Please note that new user registrations disabled at this time.

England is still here!!!!

Anything goes... just keep it clean.
User avatar
C Elegans
Posts: 9935
Joined: Thu Mar 15, 2001 11:00 pm
Location: The space within
Contact:

Post by C Elegans »

the_limey wrote:Well, of course. Though I must admit that I am surprised my own Rochdalian accent is not on the list. For those not sure, think of the movies "The Parole Officer" or "East is East" and it's quite similar.
I am not familiar with any of those movies, but the sample I found at this British accents website didn't sound anywhere near the *hrm!* uniqueness of how my Liverpuddlian and Geordie friends speak.
http://www.collectbritain.co.uk/persona ... 6U00021C01
Never a truer word spoken. I prefer mine with milk which must have my grandfather spinning in his grave- he used to say that tea with milk is devil's "urine" (insert common euphemism here).
ROFL! This Englishman drank his tea without milk.

So do you also laugh your head off as soon as you hear the words "poo" or "fart"? :D
"There are in fact two things, science and opinion; the former begets knowledge, the latter ignorance." - Hippocrates
Moderator of Planescape: Torment, Diablo I & II and Dungeon Siege forums
User avatar
the_limey
Posts: 601
Joined: Sat Nov 15, 2003 8:19 pm
Location: Blighty
Contact:

Post by the_limey »

[QUOTE=C Elegans]I am not familiar with any of those movies, but the sample I found at this British accents website didn't sound anywhere near the *hrm!* uniqueness of how my Liverpuddlian and Geordie friends speak.
Rochdale



ROFL! This Englishman drank his tea without milk.

So do you also laugh your head off as soon as you hear the words "poo" or "fart"? :D [/QUOTE]

That's it, precisely! Ironic, really- we've just had an exhibition on at work about the peasants, err sorry, locals and I'm quite sure we had *that* recording in the gallery- amazing.

As for that other insuation- no, I'm far to sophisticated to be amused by toilet humour. ;)
England expects...
...you to visit:
limey-simey.deviantart.com
User avatar
C Elegans
Posts: 9935
Joined: Thu Mar 15, 2001 11:00 pm
Location: The space within
Contact:

Post by C Elegans »

the_limey wrote:That's it, precisely! Ironic, really- we've just had an exhibition on at work about the peasants, err sorry, locals and I'm quite sure we had *that* recording in the gallery- amazing.
Funny! :D Well, maybe it's because I once lived in Scotland for a while, but from the sample, I thought Rochdalian sounded pretty normal, I mean not exactly RP but not a strong accent either.
As for that other insuation- no, I'm far to sophisticated to be amused by toilet humour. ;)
Well, the tea-drinking lad certainly was not! :D
During my time in the UK I had the experience that the English has a special relationship to toilet humour. Not everyone of course, but it certainly seemed to be hugely overrepresented. Now, I have an English friend here in Sweden who will fall down on the floor laughing if you as much as mention the word "fart". When I told this to the Englishman I met at the hostel, he started to laugh his head off before I even finished the story. He was in fact very surprised to hear that we (one Swede, one Hungarian, one Lithuanian) did not at all share his sense of humour. The guy was a writer, so he even decided to send me parts of a manuscript for a funny book he is writing, in order to check if the poo-jokes would be suitable or not for an international audience :D
"There are in fact two things, science and opinion; the former begets knowledge, the latter ignorance." - Hippocrates
Moderator of Planescape: Torment, Diablo I & II and Dungeon Siege forums
User avatar
fable
Posts: 30676
Joined: Wed Mar 14, 2001 12:00 pm
Location: The sun, the moon, and the stars.
Contact:

Post by fable »

[QUOTE=C Elegans]During my time in the UK I had the experience that the English has a special relationship to toilet humour. Not everyone of course, but it certainly seemed to be hugely overrepresented. Now, I have an English friend here in Sweden who will fall down on the floor laughing if you as much as mention the word "fart". When I told this to the Englishman I met at the hostel, he started to laugh his head off before I even finished the story. He was in fact very surprised to hear that we (one Swede, one Hungarian, one Lithuanian) did not at all share his sense of humour. The guy was a writer, so he even decided to send me parts of a manuscript for a funny book he is writing, in order to check if the poo-jokes would be suitable or not for an international audience :D [/QUOTE]

It wasn't too long ago that merely mentioning the word "knicker" (underwear, panties) was enough to draw a laugh from a British audience. I've heard it in several 1960s-1970s British comedy shows, and back in the 1950s. I wonder if the reaction has to do in part with saying a word that's still culturally taboo? Though I hadn't thought four-letter words were taboo in England, any longer. They're certainly not in the US, and some friends assure me any Australian who doesn't use them regularly is eligible for deportation.
To the Righteous belong the fruits of violent victory. The rest of us will have to settle for warm friends, warm lovers, and a wink from a quietly supportive universe.
User avatar
dj_venom
Posts: 4416
Joined: Mon Sep 27, 2004 7:00 am
Location: The biggest island in the world
Contact:

Post by dj_venom »

[QUOTE=the_limey]Hmmm...in less than twenty four hours what began as a simple request for people not to overlook my homeland, has degenerated into mindless fable-bashing. Shame on you.[/QUOTE]

Firstly, my comments were not mindless, I put a bit of mind power into them. Second of all, it's hardly bashing when he can fight back quite capably.

[QUOTE=fable]They're certainly not in the US, and some friends assure me any Australian who doesn't use them regularly is eligible for deportation.[/QUOTE]

Yeah, what we link in imagination and brain power for good comments, we just use an abundance of a few choice words. And if you don't say it, you're labelled it.
In memorian: Fiona; Ravager; Lestat; Phreddie; and all of those from the 1500 incident. Lest we forget.
User avatar
Ravager
Posts: 22464
Joined: Mon Jun 27, 2005 1:50 pm

Post by Ravager »

[QUOTE=fable]chicken curries for everybody![/QUOTE]
Don't you mean vindaloo? *cues music* :rolleyes: :p
User avatar
Greg.
Posts: 1938
Joined: Sun Oct 31, 2004 3:56 pm
Location: Here, now
Contact:

Post by Greg. »

[QUOTE=Damuna_Nova]Ohmigod.

Is Greg Limey's grandpa? [/QUOTE]

No. I'm Scottish, remember. And Limey would have said if his grandad was, I think.

[QUOTE=Ravager]Don't you mean vindaloo? *cues music* :rolleyes: :p [/QUOTE]

Someone says that - [url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VM6wRt0V878"]bad link[/url]. [url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hjSsgsQ6qGI"]Good link[/url] to make up for it. :D ;)

That be karma!
User avatar
the_limey
Posts: 601
Joined: Sat Nov 15, 2003 8:19 pm
Location: Blighty
Contact:

Post by the_limey »

:D :D :D [QUOTE=fable]It wasn't too long ago that merely mentioning the word "knicker" (underwear, panties) was enough to draw a laugh from a British audience. I've heard it in several 1960s-1970s British comedy shows, and back in the 1950s. I wonder if the reaction has to do in part with saying a word that's still culturally taboo? Though I hadn't thought four-letter words were taboo in England, any longer. They're certainly not in the US, and some friends assure me any Australian who doesn't use them regularly is eligible for deportation.[/QUOTE]

It is certainly true that British attitudes to what is acceptable language and what isn't have changed markedly in the last few decades.

I remember a documentary not so long ago on BBC3 which told of a British comedian (whose name escapes me presently) who was banned from television for telling a joke about fokkers, i.e. German WW2 planes. By contrast, the movie "Terminator 3" had at least one use of the f-word, and was rrated only "12" by the BBFC (approximately equivalent to the American PG-13 I think.

It is curious to note that despite Britain's moral stance on profanity and the like, it was deemed perfectly acceptable to have racial slurs in a program. The Fawlty Towers episode "The Germans" is a prime example of this, as there is a scene in which the Major is telling Basil how he once had to explain the difference between Indians and West Indians to his girlfriend using some very... colourful phrases (which I will not repeat). Similarly, there was a sitcom named "Till Death Do Us Part", which seemed to focus entirely on a racist, mysoginistic old codger whose new neighbours are a black family, and his hatred of them- from what I could gather there was no message of racial harmony as in the sequel series, "In Sickness and Health", the man was exactly the same, except that he had now developed a streak of homophobia as well.
England expects...
...you to visit:
limey-simey.deviantart.com
User avatar
Magelord648
Posts: 1668
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2006 1:54 pm
Location: England
Contact:

Post by Magelord648 »

[QUOTE=Ravager]There's no English accent either though.... :p [/QUOTE]
There was.

I know what you mean. It annoys me to.
[url="http://www.gamebanshee.com/forums/the-elder-scrolls-iii-morrowind-29/tel-uvirith-86692.html"]Uvirith Awakes[/url] - Please leave comments, all help is appreciated.
User avatar
Minerva
Posts: 4992
Joined: Sun Dec 31, 2000 11:00 pm
Location: Somewhere beyond the sea
Contact:

Post by Minerva »

I heard the casts of House believed Hugh Laurie being an American. One day they started laughing and asked why he was talking on the phone in "mock English accent".
"Strength without wisdom falls by its own weight."

A word to the wise is sufficient
Minerva (Semi-retired SYMer)
User avatar
Greg.
Posts: 1938
Joined: Sun Oct 31, 2004 3:56 pm
Location: Here, now
Contact:

Post by Greg. »

[QUOTE=Minerva]I heard the casts of House believed Hugh Laurie being an American. One day they started laughing and asked why he was talking on the phone in "mock English accent".[/QUOTE]

I couldn't take House seriously. All I can see is Hugh Laurie in Blackadder saying "I had a bit of a problem with belching earlier on, but its sorted itself out... *burps* Oh no, there I go again!"
User avatar
Minerva
Posts: 4992
Joined: Sun Dec 31, 2000 11:00 pm
Location: Somewhere beyond the sea
Contact:

Post by Minerva »

[QUOTE=GregtheSleeper]I couldn't take House seriously. All I can see is Hugh Laurie in Blackadder saying "I had a bit of a problem with belching earlier on, but its sorted itself out... *burps* Oh no, there I go again!"[/QUOTE]

That's the point (or one of them).
Haven't those actors ever watched Blackadder series? I thought that is universal. (Having said that, I saw Hugh Laurie from the series with Stephen Fry first.)
"Strength without wisdom falls by its own weight."

A word to the wise is sufficient
Minerva (Semi-retired SYMer)
User avatar
Greg.
Posts: 1938
Joined: Sun Oct 31, 2004 3:56 pm
Location: Here, now
Contact:

Post by Greg. »

[QUOTE=Minerva](Having said that, I saw Hugh Laurie from the series with Stephen Fry first.)[/QUOTE]

A bit of Fry and Laurie? I never liked it much.

Seems a bit strange that he did Stewart Little with an American voice too... He's getting typecast!
User avatar
dj_venom
Posts: 4416
Joined: Mon Sep 27, 2004 7:00 am
Location: The biggest island in the world
Contact:

Post by dj_venom »

Oh, I heard Europe is going through a heat wave. Did your temperature get up to 36 degrees then England? Hmmm, that's pretty hot, that's almost spring for us. :rolleyes:
In memorian: Fiona; Ravager; Lestat; Phreddie; and all of those from the 1500 incident. Lest we forget.
User avatar
Damuna_Nova
Posts: 3256
Joined: Fri Oct 28, 2005 11:24 am

Post by Damuna_Nova »

Bring back my four degrees!

:D
User avatar
dj_venom
Posts: 4416
Joined: Mon Sep 27, 2004 7:00 am
Location: The biggest island in the world
Contact:

Post by dj_venom »

Oh, yeah, Celcius by the way, not Farenheit.

And what 4 degrees?
In memorian: Fiona; Ravager; Lestat; Phreddie; and all of those from the 1500 incident. Lest we forget.
Post Reply