Best slang ever. Im going to start talking like a working class Londener
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Best slang ever. Im going to start talking like a working class Londener
Scouse is much better.
And it is named after food, not a part of the body.:laugh4:
Anyway, what is wrong with Texan?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Strike For The South
Did ya' just see Green Street Hooligans or something? (great movie btw I even went out and bought it)
(wether that was cockney in the movie or not I do not know, but the brits sound classy when they cuss compared to us yanks...it's the only thing they have better then us)
Sadly there is not a soul in the world who actually speaks it really anymore. Blame immigration, internal movements and American tv for that...
Isn't estuary ("es-jurry") the culprit?Quote:
Originally Posted by BDC
No it was on Beerfest
The occasional phrase still manages to pop in there when I speak...then I shudder...Quote:
Originally Posted by BDC
@SFTS- for your consideration- (the movie Lock, Stock and two smoking barrels is full of the stuff)
Tomorrow, Im gonna get up, have a cup of Rosie, go out and get my barnet sorted and then go see me ol china... :beam:
Decipher at your leisure...~:)
wouldn't you prefer a giggle ?Quote:
Tomorrow, Im gonna get up, have a cup of Rosie
The only cockney I remember is: bristols = titties. I learned it from my English teacher in High school.
Cockney, completly incomprehensible when your not a local. The best language there is.
A dead language you say? Wasn't the Bible recently "translated" into Cockney?
Warning-if this was an American film, what you heard most likely didn't even resemble Cockney. NB-Mary Poppins.Quote:
Originally Posted by Strike For The South
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, as lancelot said will give you some good/funny Cockney.
Tea, hair and a mate. Sounds like bloomin' fun an' frolics. ~;)Quote:
Originally Posted by lancelot
Most people from southeast England sound Cockneyish to us northerners, and I've even mistaken Aussies for Cockneys. Awful accent ~;)
Aye, you got that right.Quote:
Originally Posted by Red Peasant
Yorkshire, now there's a dialect.
Did someone call? :phonecall: :horn:
I thought you where from Manchester?Quote:
Did someone call?
Only when it suits him ... one of the benefits of dual nationality :laugh4:Quote:
Originally Posted by The_Doctor
Given that most working class londoners seem to want to sound American you probably already do...Quote:
Originally Posted by Strike For The South
Or, for the Londoners amongst us: Would you adam and eve it, the saucepans all saand like bleeding shermans naa.
(c) Mr Dick Van Dyke Ithenkyew