If there's one word I hate....

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Rezillo

TwoSheds
Location
Suffolk
Right, quite frankly, let me be absolutely clear that if ubiquitous hate annoys you, unsubscribe from this forum. Chillax, go to a workshop or whatever.

N.B. Whatever is mine.
 

Paul.G.

Just a bloke on a bike!
Location
Reading
Innovation, what happened to good old invention! I even heard someone on TV recently describing Brunel as an "innovator"
 

Smurfy

Naturist Smurf
'Happyslapping', there's nothing 'happy' about it, 'cowardly-thuggery' is an appropriate description for this type of behaviour.

Same applies to 'Joy-Riding', and various other misdescriptions of criminal behaviour.
 

ianrauk

Tattooed Beat Messiah
Location
Rides Ti2
'Happyslapping', there's nothing 'happy' about it, 'cowardly-thuggery' is an appropriate description for this type of behaviour.

Same applies to 'Joy-Riding', and various other misdescriptions of criminal behaviour.


Off topic but I saw a 'happy slapping' on Lewisham station one night.
Thing is the happy slapper picked the wrong person. I have never seen someone react so quick with a punch.
Floored the slapper with a single blow. This of course was caught on camera phone by all his laughing mates.
 

Smurfy

Naturist Smurf
Off topic but I saw a 'happy slapping' on Lewisham station one night.
Thing is the happy slapper picked the wrong person. I have never seen someone react so quick with a punch.
Floored the slapper with a single blow. This of course was caught on camera phone by all his laughing mates.

No, no! They picked the right person! :thumbsup:
 

gbb

Squire
Location
Peterborough
Craic !!. i don't understand why it suddenly gets overly used by non Irish at Christmas and the New Year..'the craic should be great'
:huh: No-one (barring quite rightly the Irish) uses that word in a day to day setting...
 

Moon bunny

Judging your grammar
Craic !!. i don't understand why it suddenly gets overly used by non Irish at Christmas and the New Year..'the craic should be great'
:huh: No-one (barring quite rightly the Irish) uses that word in a day to day setting...
Hover Fly of this parish has just shown me a book of Furness dialect words which shows how "craic" was an English word spelled "crack" in the 1860s, which passed into Irish during the 1950s. The Gaelicisation into "craic" is a "faic" encouraged by the Irish tourism industry.
 
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