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RE: Question from a Brit to any Y... umm American - 3/3/2008 3:17:10 PM
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doinkdom
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From: The higher lowcountry
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quote:
A question. Would trailer trash be the same as white trash? Not all white trash live in trailers and not everyone living in a trailer is white trash. Possible...yes, but not necessarily so.
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RE: Question from a Brit to any Y... umm American - 3/3/2008 4:19:02 PM
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doinkdom
Posts: 4279
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From: The higher lowcountry
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trailer trash are the people that after a natural disaster...the media always find. There are usually curlers in the hair, teeth missing and some kind of stained t-shirt involved. And, of course, the excess of auto parts as lawn ornaments helps. white trash is wearing a tight skirt, colored pantyhose and white shoes with a tube top as the clincher. white trash has nothing to do with money - I've met some wealthy white trash who have absolutely no taste in clothing, home decor or cars. Of course, some people refer to white trash as someone with a much lower standard of morality, but I don't usually agree with that. Anyways, 'round these parts, we got 'em all.
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RE: Question from a Brit to any Y... umm American - 3/3/2008 4:58:14 PM
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nicole6598
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I think its weird that americans call the bottom the "f" word, not sure if I can type it, because that is another female part here! OK so here is something a typical aussie may say "how ya goin mate? Geez had to chuck a sickie today coz me missus was whinging bout the broken thingy in the dunny, last bloke who fixed it did a botch up job". TRANSLASTION "How are you today friend? Wow, I had to call in from work sick today even though I wasn't sick because my wife was complaining about the broken thing in the toilet, the last man who fixed it didn't do a good job, it was rather shady."
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RE: Question from a Brit to any Y... umm American - 3/3/2008 5:21:23 PM
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manda59
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From: Hampshire, UK
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Yep, fanny is the front part too here, Nicole! (remember! the filter is American!)
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"Once again....drum roll please! Manda is right" doinkdom, October 2008
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RE: Question from a Brit to any Y... umm American - 3/3/2008 5:35:39 PM
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nicole6598
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LOL didn't know if we could say fanny or not! I also think the names for clothes is really weird sweater, pull over, anorak etc OHHH this is what I was thinking!! In American movies they always say "hand me the Kleenex" why not say "tissue" surely you have more than one brand of tissue. I mean we have Kleenex here but we dont say that.
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RE: Question from a Brit to any Y... umm American - 3/3/2008 6:13:56 PM
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manda59
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From: Hampshire, UK
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quote:
ORIGINAL: nicole6598 I also think the names for clothes is really weird sweater, pull over, anorak etc Don't you say those words?
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"Once again....drum roll please! Manda is right" doinkdom, October 2008
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RE: Question from a Brit to any Y... umm American - 3/3/2008 6:27:31 PM
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manda59
Posts: 6022
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From: Hampshire, UK
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quote:
ORIGINAL: nicole6598 Uni (university)...........Sandwich is "sanga" (not a hard "g"). Uni has definitely been totally incorporated into Brit speak btw. Nicole, am I right in saying that a "snag" is a sausage?
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"Once again....drum roll please! Manda is right" doinkdom, October 2008
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RE: Question from a Brit to any Y... umm American - 3/3/2008 7:30:42 PM
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manda59
Posts: 6022
Joined: 9/22/2005
From: Hampshire, UK
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quote:
ORIGINAL: peculiar_lady2 Kleenex is the brand that started the whole tissue craze though, so a lot of places people say that as a general word, not a brand name.[/color] In the UK, people will sometimes say "Andrex" for the same reason, as a general name for toilet paper (or bathroom tissue as you call it!). Also, when I was growing up, my mum always called the vacuum cleaner the "Hoover" - at the time it was a Hoover, but even when she bought a new different brand, it was still called the Hoover, and it has rather stayed with me as well. Don't y'all ( ) generally say "a Band-Aid" instead of "a plaster"?
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"Once again....drum roll please! Manda is right" doinkdom, October 2008
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RE: Question from a Brit to any Y... umm American - 3/3/2008 7:55:12 PM
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AussieMum
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From: East Coast, Australia
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Hello all. Jumping in here so Nicole can have a bit more Aussie support Been a while since I have been on Crosswalk, but this thread looks like fun. Yes Manda a snag is a sausage but it can also be found when you are fishing and your line gets caught in it. As for the sweater, pullover and anorak, I think those terms are used here [maybe not anorak unless you are in Tassie where it gets cold enough to wear them ] depending on which part of Aust you come from. My Victorian relatives all refer to pullovers, but here in NSW we tend to call them jumpers. We used to refer to tissues as Kleenex, but now it tends to just be tissue. Speaking of the brand name becoming the item, in the past we would "Hoover" the carpets and put on our "Levis". But these terms seemed to have dropped from use now and it has become 'vacuum' the carpet and put on our 'jeans'. Another typical Aussie slang term is to go to, or have "Maccas" when referring to McDonalds. And I always wondered about the American terms 'scones' and 'biscuit'. I know they are not what we know them as but am still a little unsure what they are. I guess by the reference to 'scones' at KFC that they may be the small bread roll you get with their meals? I think the younger people here, particularly from the urban areas are becoming more American in their speech now and I am finding with [with horror ] that even in our print media the 'journos' are using American spelling for a lot of our words, so colour can often be seen as color for instance. Although I wonder if that is more to do with the American ownership and input into our ads and media.
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Julie in Australia Prov 3: 5-6 "Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him and He will make your paths straight"
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RE: Question from a Brit to any Y... umm American - 3/3/2008 8:01:48 PM
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HisCovenant
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Cool thread! Isn't a sweater in Brit what we in the US call a "sweat shirt?" In the US, a sweater is a knit or crocheted top, usually pulled over the head, but it can be a cardigan.
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RE: Question from a Brit to any Y... umm American - 3/3/2008 8:08:59 PM
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HisCovenant
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Ahh! I am mixed up!
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-HisCovenant/ Zipporah My friends call me Zippy!
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