Next time you go to the car showroom, ask the salesman to curl up in the boot (trunk).
Not original. From Facebook.
Quote from: Westmarcher on 24 July 2016, 09:17:11 PM
Next time you go to the car showroom, ask the salesman to curl up in the boot (trunk).
Not original. From Facebook.
I rather like that one, Westie......Took me a moment to get it, though.....(t is early) ;D ;D ;D
Cheers - Phil
I don't get it.
You are not alone.
Is there something to be gotten?
Think of potentially very nasty criminal activity.
(I listen to too many detective/thriller stories.)
Cheers - Phil
So there isn't some strange pun or cultural reference there?
I've just taken it as a rather evil 'jape' to play on the car salesman.
Cheers - Phil
What does "bored" mean?
Quote from: fsn on 25 July 2016, 11:55:00 AM
What does "bored" mean?
That's when you drill a hole & miss again.
A "bored" is what one goes before in the hopes of being released from prison.
I thought it were a piece o wood 2' wide, 6' long and 2" thick.
IanS
I've always understood it was a senior officer in an establishment that provided entertainment for lonely gentlemen who hadn't heard of internet dating.
I still don't get it!
Shouldn't you preface this with something like,"Hmm, you're about the same size ..."
Though of course such a "jape" may possibly be followed sometime later by,"Honestly officer, the duct tape, cable ties and box cutters are for a terrain item I'm building ... the patio, yes it's new ... flagged it over myself ... my wife? .... no honestly she's on holiday with her sister and a friend .... no, really ... ow! Those handcuffs pinch!" :)
Quote from: Ithoriel on 25 July 2016, 06:57:45 PM
Shouldn't you preface this with something like,"Hmm, you're about the same size ..."
"Honestly officer, the duct tape, cable ties and box cutters are for a terrain item I'm building ... the patio, yes it's new ... flagged it over myself ... my wife? .... no honestly she's on holiday with her sister and a friend .... no, really ... ow! Those handcuffs pinch!" :)
"Oh, yes sir.....and how does the shovel and pick fit in with your....Ahem.....Terrain building.
You're nicked, Chummy."
Cheers - Constable Savage.
"But officer, I'd borrowed them from a friend to do the patio work. They're in the boot because I was about to return them."
Hay likely story.
Hide like hue to haccompany me to the station, sir.
wat accent were dat.
IanS
Quote from: Techno on 26 July 2016, 04:35:40 PM
Hay likely story.
Hide like hue to haccompany me to the station, sir.
Very well, but I don't do truncheons and handcuffs on a first arrest, ok?
Quote from: ianrs54 on 27 July 2016, 06:18:45 AM
wat accent were dat. IanS
Hay policeman giving hevidence in hcourt, hand trying to speak posh.....Hi presume.
(Where DID that 'haccent' horiginate ?......Some hold comedy show, hi presume.) ;)
Cheers - Phil
Inappropriate aspiration of vowels is an affectation older than English. Catullus wrote a poem about it poking fun at a man called Arrius, usually translated 'Arry.
Chommoda dicebat, si quando commoda vellet
dicere, et insidias Arrius hinsidias.
et tum mirifice sperabat se esse locutum,
cum quantum poterat dixerat hinsidias.
Credo, sic mater, sic liber avunculus eius,
sic maternus avus dixerat atque avia.
Hoc misso in Syriam requierant omnibus aures:
audibant eadem haec leniter et leviter,
nec sibi postilla metuebant talia verba,
cum subito affertur nuntius horribilis,
Ionios fluctus, postquam illuc Arrius isset,
iam non Ionios esse sed Hionios.
"Hadvantages" Arrius would say whenever he wished to say advantages
And ambush he said was "hambush,"
And then he was hoping that he had spoken wonderfully
Under the circumstances when he said "hambush" as much as he was able,
I believe, thus his mother, thus his free uncle,
Thus his maternal grandfather and grandmother had spoken.
When this man was packed off to Syria, everyone's ears had a rest:
They were hearing the same thing more softly and more lightly,
Nor afterwards were they themselves fearing such words,
When suddenly the horrible message is brought that:
The Ionian waves, after Arrius had been there,
Were now no longer Ionian but "Hionian."
Quote from: ianrs54 on 27 July 2016, 06:18:45 AM
wat accent were dat.
Parker out of Thunderbirds.
I think it's quite an old affectation. Cockerknees would drop their 'h's' in things like
'arrogate insted of
Harrogate , or in the case of the Steptoes
'arold instead of
Harold. When being 'posh' they would replace the 'h's', but then added then where they were not needed.
How about phoning a GW store and asking if they have the following in stock
Heamo roidis purple paint
Stool brown paint
if they query it say " its some new colours in the range" :d
Hamo Hamamus
Hamas Hamatis
Hamat Hamant
-Arrius
Ask in Mcccyds for 15 nuggets, wait for the "We only serve in 6, 9 or 12!" Reply...
The response is then, "So you'd rather take no money at all than sell 15? How on earth did you get 5 stars you wazerk?"
Eh ?
Good grief ! =)
Mind you.....(I've probably told this one before).....About 15 ? years ago, I was in a particular shop in a 'town' called Southwell, where the tills had temporarily stopped working.
Honest truth....One of the assistants said to her colleague....."Tracy, what's 17 less 3 ?"
Cheers - Phil
Quote from: d_Guy on 27 July 2016, 01:45:56 PM
Hamo Hamamus
Hamas Hamatis
Hamat Hamant
-Arrius
'ah, 'ah, ah, very hamusing!
I remember shopping with my father for some item of furniture. Aware of the limited space, father asked the shop assistant how wide the item was in inches, rather than the damned centipedes and millipedes we now use, for father was at heart an Imperial man. She took out a tape measure and painfully measures the item.
"2 foot 15 inches." She offered. My father, who on occassion made Victor Meldrew look like the Dalai Llama, retained a surreal calm and asked her to check again. She snicked the tape across the item.
"Yes. 2 foot, 3 inches."
"Don't you mean 3 foot 3 inches?" prompted father, kindly. She looked at him as if he had perhaps lost some portion of his sanity. Again, the ruler whipped out.
"No, definitely 2 foot 15 inches." Father was perplexed by such repeated demonstrations of inability.
"Could you measure the other side?" This time, she openly scowled at him, but sensing a sale was possible, measured the opposite length.
"Two foot 14 ... no 15 inches." She intoned.
"Ah! Said father. You're quite certain?" The sales assistant studied the tape measure for a moment.
"Yes, quite certain."
"Pity." Said Father. "I need it to fit into a gap which is a yard and 6 inches wide." So saying, he turned on his heel and we left the shop. We never spoke of the incident but he never, to my knowledge, returned to that shop.
Quote from: Techno on 27 July 2016, 06:10:55 PM
Honest truth....One of the assistants said to her colleague....."Tracy, what's 17 less 3 ?"
Cheers - Phil
I have given up with shop assistants. the times I have been told "its £5.26 sir"( or a similar sum) and then given them a £10 note and 26 pence. they look at me like I am nuts, give me the 26p back and then count out the £4.74 change"
Too true, Mark ! =) X_X
Cheers - Phil
Quote from: Just a few Orcs on 28 July 2016, 07:41:41 AM
I have given up with shop assistants. the times I have been told "its £5.26 sir"( or a similar sum) and then given them a £10 note and 26 pence. they look at me like I am nuts, give me the 26p back and then count out the £4.74 change"
Then they call out to the supervisor " I am running out of £1 coins.!!!" - I think "of course you are you twit"
Appreciate the well-told remembrance, fsn.
As a casual observer of things, we (USA) seem to have dropped the use of "feet" from measurements less then 72". Growing up 15" would always be expressed as 1'3" and verbalized as "one foot three" now it's just "fifteen inches". Puts me in mind of your former monetary system. During my first visit to Britain in the 1960's I'd simply stick out my palm full of coins and let the local sort through the collection of shillings, pennies, farthings, Demi-groats, etc. until they were satisfied.
Quote from: d_Guy on 28 July 2016, 02:05:13 PM
Appreciate the well-told remembrance, fsn.
Thank you. :-[
Aye, but with 3 pennies a couple of farthings and a half crown in your pocket you
knew you had money. I remember finding a 1797 penny in my change, worn nearly smooth. Victorian pennies were very common.
Quote from: Techno on 27 July 2016, 06:31:55 AM
Hay policeman giving hevidence in hcourt, hand trying to speak posh.....Hi presume.
(Where DID that 'haccent' horiginate ?......Some hold comedy show, hi presume.) ;)
Cheers - Phil
Was it this one by any chance, Phil?
p.s. Nobby. Typo? (did you mean to say, 1897 (Victorian penny)?)
I think it could possibly be even older than that Westie. :-\
Cheers - Someone who nearly put your real name down. X_X
;D ;D ;D
I had to stop drinking my tea until that was finished ;) :D