Right where the toilet paper goes!!!!!!!? :DQuote:
Originally Posted by sirhamish
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Right where the toilet paper goes!!!!!!!? :DQuote:
Originally Posted by sirhamish
Don't remind me of that area. :eek:Quote:
Originally Posted by strangeirish
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Originally Posted by strangeirish
You got in before me ;)
Professor Terry Dolan's Hiberno-English archive is good craic.Quote:
Originally Posted by MacAonghusa
http://www.hiberno-english.com/archive.php
Hadn't realised that 'craic' was a loanword from English!
:eek: :eek: Disgusting chat!!!! :DQuote:
Originally Posted by MacAonghusa
What a vicious b*tch....................Only joking KT,you're greatQuote:
Originally Posted by kerr's tribe
It wasn't always just gobsheen,sometimes it was spluttering gobsheen.Quote:
Originally Posted by Conor74
Amazing what the Irish accent can do too.. you can be as cheeky as you like to customers and because of the accent you get away with it! even had a good looking English lass buy me a pint when serving her the other day purely for making her day with my accent! made my day too until her boyfriend came back.. :(
yours isnt really an irish accent, its the bog irish accent!!hehe only buzzin, so thats prolly why cos you sound all mad and funny like, i never used to take a pint when i was offered it though, i mean i would never take the money from it.Quote:
even had a good looking English lass buy me a pint when serving her the other day purely for making her day with my accent! made my day too until her boyfriend came back.
Listen mate, always going to happen as emigrants and children of emigrants move home. And to say they're all east end is just bobbins, you twát...Quote:
Originally Posted by Conor74
btw Do you think about that over your traditional east end of London drink stout (or when you're consuming your ancient roman beverage of cider?) :)
Anyway, back to the original post. DOn't 98FM advertise their station with an American accent all the time. It just strikes me as odd that a local Dublin station thinks it's cool to have an American accent advertising their station. The Irish accent may be liked abroad but do you hear a Dublin accent promoting a local Dallas station ?? Never.
Let's not become totally subsumed into a foreign culture so that we think a foreign accent is somehow cooler or more cache attaches to it than our own.
Phrases that irk: "Cross channel soccer results - eh ? UK is not cross channel, from Dublin anyway.
"High street prices" - we don't have High Streets as such.
But these are just asides and have nothing to do with the Americanisation of our language.
Biggest americanisation is the pronunciation of words... Genuwine, skedule etc :rolleyes:Quote:
Originally Posted by OwlsFan
Happy Days !!! ;) :DQuote:
Originally Posted by sirhamish
brilliant :D :D :DQuote:
Originally Posted by razor
I think it's just the one guy all over the world. When I was in Orlando years ago the same guy who would say "You're listening to FM 104" would say "You're listening to Radio Orlando(or whatever)".
Cheeky fcuker - I meant The Kerryman Newspaper.Quote:
Originally Posted by razor
I presume you were making a reference to sex - we have it on tap up here and, this is no joke, yesterday, on my street, the watermain burst!!! :D :eek:
There........I've given you plenty of ammunition........help yourself. :p :D
Not sure how common this used to be, but I've noticed more and more people pronouncing 'new' as 'nue' (same with 'news'). Fries my head, that one. It sounds wile American.
A few years ago a pupil from Limerick entered an entry into the Young Scientists' Exhibition - it was a survey in which he found that people with strong Limerick city accents felt discriminated against when applying for jobs. Maybe that's one reason why Irish people feel they have to adopt a sort of bland mid-atlantic accent, that sounds makes them sound like they're coming directly out of the cast of Friends or The O.C
Here's the link to that Young Scientists accent story:
http://www.limerick-leader.ie/issues...10/news03.html
However, the boom in call centre's over here was because people liked the irish accent. Admittedly, probably not many in Limerick, Cork or Kerry.... :DQuote:
Originally Posted by gaf1983