldn't call my mother anything other than "Mum" despite the fact I know her full name, and she calls me "Victoria". Everyone else calls me Vicky. Except for your online friends, of course... Joyce |
#95
|
|||
|
|||
Takayuki had some very interesting things to
say about Mom [OT]: I have a habit of sometimes calling women "sir". I also call groups of women "guys", like "Hi guys", and "I'm going out with the guys". I sometimes get some funny looks. Do you suppose that's okay? I wouldn't enjoy being called "sir". Would you enjoy being called "ma'am" or some other feminine form of address? Same thing, IMO. If you know the person's gender, addressing him/her by a title used for the other gender borders on insult, I think [by saying that person is in your opinion more a member of the opposite gender to his/her own]. -- "Don't mess with major appliances unless you know what you are doing (or unless your life insurance policy is up-to-date)." - John, RCFL |
#96
|
|||
|
|||
jmcquown wrote:
Woman from the Southern U.S. is sitting in an airport next to a woman from NYC. The Southern woman attempts to strike up a conversation by asking, "So, where are you from?" The woman from NYC replies snootily, "I am FROM where they don't end a sentence with a preposition." The Southern woman thinks about this for a minute, then says, "Okay, where you from, bitch?" That is an excellent joke, thanks! Definitely a keeper. Joyce |
#97
|
|||
|
|||
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 On Sat, 27 Mar 2004 16:40:03 -0500, Takayuki wrote: John F. Eldredge wrote: My mother was an elementary-school teacher, and once had a principal gesture to the Halloween-decoration witch on her classroom door and ask her, jokingly, if Eldredge meant "old witch". I thought that "Eldredge" was just one of those names that begin with "El", like Eldorado, or El Paso. Well, when I am trying to explain to someone how to spell it (since many people get confused if you just tell them the letters), I sometimes say "E L Dredge like dredge a river". When I have tried to look up the likely original meaning of Eldredge (or Eldridge, the other common spelling), I have found a variety of explanations. The two likeliest ones that I have found are "Eld bridge" (old bridge) or the Old English phrase "Eld Reac" (meaning Old Kingdom). Reac is cognate to modern English "Reach" and to German "Reich". Both derivations likely started out as place names. The surname Eldredge or Eldridge is apparently from southern England, but most of the ancestry on my father's side, except for the Eldredge line, has been traced back to Scotland. My mother's side is also probably Scots, judging from the family names, but we haven't been able to trace it back beyond my great-grandparents. Incidentally, speaking of family origins, my mother's father immigrated to the USA from Canada as a child, around 1900, but didn't become a US citizen until around 1950. His wife, my grandmother, was born in the USA but, without knowing it, had lost her citizenship when she married my grandfather. US law at the time, since changed, was that an American woman marrying a foreign man would lose her US citizenship, but an American man marrying a foreign woman would keep his US citizenship. Canadian law didn't automatically grant citizenship to the wife of a Canadian citizen, so she spent four decades or so as a stateless person, with no citizenship anywhere. My grandmother, even though she had started out as a US citizen by birth, had to go through the naturalization process to regain her US citizenship. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGPfreeware 7.0.3 for non-commercial use http://www.pgp.com iQA/AwUBQGYBDDMYPge5L34aEQJ08gCfcIme5kULCIsVDIG/85dnYuTSpiIAn1Pb a0GscE2fRrsqm8m7bD5DVwig =k6ZB -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- John F. Eldredge -- PGP key available from http://pgp.mit.edu "Reserve your right to think, for even to think wrongly is better than not to think at all." -- Hypatia of Alexandria |
#98
|
|||
|
|||
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 On Sat, 27 Mar 2004 14:23:40 -0800, Seanette Blaylock wrote: Takayuki had some very interesting things to say about Mom [OT]: I have a habit of sometimes calling women "sir". I also call groups of women "guys", like "Hi guys", and "I'm going out with the guys". I sometimes get some funny looks. Do you suppose that's okay? I wouldn't enjoy being called "sir". Would you enjoy being called "ma'am" or some other feminine form of address? Same thing, IMO. If you know the person's gender, addressing him/her by a title used for the other gender borders on insult, I think [by saying that person is in your opinion more a member of the opposite gender to his/her own]. For some reason, if my father was saying yes to a male gas station attendant, it always sounded like "Yes'm". The rest of our family used to fuss at him about that. He always insisted that he was saying "Yes sir", but it didn't sound like that. For some reason, gas station attendants were the only ones he said this to. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGPfreeware 7.0.3 for non-commercial use http://www.pgp.com iQA/AwUBQGYDXDMYPge5L34aEQIAlwCbBPwaQUxwDp6Gdi0cvRAYwm Zed8IAnjhD spJw3owaAsII4Z3LNsGP/7If =Ck/X -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- John F. Eldredge -- PGP key available from http://pgp.mit.edu "Reserve your right to think, for even to think wrongly is better than not to think at all." -- Hypatia of Alexandria |
#99
|
|||
|
|||
Kreisleriana wrote:
Kids imitate anything they see on TV. They don't think too hard about it-- they just think if it's on TV, it's cool. Well, yeah. But I was just wondering what the appeal was about cockney- speaking Londoners, to kids from Glasgow. There's probably a cultural history there that I'm not aware of, being from over here. Joyce |
#100
|
|||
|
|||
Kreisleriana wrote:
An' th' infamous glo--al stop (glottal stop). LOL! Some people use that here, too, eg, "I ain't gi'in (getting) any younger." Joyce |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
[OT] GTA:Vice City | Yowie | Cat anecdotes | 11 | May 4th 04 08:44 PM |
[OT] My little part of the Texas snowfall | Victor Martinez | Cat anecdotes | 4 | February 29th 04 10:35 PM |
[ot] Mars Rover Goes for a Spin | Jeanne Hedge | Cat anecdotes | 1 | February 11th 04 05:26 AM |
[OT] Hurricane Isabel tree damage | John F. Eldredge | Cat anecdotes | 11 | September 29th 03 06:08 AM |