RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (Full Version)

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myotherself -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 12:57:11 PM)

Try a bit of Bobby Thompson, otherwise known as the Little Waster.

He was a local comedian and he still has me breathless with giggling.

But then again, I can understand what he's saying and can relate to the cultural references [:D]




GreedyTop -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 1:19:17 PM)

ok, I didnt get a lot of that (largely because of dialect, I think *sigh*), but what I did get was FUNNY!!

*hugs da bunnykins*




myotherself -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 1:20:48 PM)

he sounds just like my grandfather did [:)]





GreedyTop -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 1:27:02 PM)

*smiles*




kiwisub12 -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 3:39:17 PM)

Ehh, i have to admit to growing up watching "Coronation Street" five days a week (one channel on the telly), so not only do i understand it, but i can hear it in my head. Makes me all homesick for New Zealand!

Which, if i stop and think about it, is a bit weird - a Yorkshire accent making me homesick. *grins* but then i am a bit weird.




PeonForHer -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 3:48:01 PM)

FR

Did people outside of the UK get "When The Boat Comes In"? Ah, nostalgia. 1920s Northern England - Jack Ford returns to his hometown, shattered after WW1.

Great theme song, sung entirely in Geordie. Got to admit, I'm lost on some of it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2OiYLjQE3f4





playfulotter -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 5:07:23 PM)

He made sense to me and I had fun reading his posting...It took me back to the movie "My Fair Lady" and some of the characters in that movie...ha ha




Hisfreedom -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 5:11:49 PM)

Thanks for the suggestions on help to understand....and now that I'm awake and re-read the OP it is really good....and funny....That'll teach me to read the forums before coffee!

~His freedom




PeonForHer -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 5:15:07 PM)

What? For God's sake, they were all Cockneys in "My Fair Lady"!

"De rine in Spine fawls minely on the Plines! . . .

NOT

"T' ree-yun in Spee-yun fahls me-aanly un t' Plee-uns'!

I give up.




playfulotter -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 5:38:46 PM)

Oops...Let's not bring religion into this..ha ha...well what do I know about English accents and all the particulars...I just know they use whimsical words sometimes and it is fun to listen to and interesting......His posting kind of reminding me too of some Charles Dickens books and things said in them PeonForHer but I am not sure what accents were used in those either...




agirl -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 6:19:57 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer

FR

Did people outside of the UK get "When The Boat Comes In"? Ah, nostalgia. 1920s Northern England - Jack Ford returns to his hometown, shattered after WW1.

Great theme song, sung entirely in Geordie. Got to admit, I'm lost on some of it.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2OiYLjQE3f4




Great song...Raw Geordie needs sub-titles though..lol.

While faffing about on youtube, listening to various versions of the song, I saw that the series is on there..not the best way of watching it, so may have to go seek it out as a download..Fun to see a very young James Bolan again.......lol

While I was playing it, one of my sons came downstairs (asking me to turn it down :) )...and said he remembered dancing and singing it when his Daddy came home from work....and he's only 17yrs old.....lol Good times, silly days.

agirl






Hisfreedom -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 6:30:15 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: myotherself

Try a bit of Bobby Thompson, otherwise known as the Little Waster.

He was a local comedian and he still has me breathless with giggling.

But then again, I can understand what he's saying and can relate to the cultural references [:D]


Woooow....I couldn't understand almost anything he said...it's like another language entirely...SUBtitles please :).......I know there were parts in the movie Trainspotting that HAD to have subtitles for alot of Americans............

But then again, I am from the south...and we also have a language all our own...it's called Redneck ;)




myotherself -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/3/2011 10:57:37 PM)

Oh Peon - I used to LOVE When the Boat Comes In! It was staple viewing in our house [:D]

In fact, it was filmed in the small town I was born, and some of the scenes had the house I was born in as part of the background.

And Hisfreedom - quite a few British people have no clue what's going on when an older geordie with an extremely broad accent starts talking. My elderly uncle is pretty much incomprehensible to anyone who hasn't lived their entire life within 30 miles of my home town! lol




sunshinemiss -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/4/2011 5:45:26 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer

What? For God's sake, they were all Cockneys in "My Fair Lady"!

"De rine in Spine fawls minely on the Plines! . . .

NOT

"T' ree-yun in Spee-yun fahls me-aanly un t' Plee-uns'!

I give up.


Somebody asked me the other day if I was from Britain or America.  I almost fell over.  I lied and said South Africa!  That'll learn 'em.

(Ok, I didn't really lie and say South Africa, but I sure did want to!)




LadyHibiscus -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/4/2011 9:46:03 AM)

~sigh~ the first non-Dagonian accent I learned was Glasga, courtesy of our next door neighbor. If you can get that, you can get most of the northnern stuff. GEORDIE LOVE.




PeonForHer -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/4/2011 10:07:29 AM)

I heard once that of all the UK accents, for Americans, Geordie was the hardest to understand. But whoever said that probably hadn't watched Rab C. Nesbitt - very strong Glasgow. That was so difficult that they considered subtitling it even for UK viewers.




MissToYouRedux -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/4/2011 1:41:44 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer

I heard once that of all the UK accents, for Americans, Geordie was the hardest to understand. But whoever said that probably hadn't watched Rab C. Nesbitt - very strong Glasgow. That was so difficult that they considered subtitling it even for UK viewers.


I don't know what that is, but I used to feel accomplished when I understood Taggart, when our public television station aired it. [:D]




PeonForHer -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/4/2011 2:58:31 PM)



Try this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8k7VoFiagfs

Rab C is the dole claimant.

If you understood Taggart, you were doing well indeed! Mark McManus refused to compromise on dialect or accent when he played that part. It was a big hit here.







foxling -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/5/2011 12:44:55 AM)

Teeheehee. The OP, I loves it.

However. I have a mild case of the shame coming on here:
quote:

ORIGINAL: Lucylastic

I can tell the difference between yorkshire and lancashire, AND lincolnshire, (mothers tongue)

I can't do that and I'm FROM Lincolnshire (~12 years there). >.<




GreedyTop -> RE: How to meet dirty lasses on 'tinterwebnet (9/5/2011 5:59:02 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: PeonForHer



Try this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8k7VoFiagfs

Rab C is the dole claimant.

If you understood Taggart, you were doing well indeed! Mark McManus refused to compromise on dialect or accent when he played that part. It was a big hit here.







I actually understood about 1/3 or 1/2 of that LOL




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