Annoying words and phrases
Marketing bollocks, buzzword bingo, or your mum saying "fudge" when she really wants to swear like a trooper. Let's ride the hockey stick curve of this top hat product, solutioneers.
Thanks to simbosan for the idea
( , Thu 8 Apr 2010, 13:13)
Marketing bollocks, buzzword bingo, or your mum saying "fudge" when she really wants to swear like a trooper. Let's ride the hockey stick curve of this top hat product, solutioneers.
Thanks to simbosan for the idea
( , Thu 8 Apr 2010, 13:13)
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anytime the letters F or V replace th
As in fink, bruvva, somefing, etc
That's more of a speech problem than a particular word or phrase.
Fanks.
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 21:58, 6 replies)
As in fink, bruvva, somefing, etc
That's more of a speech problem than a particular word or phrase.
Fanks.
( , Fri 9 Apr 2010, 21:58, 6 replies)
Thank you
My twat of an ex couldn't say 'th', it's the most irritating speech problem in the whole of the English language
"Which modbile network are you on?"
"Free"
"Free??"
"No, Free, ve number free"
Twat
( , Sat 10 Apr 2010, 0:50, closed)
My twat of an ex couldn't say 'th', it's the most irritating speech problem in the whole of the English language
"Which modbile network are you on?"
"Free"
"Free??"
"No, Free, ve number free"
Twat
( , Sat 10 Apr 2010, 0:50, closed)
Everyone's mentioned replacing th with F or V, but they use D too:
Sumfink in a fir'y-acre fermal ficket uv forns en fistles fumped en fundered freatnin da free-D forts uv Maffew da fug - allvow, fea'ricly, it was only da fir'een-faasand fistles en forns frew da underneaf uv is figh dat da fir'y yeyar old fug fort uv dat mawnin.
( , Sat 10 Apr 2010, 7:44, closed)
My girlfriend,
who is from south London, does this sometimes. But only sometimes - I just assumed it was part of how they spoke where she grew up (I'm Canadian). Is it actually an affectation of some sort?
Somefink is the most common one I hear from her.
( , Tue 13 Apr 2010, 1:08, closed)
who is from south London, does this sometimes. But only sometimes - I just assumed it was part of how they spoke where she grew up (I'm Canadian). Is it actually an affectation of some sort?
Somefink is the most common one I hear from her.
( , Tue 13 Apr 2010, 1:08, closed)
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