Czarcasm wrote: » Courtesy of Sesame Street, which I'm pretty sure isn't in Ireland -
Sulla Felix wrote: » Fscker sounds like gaybo. "there it is now, lovely letter"
Elmo wrote: » You'll miss me. I never noticed that you could have a problem with the letter R until I was on the phone to a cust care place in England. I was spelling out some serial number with the letter R, they replied, OR?? what do you mean OR, as in O.R we don't have serial numbers beginning in O!
Elmo wrote: » The letter is AR not OR, though we live in Ireland so it is OR TEE EE.
Fred Swanson wrote: » Smug bastard has 4G as well.
Pumpkinseeds wrote: » I've always pronounced it OR, my husband is English and thinks it's hillarious. Every now and then when we're having a few drinks he'll wind me up trying to get me to say OR:D It does confuse the English though, even Americans in my experience. I was speaking to an American tourist when I lived in the UK and he commented on my accent and asked if I was from the West country. Idiot clearly had not been to Devon or Cornwall. There's no comparison.
riclad wrote: » I Went to cex yesterday, to buy a monitor. CEX sells tvs, games,phones etc. SO i,m waiting in the queue ,for 15 minutes, wtf is up with this music, there,s constant rock music played at a high volume ,like in a nightclub. very annoying. IF i,m looking to buy games ,dvds ,ill go elsewhere ,some shop that does,nt play loud music. I,M going to your shop to buy something, if i wanna listen to loud music i,ll go to a nightclub,or music venue. Maybe they want to stop anyone over 20 coming in to the shop. most of the customers ,are over 20 ,they are not coming here for sample rock music. And i went round the corner ,its ironic, the golden discs shop thats sells music ,dvds is closed , was there for 10 years. ITS like going to a pub that has 3 tvs, on , and no one is watching them, its just presumed by the boss, we all want noise all the time , silence is to be avoided. Even if its 2 o.clock, theres nothing on of any interest to anyone.
FullblownRose wrote: » My husand is from East Anglia but he is often mistaken for an Australian. The occassional bogger tells him he has an ''ooh arr!'' accent though. I have been asked by Clare people, if I am English or from Dublin because I do not have much of an accent at all. There are many English accents and more than one Dublin accent, though :O Another item high up on my Shovel List is Mayonnaise. And people who put it on my food when I did not ask for it. It's so diabolical. I have to fake an egg allergy to impress upon people the importance of not giving me mayonnaise.
Elmo wrote: » Having unread emails, voicemail and missed calls, not seeing why I have unread mail, voicemail and missed calls, when I have read everything!
Meelah wrote: » When people carry things in their mouth when they have a free hand.
Czarcasm wrote: » I will admit, I'm terrible for doing this. I hold the barrel of the pen sideways between my teeth while I'm typing. Only once has it ever snapped when I bit down, but that was a shìtty bic pen. The parker pens can take much more resistance The upside? Nobody ever asks can they borrow my pen!
Feminists and manginas
Elmo wrote: » Thing Feminists Hate, new after hours thread.
FullblownRose wrote: » People who poke their tongue out for no apparent reason. It is like a cheeky miscievous look but more grotesque with the tongue in overdrive like they are trying to lick their own ear. Waggling around the place. The estate agent we bought our house from/through/with used to do it and I saw a middle-aged woman crossing the road with her tongue sticking out as she trotted out in a gap in traffic.