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-   -   What is your favourite British saying? (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/what-is-your-favourite-british-saying-638967/)

Robespierre Aug 18th, 2006 09:33 AM

"Faggots," actually.

Mathieu Aug 18th, 2006 10:09 AM


R : I thought she was taking the mickey.

maureencol Aug 18th, 2006 10:22 AM

My Belfast connections always ask in the negative...

Do ya not want some tea?

This is addicting...somebody stop me!!LOL

wombat7 Aug 18th, 2006 10:31 AM

He's such an anorak

DiAblo Aug 18th, 2006 10:46 AM

"Twee..." something that's sickeningly cute, or a person who's just a little bit too sweet.

"Pissed as a newt..." drunk as a skunk.

"That's a bit of a damp squib..." a disappointment. I'm told that sqib means the same thing as a fuse, so you're already to blast away but the fuse is wet and your project eithere fails, or at least comes off poorly.

sheila Aug 18th, 2006 11:48 AM

A squid is a firecracker, not a fuse.

Huitres Aug 18th, 2006 11:57 AM

Brilliant! That is just Brilliant!

jsmith Aug 18th, 2006 12:36 PM

How about I'll be with you in "two shakes of a lamb's tail".

When speaking of something or place, it's gone to the dogs.

jsmith Aug 18th, 2006 12:41 PM

One of my favorites from my Lancashire grandfather, a bookie - referring to the favorite in a race as "the chalk".

Still use it.

walkinaround Aug 18th, 2006 03:28 PM

>>>>
A squid is a firecracker, not a fuse.
>>>>

it's also slang for quid (double slang i guess).

schnauzer Aug 18th, 2006 07:25 PM

It is not squid but squib, as the first poster said. Damp squib.

Has anyone said, "like a rat up a drainpipe?". Obviously meaning very quickly.

sheila Aug 19th, 2006 12:53 AM

You're right, of course. My typing dyslexia strikes again.

OTOH, I've never heard squid used as quid, except here.

Another one came to mind this morning

in and out like a fiddler's elbow.

MissPrism Aug 19th, 2006 01:54 AM

...or in and out like a dog at a fair.
Talking of dogs, fit as a butcher'dog.

Again on fiddles.
My mother used to say of the sort of man who is the life and soul of the party, but is suspected of not being very nice at home "I think that he leaves his fiddle on the doorstep."

Toupary Aug 19th, 2006 01:57 AM

Street angel, house devil.

mclaurie Aug 19th, 2006 03:31 AM

My M-I-L used to say, "well he's no oil painting, is he?

"Bob's your uncle." (I'm still a bit flumoxxed about the meaning :-D -sort of..voila)

and then there's "Gordon Bennett"
:-@
<i>who's</i> Gordon Bennett, I ask. O:)

squiffy @-)

her indoors=trouble &amp; strife

Judyrem Aug 19th, 2006 06:29 AM

Stone, as in weight,,,,,what does it mean when they say someone weighs &quot;five stone&quot;?

teacher33 Aug 19th, 2006 06:45 AM

As I recall, a stone is 14 pounds so 5 stone would be 70 pounds.
Wishing I could see 9 stone again,
teacher

mclaurie Aug 19th, 2006 06:47 AM

A stone=14 lbs. 5 stone is 70 lbs.
http://www.metric-conversions.org/we...-to-pounds.htm

StephCar Aug 19th, 2006 06:59 AM

Too funny....I was just in Boots last week finishing up a month long visit in Cambridge and stepped on a scale to see if I had gained any weight from going to the pubs every night. They gave me my weight in stones and I had no idea what that meant. I convinced myself it meant I had lots tons of weight, LOL.

I love when the weather person describes the weather as &quot;fresh&quot; and says &quot;today is going to be fresher than we are used to this time of year....&quot; It was cold last week, 19 C!!! In August!

Judyrem Aug 19th, 2006 09:46 AM

teacher, me too :-D


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