Th changing face of english. A language that seems constantly in transition. In a few hundred years our current form of English may appear to the future generations as Chaucer currently appears to us.
Th changing face of english. A language that seems constantly in transition. In a few hundred years our current form of English may appear to the future generations as Chaucer currently appears to us.
C U soon M8. (and for example)
I'm getting more and more abbreviated messages these days.
Struth, is your name Bruce?
'kinoath
Never intended it to.
Doesn't calling someone "Blue" in Ausspeak mean you're referring to a ginger?
Lovely word, kerfuffle, has a sort of texture to it.
Definitely of British origin. Coincidentally I saw it referenced recently in an article talking about words that deter younger voters from listening to older politicians.
It was used in a very ironic sense in many Lou and Andy sketches from Little Britain.
That'd be a blowie . . . not the kind that socal gets from LBs . . . Same word, different meaning
A 'shamozzle' describes this place sometimes.
... but not apparently for the septic spellchecker
^ It's the little things that can change a meaning . . . thank you
"Dead set" means absolutely true
"Kinoath"
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