Purple Mountain wrote: » Back in my prime days, I met a hot Aussie guy who was in Ireland on holiday. We snogged and arranged to meet up a few days later in the city. He was meeting up with his Oz friend who was living here that same night so I brought my friend along. I can't remember the bar we met them in but it was Australia Day. Anyhow, either me or my friend went to the bar and got a round of drinks for 4 people. Then when the drinks were finished the boys went to the bar and got themselves tap water and seeing us standing there, the friend offers us girls a sip from his glass (come to think of it, I think there was only 1 glass). To top it all off, my handbag got robbed that same night by some guy outside on the street while I naively left it down momentarily!
the purple tin wrote: » Lol, the cheap git. Did you...ahem...you know? nudge, nudge...wink,wink, after that display of stinge.
Purple Mountain wrote: » As if I'm going to divulge that on here to you pervs!
partyguinness wrote: » Last weekend I has just done my weekly grocery shop for the family but when I got to the till I realised I had left my Necter card on the dashboard of the car. Check out guy said no problem just bring the receipt and card to customer service and they will log your points. I spend £100+ every week so it does add up..but anyway. I just finished up collected card from car and went back in and stood behind this elderly gentleman who handed a small carton of semi-skimmed milk to the guy behind the counter while demonstrating that when you screwed off the plastic top the inner foil bit was stuck to the underside of the top. Basically it was like this when he got home and he wasn't sure if it was now safe and so wanted a new one. He had traveled in from a neighbour town (being elderly you have to hear all the insignificant details). The town is 8 miles away and the carton of milk (the smallest ones you can buy) cost all of .45p. It effing cost him more in fuel and hassle just getting back.
rawn wrote: » My brother was eating lunch alone in his canteen yesterday, it's a tiny canteen that seats 1. He had brought in a curry from home and had maybe 2 bites and went out to take a phone call. He returned a few minutes later to find the food gone and the dirty plate in the sink. The cleaner was standing there with her mouth swinging open stuttering that she thought he was finished so she threw it out. The miserable bitch had eaten it cos he checked the bin and it wasn't there. She's notorious for being a mooch, always bumming smokes, stealing lighters, hovering around desks when people have sweets out for birthdays etc. One year a coworker did a collection of clothes for homeless people and found the cleaner rifling through the collection looking for stuff to sell at her car boot sale!
Graces7 wrote: » How is that stingy please? He was not sure the milk was safe to use as it was not properly sealed and had no other milk for his tea. Just careful is all...Maybe stingy is how you reacted? Just a thought..
sligojoek wrote: » Was there something wrong with his nose?
Graces7 wrote: How is that stingy please? He was not sure the milk was safe to use as it was not properly sealed and had no other milk for his tea. Just careful is all...Maybe stingy is how you reacted? Just a thought..
rawn wrote: » My brother was eating lunch alone in his canteen yesterday, it's a tiny canteen that seats 12. He had brought in a curry from home and had maybe 2 bites and went out to take a phone call. He returned a few minutes later to find the food gone and the dirty plate in the sink. The cleaner was standing there with her mouth swinging open stuttering that she thought he was finished so she threw it out. The miserable bitch had eaten it cos he checked the bin and it wasn't there. She's notorious for being a mooch, always bumming smokes, stealing lighters, hovering around desks when people have sweets out for birthdays etc. One year a coworker did a collection of clothes for homeless people and found the cleaner rifling through the collection looking for stuff to sell at her car boot sale!
Weepsie wrote: » No stingier than going back and queuing up again for the Nectar points
Solomon Pleasant wrote: Anyway, we didn’t have a sofa and decided we’d all chip in 5€ and get a cheap one from IKEA. Grand job, one of the lads stuck it on his card and we all gave him the money except one lad from Malaysia.
Solomon Pleasant wrote: » When I was in first year of university, I lived in a shared complex with 13 other students and we all shared a living room and kitchen. Anyway, we didn’t have a sofa and decided we’d all chip in 5€ and get a cheap one from IKEA. Grand job, one of the lads stuck it on his card and we all gave him the money except one lad from Malaysia. Said he had no interest in it. Fair enough, some students are stuck for money but this guy was an international student studying medicine. His fees for college came in at around 30-40k per year I believe and he regularly was able to afford trips around Ireland and abroad. In other words his family were loaded. Stingy prick.
Le Bruise wrote: » One of my old college mates had a bit of a penchant for thrift and stinge. Back when we were doing our post grad in Maynooth, I was living in Dublin and he was in Celbridge, so there was a bit of public transport involved getting too and from College. This was when, instead of giving change on the bus, you got a little receipt for the monetary amount (20c or so) which I usually lost within minutes of receiving. My friend, however, kept these religiously, squirrelling them away for a rainy day. Of course this in itself is not stingy, just thrifty and well organised. But then one day he asked me to do him a favour and pop in to the Dublin Bus headquarters on O'Connell St to redeem his bus receipts for him, as I'd be 'passing by' getting my bus from the quays (not quite passing but how and ever). I had no problem with this as I don't mind doing my mate's a solid, so he handed me the neatly stapled receipts, amounting to the princely sum of €10. The issue arose, however, when he then announced that this would suffice as the repayment of a tenner that he owed me from a night out the previous week. The cajones on this gentleman to pay a loan back in bus receipts that i would have to cash in myself. Of course, being a mug, I went ahead and cashed them in....but I ensured I handed him the tenner, so that he could give it back to me as a proper loan repayment in cold hard cash. We still slag him to this day about it.
partyguinness wrote: We have not been out with them since to a restaurant.
rushfan wrote: » I'm not surprised, we have friends who, in the early days, when it came to tipping in a restaurant would leave the bare minimum, we got around this by handing our tip amount personally to the waiter/waitress. They've since come around to our way of thinking. On a slightly similar note, when my eldest started doing floor work in a local establishment, she told me that all tips paid by credit card were never forwarded to them , but instead retained by management. Since that day, I always tip with cash.
partyguinness wrote: » Funnily enough I was in some restaurant in England a few back. I can't remember which it was but when the waitress was there holding the card machine I was apologizing for not having cash and having to leave the tip on the card rather than hand it to her in cash. She basically told me not to bother as the tips on the card do not get passed on anyway- so I didnt.