bad spelling is uniquely Irish![]()
hearing the mother in law shout ''AH FOR BLOODY SAKE!!!!'' Gets me every time
or ''AH FOR MOTHER OF SAKE!!!''
actully whyle o the sbject whyle meself and my friend were watching liverpool and chelsea in the CL last year she seen jamie carrager clear a shot of the line and proceeded to say ''ah..ah a for blody sake'' left the room and whyle climbing the stairs i could hear her mumble ''for bloody sake..the eejit,could he not put the ball into...the..goal... hmph'' you had to be there i'm pretty certian thats unique to ireland![]()
Last edited by Acornvilla; 21/02/2010 at 9:43 PM.
bad spelling is uniquely Irish![]()
no americans cant spell real english either :P bad spelling is unique to dyslexics and to me aparently :P
well they spell pheoneticly
i think there should be 2 L's in that![]()
i heart you oscar :P:P
Classic that I heard lads say years ago
"Where were you going that time when I saw you coming back?"
The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist thinks it will change; the realist adjusts the sails.
I was deliira wih me 6 cigareh liira's for eh pouind
The way people say 'the' instead of 'my'. As in, 'I got a lift from the brother'.
Yeah, but The Wife sounds normal, whereas "my wife" sounds, well, a bit ghey...
would ye get up ourra dat.
I like high energy football. A little bit rock and roll. Many finishes instead of waiting for the perfect one.
You just got to talk to Jeff Kenna, a Dubliner who won the League with Blackburn Rovers. He truly embraced his life in Britian to the extent that when he became manager of St Patrick's Athletic, he commuted from his family in Birmingham. He flew in and out of Dublin a few times a week for games and training sessions. That arrangement didn't last too long.
Nobody knows us, we don't care
"The further we go the further we're gonna be from where we are!" - a slow-witted pal of mine came out with this beauty whilst on a trip to Amsterdam ten years or so back. A local woman was lucky enough to be within earshot while we had the pleasure of watching her walk across the square cracking up the whole way.
And you ask me to help you??!! Man is evil!!!! Capable of nothing but destruction!
People who still say Pounds instead of Euro.
Nobody knows us, we don't care
People who say euro instead of euros. (Not you in particularly Paddyfield, you just reminded me.) It's a horrific mangling of the english language and a tragedy that the popular media use it in their guidelines.
That's a pet hate of mine too.
Even more so as the Brussels honchos were at pains to make clear at the time that it was perfectly acceptable for those languages that pluralise with an added 's' to use Euros instead.
Euro sounds false and horrible and "How continental are we?!!".
Last edited by stann; 27/07/2010 at 8:51 PM.
more bass
pound was pretty common too, dont forget...
"how much is that?"
"five pound."
and it didnt sound too continental whenever i heard it.....![]()
I like high energy football. A little bit rock and roll. Many finishes instead of waiting for the perfect one.
I'm being pedantic now, but that's different. The media actually have guidelines that require them to use "euro", which were introduced at the behest of the government of the time. Presumably some idiot there thought it'd be very european.
So when you hear someone on the street saying it, it's because the newsreaders in RTE and the journalists in the Times and De Paper were told to use it. If they hadn't, they wouldn't have, and we'd be calling them euros.
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