Question: What do the Brits think of Monty Python and Benny Hill, which are so popular here 'cross the pond?
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Monty Python is obviously amazing and I think any true fan of British comedy would say its one of our finest, most influential exports.
Benny Hill - I liked him when I was a kid and he's great in The Italian Job. But I think most people under 30 would really struggle to tell you he is. Just not a big deal over here at all and forgotten in the pantheon of comedy performers.I experienced an invasion of my mind by a transcendentally rational mind, as if I had been insane all my life and suddenly I had become sane.
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I recently saw a picture of the Marble Arch Inn in Manchester. It says "Free House" on the side of the roof. What does this mean?I like the way the line runs up the back of the stocking.
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It means you're free...to do what you want...any old time...Originally posted by MartinWho the fuck is Kellan Lutz?Originally posted by gravediggerBasically what I'm saying is that, based on what I've watched so far, we should all listen to Matt more often.Originally posted by MartinAnd who the FUCK is Peaches Geldof?
Kellan Lutz's girlfriend?
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Can I get some sort of proper explanation of cockney rhyming slang? I know apples and pears = stairs, alan whickers = knickers and all that.. but WHY? Why is it stairs, why isnt apples and pairs.. chairs.. or something. Are they predefined and everyone knows them (cockney grammar class?) or can you throw any old rhyming words together to substitute something. HOW DOES ANYONE KNOW WHAT SOMEONE IS SAYING??
Thanks in advance.Last edited by Trejo; 09-24-2013, 01:02 PM.XBL/PSN/Steam Gamertag - CalgaryRonin
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Originally posted by Trejo View PostCan I get some sort of proper explanation of cockney rhyming slang? I know apples and pears = stairs, alan whickers = knickers and all that.. but WHY? Why is it stairs, why isnt apples and pairs.. chairs.. or something. Are they predefined and everyone knows them (cockney grammar class?) or can you throw any old rhyming words together to substitute something. HOW DOES ANYONE KNOW WHAT SOMEONE IS SAYING??
Thanks in advance.
hahahah yes."Looking like Nic Cage dressed in Kurt Cobain's closet. I mean that as a compliment" - BillyG
"Too cunty for wine bars, too dainty for real bars." - Anderson
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Originally posted by IggytheBorg View PostI recently saw a picture of the Marble Arch Inn in Manchester. It says "Free House" on the side of the roof. What does this mean?
So yeah, Free House just meant you were free to come in and have - and in later years pay for - a drink. A pub still wearing that banner is advertising that they've been there for probably a hundred years or more.
Originally posted by Matt View PostIt means you're free...to do what you want...any old time...
Originally posted by Trejo View PostCan I get some sort of proper explanation of cockney rhyming slang? I know apples and pears = stairs, alan whickers = knickers and all that.. but WHY? Why is it stairs, why isnt apples and pairs.. chairs.. or something. Are they predefined and everyone knows them (cockney grammar class?) or can you throw any old rhyming words together to substitute something. HOW DOES ANYONE KNOW WHAT SOMEONE IS SAYING??
Thanks in advance.
I don't know a single person my age that hasn't grown up asking their Dad, "What?" when confronted with such sayings. Throw in growing up the son of a former squaddie and you end up adopting all manner of sayings that you then have to explain to your friends and colleagues once you yourself start using them organically.
And none of my family are cockneys.
It was an entirely new learning curve for me moving to the North of England in my early teens, where every county seems to have their own language. It's similar to the difference between an upper class Southern Californian and a lower class Kentuckyian (?), but every 50 miles. And they ALL hate each other. Mostly because of football.
Originally posted by BillyG View PostSame as Pub isn't it? Pub is short for Public House.I experienced an invasion of my mind by a transcendentally rational mind, as if I had been insane all my life and suddenly I had become sane.
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Originally posted by Captain Russ View PostAll according to plan...I like the way the line runs up the back of the stocking.
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Question: Are Father Christmas and Santa Claus one and the same? The depiction I saw in the 1st "Narnia" movie led me to think they were, but both are mentioned in seperate verses of a John Entwhistle solo tune, "I Believe in Everything", a litany of supernatural/paranormal phenomena the narrator believes in. This seems to imply they're 2 different people. What's the real scoop?I like the way the line runs up the back of the stocking.
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