People who use the Irish language version of their name.
For example, people who were born, christened and registered as Paul Murphy, for example, who start going by Pól Ó'Murachú.
I skipped a queue in dunnes the other day...i had my 2 year old with me and he was getting cranky, i was in bad form.......the couple ahead of me had a tonne of shopping so when a new till opened up, i just went for it....kept the head down, paid for the few bits i had and got out as fast as i could....
They certainly would put me in this thread.....
It's good to see that the White Van Person is getting some good press. They have a reputation for being rude and aggressive drivers. You wouldn't want to start a stereotype of young women in small cars being selfish.
Anyone who calls Baseball or GAA actual sports. American football also.
People who have quotes like "refugees welcome" or "Ireland is full" on their Facebook or social media.
White van man do have a tenancy to be complete knobs once they get onto motorways.....so they are still tossers
To me this is a little like wearing formal dress shoes with a tracksuit.
You're literally the only person I've ever heard who wouldn't think those are sports. Doesn't it seem unlikely that everyone else but you is the tosser?
Nah. If I had a big shop and you had just had a few things, especially with a cranky child, fire away!
Although, sometimes people don't notice.
You didn't skip ahead of them in the queue they were in though. Imo when a new till opens its fair game to go to it.
If you are not going to compete against other nations then it's not worthy of the name. Even Rugby is a sport and rugby is utter rubbish.
There is a baseball world cup involving countries competing against each other.
This is uncalled for. Not just you being wrong, but so ridiculously wrong.
Whatever
mod take your trolling elsewhere.
Narcissistic empathy sprinkled with intolerance to anything or anyone that might have a different opinion to them and will immediately jump to conclusions and stereotypes about someone who remotely disagrees with them. Soft, weak-minded, ignorant tossers.
You consider yourself a Tosser right?
Yes.
I disagree and it really pisses me off.
Why should someone say in 5th position in the queue get to skip ahead of person 3?
It can sound like a duck quacking if you have any basic knowledge of the English language you’ll understand that an apostrophe is symbolic of a word being shortened.
should’ve (should have) the ve is the giveaway there.
When someone says Ireland is not full because the population was X times bigger in the 1800's.
The tossers don't realise it's not about potential, it's about the current situation and resources.
It's like saying a 5 seater car with 6 people in it isn't overloaded because the family had a 7 seater a few years ago.
Be fast or be last.
Try pronoucing Should Of and Should've a few times. Anyone listening will think you are saying the same thing. Tossers would slow it down to try to make them sound different.
As I said I don’t care if it sounds like a duck quacking it’s very basic English language.
Should’ve (Should Have) dropping the “Ha” and replacing with an apostrophe.
Marcus Sweeney
Most people have better things to be doing with their life than worrying about such trivial matters, people sometimes forget about trivial little things
I know about the grammar. What I said is that they sound the same in speech. Do you think they sound different in speech?
Believe me I’m not worried I’m just pointing out the matter of fact.
Yes they do. uv and of doesn’t sound the same to me. Maybe I should get a hearing aid though.
This thread is like one big tosser now 😆
You wouldn't really see it in Ireland but anyone who pairs a baseball cap with a suit.
You mentioned knowledge of basic English. One of the basics would be to measure the average rate of speech. The experts say that it is 100 to 120 syllables per minute. (I know that is not an average, but average can be used as a figure of speech as well as an exact measure).
Taking the lower number, you would pronounce Should Of / Should've 50 times in 60 seconds. You could test yourself on friends by doing a mixture of both over the course of a minute, and ask them to distinguish between them. You don't need a hearing aid to distinguish between two different syllables in isolation. It is when they are part of a word or phrase that they become homonyms in this case.
Not enough eye rolls in the world