Originally posted by bogeyman
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Reply to: I want a Cab, innit
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Previously on "I want a Cab, innit"
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Originally posted by zeitghostReminds me of a black chap I was in uni with, he had a perfect RP accent... seemed quite incongruous compared with some of the African patois that was more usual, but much much easier to comprehend...
I often wonder whatever happened to some of these people.
Like the twats that reject the English names they were born with an adopt some kind of faux African name. Like that plonker who's always on Newsnight Review - Kwame Cumquot, (born Ian Roberts!) or some such.
BTW don't get me started on the tossers who appear on Newsnight Review
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Originally posted by Just1morethen View PostYou get your chavspeak down south, but you should hear what we need to contend with up here in Scotland. It seems that everyone between 14 and 23 wears a lacoste trackie and speaks with a lanarkshire accent regardless of where they live. And then end every sentence with the word "nomeen", which I think is a contraction of "does one know what I mean?". Makes me mad.
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Originally posted by snaw View PostI'm not entirely sure I liked being lumped in with a bunch of sassanachs, to be used as a tool of comparison.
Aye. Gonni noe dae that, jist gonni noe.
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Originally posted by BA to the Stars View PostAs for Cardiff in the cup final - "Play up Pompey" (Yes I am a Pompey fan)
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Originally posted by snaw View PostMakes me laugh, especially all the white kids trying to be black.
Some years ago at a friend's house there was a black guy who talked with a very strong accent in some kind of Jamaican patois mixed with Gangsta talk (or whatever it's called).
After he left my friend explained that they'd been at school together, and until he was about sixteen the bloke had talked perfectly good English with a distinctly middle-class accent
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Originally posted by Just1morethen View PostSpelling amended.
"nomeen" - know what I mean. Its how the neds say it - honestly.
They intend it as a question, hence my grammar.
PS. Ignore me, am being a git.
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Spelling amended.
"nomeen" - know what I mean. Its how the neds say it - honestly.
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Originally posted by Just1morethen View PostYou get your chavspeak down south, but you should here waht we need to contend with up here in Scotland. It seems that everyone between 14 and 23 wears a lacoste trackie and speaks with a lanarkshire accent regardless of where they live. And then end every sentence with the word "nomeen", which I think is a contraction of "does one know what I mean?". Makes me mad.
what
nomeen?
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You get your chavspeak down south, but you should hear what we need to contend with up here in Scotland. It seems that everyone between 14 and 23 wears a lacoste trackie and speaks with a lanarkshire accent regardless of where they live. And then end every sentence with the word "nomeen", which I think is a contraction of "does one know what I mean?". Makes me mad.Last edited by Alan @ BroomeAffinity; 11 April 2008, 15:58.
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Originally posted by oracleslave View PostBit of a commute to fratton park from Yorkshire I'd have thought?
And sometimes you wonder why, then other times (like last week) it makes it seem so worthwhile
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Originally posted by BA to the Stars View PostAs for Cardiff in the cup final - "Play up Pompey" (Yes I am a Pompey fan)
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Originally posted by Bagpuss View Postanybody who says off of should be shot
as in I got off of the motorway
I picked it up off of the table
no, you got off the motorway
you picked it up off the table
Sounds like a flock of crows in full cry
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Originally posted by BA to the Stars View PostI agree, but we do have a common language (Welsh & Celtic speakers acknowledged but are minority languages). Throughout the nation, we have regional accents but it is the introduction of this "chav speak" for want of a better phrase that is the problem highlighted on this thread. A Geordie, Scot, Cockney, Brummie, et al would all ask for a cab or a taxi. The pronouniciation may be different but no-one would end the word cab or taxi with innit. What these people do not realise is that whilst they think it may make them appear cool within their own peer groups, it gives everyone else the impression that they are too lazy to learn their own native tongue and come across as uneducated.
As for Cardiff in the cup final - "Play up Pompey" (Yes I am a Pompey fan)
Aye. Gonni noe dae that, jist gonni noe.
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anybody who says off of should be shot
as in I got off of the motorway
I picked it up off of the table
no, you got off the motorway
you picked it up off the table
Leave a comment:
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