Words going out of use

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Ganymede

Veteran
Location
Rural Kent
2902608 said:
I haven't heard anyone say forsooth in The City in the last couple of years.

You're mixing with the wrong people mate! I can truly confess that I use the word "forsooth" quite often. (I've played quite a bit of Shakespeare though...)
 

ASC1951

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
[QUOTE 2902923, member: 259"]The standard US spelling is roofs.[/quote]You may be correct on that.
Rooves is just plain wrong, and it never was spelt so except by mistake.
But not about that The OED says "The most usual plural of roof is roofs, although rooves is sometimes used."
 

deptfordmarmoset

Full time tea drinker
Location
Armonmy Way
[QUOTE 2902923, member: 259"]The standard US spelling is roofs. Rooves is just plain wrong, and it never was spelt so except by mistake.[/quote]
I learnt it as roof/rooves along the same lines as hoof/hooves.
 

Fnaar

Smutmaster General
Location
Thumberland
I learnt it as roof/rooves along the same lines as hoof/hooves.
In the 1960s, the word 'pooves' (meaning the plural of 'poof', as a derogatory term for homosexual men) was not unusual.
 

Shut Up Legs

Down Under Member
BullBingo.jpg
 

Shut Up Legs

Down Under Member
Oh, and while we're on this topic: the increased use of "they" and "their" to refer to individuals. Yes, I know, English lacks a third-person gender-neutral singular pronoun, but even so... :rolleyes:
 

swee'pea99

Squire
I received a compliment recently for referring to someone as 'an amiable looking cove'. I like using archaic expressions, particularly insults. I quite often call chaps binders, cads, and even rotters (tho' seldom 'absolute stinkers' - one has to draw the line somewhere).

Expressions for chaps which were common in my childhood - blokes, fellers and the like - all seem to be sliding into the abyss, leaving 'guys' as the one-size-fits-all, in much the same way our two-fingered salute has pretty much been replaced by the 'spin-on-this' finger. Damn country's going to the dogs, harrumph. And there's another you don't see a lot of nowadays. (Do people still say 'nowadays'?)
 
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