KTRIC wrote: » He's outta his box I was outta me box last noite etc
pierrot wrote: » is that box meaning head, rather than a 'lady's box'
KTRIC wrote: » Yep, box as in head.
dSTAR wrote: » Me bollix. Bag o' Taytos please isn't rich or diverse. I mean how in the name of jasus is dat unique? Would ya gwan outta that mister. A bag o' yore ma's knickers now dats cat.
KTRIC wrote: » Don't ya mean a "package a taytos" ??
Honey-ec wrote: » Black people in general. What amazes me is that she clearly wasn't using it in a racist context, but people still saw fit to get offended. It's like someone being offended at the Irish word "focail" because it sounds phonetically slightly rude...
sprinklesspanky wrote: » Little black sambohttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Black_Sambohttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sambo_(racial_term)
Honey-ec wrote: » I'm aware of the history of the term Sambo in that context. My point was, if you use a word that just happens to have a different meaning to the one you mean, in a totally different context to the one in which it would be offensive, do people really have any right to object to it?
Tigger wrote: » yeah i was running a potato farm and there were some nigerians working, one of them broke his digging implement and got all huffity when i told him to get another spade and finish the harvesting
super_furry wrote: » Indeed it'd be like gay people get offended if you asked was anyone going outside for a fag.
Fratton Fred wrote: » That thing in the gutter, that water goes down. its called a drain. Why do you insist on calling it a shore?
r3nu4l wrote: » As I was typing mine, Fred was typing his On that note, why oh why do English people insist that if they fall on the footpath/road, they fell on 'the floor'? WTF? No, you fell on the footpath/road, not the floor...the floor is inside your house ffs!
Honey-ec wrote: » My point was, if you use a word that just happens to have a different meaning to the one you mean, in a totally different context to the one in which it would be offensive, do people really have any right to object to it?
Gyalist wrote: » For example, it's not uncommon in Ireland to call someone, even in jest, a bastard. Do that in Jamaica and you'll probably have a fight on your hands.
Gyalist wrote: » The point is that the word has a specific meaning in Ireland. That doesn't give you license to use it in other countries where they already have an accepted meaning for it. Simple common sense really. For example, it's not uncommon in Ireland to call someone, even in jest, a bastard. Do that in Jamaica and you'll probably have a fight on your hands.
Septic Leper wrote: » in english: hello my good fellow can you tell me where the nearest post office or building society is as I would like to lodge a cheque ito my account?