Marc Chevalier
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Paisley said:I just went to an Irish restaurant that had a dessert called a "car bomb."
More like a gut bomb.
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Paisley said:I just went to an Irish restaurant that had a dessert called a "car bomb."
The phrase was actually popularized by a radio character in the 1940's. She'd always say "Who'd a thunk it!?" It passed into the lexicon, even among people who never heard the radio show.i_am_the_scruff said:I don't want to offend anyone, but there's alot of stuff Americans say that irritates me like crazy.
Prime example, the non-word "thunk". Seriously, what? "who would have thunk?" No, thought. THOUGHT.
I was in Kansas a couple of years ago and the lady we were staying with actually said "I'm gonna call >insert name here< and see if he's had any thunks for dinner." I almost left the country there and then.
dhermann1 said:OK, I'll throw in a few.
"Thanks in advance" or, worse, closing a letter with "Thanking you in advance". Talk about presumptive!
Two words that I have watched with amusement on both sides of the pond have had parallel but non-intersecting careers. Specifically, "Awesome" in the US and "Brilliant" in the UK. Talk about words over used to death!
They've each become UBIQUITOUS in their native lands. But neither has (thank God!) managed to pollute the brain cells of folks on the respective other sides of the Atlantic. I find this curious.
Regarding virtually every phrase or word listed so far, I'm afraid we all face losing battles in rolling back the tides of bad usage. [huh]
Marc Chevalier said:More like a gut bomb.
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Acronyms make for faster communication, though... although I'll agree that it would help if, for the ones that aren't standard Netspeak like IIRC, they were spelled out early and only used in acronym form in subsequent usage.Darhling said:I am not a fan of contracting words like the "DH" craze (dear hubby I presume it means).. everythings gets initialed!
Paisley said:Now everything is amazing.
AtomicEraTom said:"That's the new word everyone uses"
Dixon Cannon said:"My Bad!" Now stop it and speak English!
"No Worries!" What?...next we'll be saying "Oi!" and grimacing like Jacko?!
-dixon cannon
Michaelshane said:There's no x in espresso...... pet peeve.
Quote:
Originally Posted by TheDutchess
Usually when someone says " I'm sorry" to me. I reply with " I know your sorry, now apologize."
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tomasso
Sorry, but that's downright rude; and from a Duchess, no less.
Rude, heck. It's downright b**ch goddess-y. Words one might hear from a seasoned dominatrix. (Hmm ... could she be that kind of 'dutchess'?)
Marc Chevalier said:Wickedly apt description! :eusa_clap :eusa_clap
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dhermann1 said:Ravioli, plural Singular: raviolo.
Cannoli, plural. Singular: cannolo.
In Italian, if it ends with an "I", it's a plural.
Paisley said:"Gut bomb" describes almost everything on the menu: variations on the themes of sausage, cheese, potatoes and meat fried in batter. *yucky*