Full Marx wrote: » Really? I've heard the penguins in Antarctica are awful cúnts who can't stand us taigs
The Backwards Man wrote: » Never in my life, and I've been around a fair few corners. Got a bit of grief in Cork once for being from Donegal but that's just jealousy.
DEFTLEFTHAND wrote: » I've traveled a bit and have being treated well for the most part. I was referred to as a mick a few times in New York but is was pretty much in a jokey fashion. The friend who I was visiting who lives there said that blue collar Italians sometimes refer to the Irish as White N1ggers. The one time I did experience some hostility was in Holyhead Wales. I was drinking at bar in the town with a friend of mine. I noticed some bald headed neanderthal eyeballing us out of the corner of my eye. When we got up to leave he grabbed my arm as I passed him and said "The ferry is that way paddy" I didn't react I just walked out the door.
A Little Pony wrote: » All the time. Orange Bastard is thrown my way all the time. Hun etc.
Princess Consuela Bananahammock wrote: » Once in the UK from a guy who was from the North, ironically enough. But he was widely regarded to be a bit of a twat.
Motivator wrote: » I lived in New York & worked in a bar owned by a very distant relation of the family. There was a hockey game on & after it about 50 stereotypical American 20 somethings walked in pissed out of their minds. One of them came up to get a drink & I said I couldn't serve him (policy of the bar was do not serve people the night of games who were already drunk) but when I did he kept asking me to repeat myself & kept asking me to speak up that he couldn't hear me. As I spoke a bit louder he screamed "sorry I don't understand pig talk you Irish IRA mother****a". There was a bit of a scene in the bar as security & plenty of regulars fought to get at this fella to throw him out on his ear. The funny part was it was an Irish bar & the bouncer said he checked his ID about 1 minute before this & the chap had an Irish surname. It was hilarious! My evening perked up a bit not long after as I was getting loads of drinks bought for me & tips thrown at me left right & centre. After my shift ended I stayed on for a few pints with some of the regulars & ended up going on to a few other bars with a group of American girls who absolutely loved the pig talk from this Irish IRA mother****a. Ended up going out with one of the girls for 9 months.
Aongus Von Bismarck wrote: » Yes. A former manager here in Germany once remarked that he was surprised I didn't have Guinness for breakfast and that I must be dying my hair as he expected it to be red. Funnily enough, this came from the mouth of a bald alcoholic. The prejudice ended when a ninja squad that I was a member of deemed him surplus to requirements.
IrishWandering wrote: » "All you paddies are drunk f*ckin' farmers!" — obese Londoner clearly under the influence of drugs, May 2016
Preston Sour Seaplane wrote: » What's a ninja squad?
Aongus Von Bismarck wrote: » It's an internal group within an organisation who are brought together secretly to carry out a piece of work quickly. In this case it was a group of young turks who were tasked with working out which of the senior managers were no longer required.
seamus wrote: » Not in any real way. Wife spent 2 years in college in London. One of the British guys on the course remarked that something "was so Irish" and we were a bit like "WTF". Turns out it was a pretty common bit of slang for something that's shoddy/ridiculous, but we had never heard it before. And the guy who said it had never really thought about what it meant until we were staring at him with our mouths open. 😠Oddly enough I heard an Irish builder use the same phrase this year.
Clampdown wrote: » It's an accurate phrase imo, unfortunately. If you've lived elsewhere a lot of things here seem shoddy/ridiculous/shockingly unorganized. Sometimes that's part of the charm though.