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"Bang out of order", "Mate" and in fact any colloquial English phrases used by Irish people on Irish websites, who spend too much time on English Football Message boards.
"I didn't interrupt you, so don't interrupt me" usually by FF people like Willie O'Dea or Dick Roche who have spent the whole time the other person was speaking interrupting, shouting down or talking over.
EAFC_rdfl
24/09/2008, 3:54 PM
"Come here to me"
In cork sounds like "come ere timmy"
oh i hate that, theres a cork woman sits near enough to me, thats all I can hear when shes on the phone, as well as phrases like 'arrra', as in 'arrra I'll do it myself like'. <End Rant> :D
I also have a recent dislike to those radio adverts that start with an apology, stuff like 'we apologise to listeners who may experience feelings of well being...blah blah blah'
Wolfie
09/04/2010, 8:08 AM
The complete overuse of "Absolutely" when voicing agreement in remotely anything.
Partcularly when people break up the word into pieces when saying it - "AAAB--Sow-Looote-leee".
smellyfeet
09/04/2010, 8:40 AM
HELLOOO, really does my head in.
The complete overuse of "Absolutely" when voicing agreement in remotely anything
Remotely anything? Booo... ;)
Oh and I absolutely use the word absolutely too much.
John83
09/04/2010, 12:29 PM
The misuse of the word literally
http://xkcd.com/725/
Wolfie
09/04/2010, 12:54 PM
The phrase "ye get me" appears to be en vogue with Skangers at the moment when ascertaining if you understand something.
Usually best conveyed with a heady mix of aggression and menace - "Ye get me, Palt?"
Spudulika
09/04/2010, 1:46 PM
Ever so. Ever so.
I was dating an Italian girl who was living in London, and everything was "ever so good" "thanks ever so much" etc. Then I heard my sister saying it last year, and I realised it's a completion of Eastenders speak.
Before that, and still going, is the "yeh". As in "Hi Alan, yeh." The yeh being - what do you want, you understand, and so on. Makes me very angry, and in the mood for slapping someone and telling them to watch Fair City, then I heard characters there doing the same. Bring back Dinny and Miley, at least they spoke decent english!
osarusan
09/04/2010, 1:47 PM
Ever so. Ever so.
I was dating an Italian girl who was living in London, and everything was "ever so good" "thanks ever so much" etc. Then I heard my sister saying it last year, and I realised it's a completion of Eastenders speak.
Before that, and still going, is the "yeh". As in "Hi Alan, yeh." The yeh being - what do you want, you understand, and so on. Makes me very angry, and in the mood for slapping someone and telling them to watch Fair City, then I heard characters there doing the same. Bring back Dinny and Miley, at least they spoke decent english!
"daycent"
smellyfeet
09/04/2010, 1:49 PM
[QUOTE=Spudulika;1344890]Ever so. Ever so.
Jamie Rednapp constantly says above. He's an Ever so nice bloke
Ever so. Ever so.
Jamie Rednapp constantly says above. He's an Ever so nice bloke
and a top, top footie pundit.
Spudulika
09/04/2010, 6:56 PM
"daycent"
I mean, beat the holy god! Now that's rail english. Not this dross from BBC.
Ever so, ever so. Now you'll hear everyone using it!
Lev Yashin
09/04/2010, 7:29 PM
When people add the word "literally" to the end of a sentence when it is anything but literal. e.g "there were millions of people at the match, literally"
My girlfriend does his alot literally. She literally says it like all the time I have literally pulled her on it trillions of timesbut she literally ignores me.
The one I hate, that's creeping in is, AWESOME! And...someone
says...ya know that kinda way!! Hate that!!
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