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unicorn

Do some accents or languages get on your nerves?

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Posted
7 minutes ago, Keithambrose said:

There is the famous quote, probably  apocryphal,  about Princess  Margaret  asking a guest at a dinner party, "and what do you do?", to which the answer was, "I'm still the Archbishop of Canterbury ".

The (equally apocryphal) version I heard was that somebody at a garden party was chatting to a lady he couldn't quite put a name to, so he asked her "and what's your husband up to these days" She replied "Oh, he's still King".

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Posted
On 12/15/2025 at 11:47 PM, Olddaddy said:

Americans annoy me 

Keep saying the word "like " ... like...

Another word being used by this generation annoy me ...constant use of word "bro " 

 

I'm American, and I never say "like," though it can be irritating to hear Canadians finish every 3rd sentence with "eh." I can remember in a cruise a few years ago, meeting my neighbor at the balcony, and he said "Nice weather we're having, eh?". To which I responded "What part of Canada are you from?". He laughed and said "Did I end a sentence with 'eh' again?". The host of the MTV program Ridiculousness, Rob Dyrdek, has an annoying habit of ending every other sentence with "You know what I mean?". I feel like yelling at him "YES! I know what you mean!". 

Posted
2 hours ago, unicorn said:

I'm American, and I never say "like," though it can be irritating to hear Canadians finish every 3rd sentence with "eh." I can remember in a cruise a few years ago, meeting my neighbor at the balcony, and he said "Nice weather we're having, eh?". To which I responded "What part of Canada are you from?". He laughed and said "Did I end a sentence with 'eh' again?". The host of the MTV program Ridiculousness, Rob Dyrdek, has an annoying habit of ending every other sentence with "You know what I mean?". I feel like yelling at him "YES! I know what you mean!". 

Like is used farbto frequently in the UK, by the younger generation,  sometimes twice or more in the same sentence. It sloppy thinking, often combined with 'you know', as in, 'like, you know'.    

Posted
8 hours ago, thaiophilus said:

The (equally apocryphal) version I heard was that somebody at a garden party was chatting to a lady he couldn't quite put a name to, so he asked her "and what's your husband up to these days" She replied "Oh, he's still King".

sounds like Queen Mother

Posted
On 12/18/2025 at 3:08 AM, unicorn said:

I'm American, and I never say "like," though it can be irritating to hear Canadians finish every 3rd sentence with "eh." I can remember in a cruise a few years ago, meeting my neighbor at the balcony, and he said "Nice weather we're having, eh?". To which I responded "What part of Canada are you from?". He laughed and said "Did I end a sentence with 'eh' again?". The host of the MTV program Ridiculousness, Rob Dyrdek, has an annoying habit of ending every other sentence with "You know what I mean?". I feel like yelling at him "YES! I know what you mean!". 

Kiwis/ New Zealanders always end the sentence with "eh" 

"It's good eh bro eh !

Posted
18 hours ago, vinapu said:

I love when I hear that and my answer invariably is 'Noooo"

Usually cockneys ...

Posted
On 12/18/2025 at 6:07 AM, vinapu said:

sounds like Queen Mother

The favourite story about the Queen Mother is that she genuinely had a soft spot for gay men. Most of her household servants were gay. One day having woken from her afternoon nap and slightly annoyed that her tipple had not arrived, she went to the balcony and shouted down, "I don't know about you queens down there but this old queen is still waiting for her drink."  

Posted
On 12/18/2025 at 1:16 AM, Keithambrose said:

It sloppy thinking, often combined with 'you know', as in, 'like, you know'.    

I wonder if it really is sloppy thinking as opposed to bad upbringing, especially in schools. How to converse is as important as how to behave in public - and neither seems to be taught in schools any more.

Posted

A few years ago I watched a documentary on royal visits to Australia.

A young princess Anne was being interviewed.

'What do you think of Australia, love'?

She gave him a steely look.

'I'm your royal highness!'

Many people did not appreciate her putting him in his place. This is Australia - OUR place, not hers.

 

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Posted
7 hours ago, a-447 said:

...Many people did not appreciate her putting him in his place. This is Australia - OUR place, not hers.

When Australia wants to become a republic instead of a monarchy, they have only to vote and choose to do so. Until then, they can continue bowing and curtsying to their royal families. Charles III is still their king. Americans rejected the monarchy two and a half centuries ago:

 

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Posted
40 minutes ago, thaiophilus said:

So what's it like, having an elected head of state?

I must admit that at the current time, it would be nice to have a monarch or his representative call for a new election. My understanding though is that this almost never happens in any of Charles III's realms, so even that theoretical advantage doesn't seem to exist in practice. I suspect that a new Congress will put the brakes on Cheeto Benito's (and his lackey Speaker Mike Johnson, the closest we have to a Prime Minister) shenanigans in another year or so. At least the two years of unfettered power will show the US public what doofuses the Republicans are, and there won't be anyone else to blame. It would also be nice for the President of Israel to call for a new election, but it doesn't look as if that's ever going to happen. When the legislature and the country's political leader have unfettered power, disaster can occur, and this is almost always this is almost always the case in constitutional monarchies--prime ministers run the legislature. I have a feeling that despite Republican monkey-business attempts to dilute Democrats' votes, Johnson will lose the speakership in another year. 

At least in the US system, the legislature can put the brakes on the country's political leader. Johnson's too much of a pussy to get his nose out of Don the Con's ass. This is the first time Americans have elected a bona-fide convicted felon and con-artist to lead our country. Not all Presidents have been great, but this is the first time we've had a dictator--at least until the '26 elections.

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Posted

We just had a Australian guide give us a tour of a former whaling village in the South Shetland Islands. The Australian habit of pronouncing almost every vowel like a long "I" made it at times difficult for us to understand him. For example, he pointed to a structure and said "This is where they had their whiles...". It wasn't until he finished his sentence with "so they could obtain fresh water," that I understood he was saying "wells," which in Australia is pronounced the same as "whales" and "whiles" (it had occurred to me that the structure was too small to contain whales). 😉

Posted
1 hour ago, unicorn said:

Which parts?

See the Wikipedia link I posted:  

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English-language_vowel_changes_before_historic_/r/#Mary–marry–merry_merger

"The full Marymarrymerry merger (also known, in this context, as the three-way merger) is found throughout much of the United States (particularly the Western and Central United States) and in all of Canada except Montreal.[7] This is found in about 57% of American English speakers, according to a 2003 dialect survey.[5] The merger is highlighted in the song Merry Go 'Round, whose central wordplay revolves around "Mary", "marry", and "merry" having the exact same pronunciation in the singer's accent."  

There's a map here (scroll down about halfway, or search for "Mary") : https://brilliantmaps.com/linguistic-maps-that-divide-americans/

 

 

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Posted
1 hour ago, thaiophilus said:

See the Wikipedia link I posted:  

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English-language_vowel_changes_before_historic_/r/#Mary–marry–merry_merger

"The full Marymarrymerry merger (also known, in this context, as the three-way merger) is found throughout much of the United States (particularly the Western and Central United States)...

I'm from the Far West (live in Los Angeles, grew up in Oakland), I don't pronounce merry and marry the same, thought Mary and marry are only slightly different. 

Posted
8 hours ago, unicorn said:

At least in the US system, the legislature can put the brakes on the country's political leader. Johnson's too much of a pussy to get his nose out of Don the Con's ass. This is the first time Americans have elected a bona-fide convicted felon and con-artist to lead our country. Not all Presidents have been great, but this is the first time we've had a dictator--at least until the '26 elections.

Let us hope and pray we can survive his stupidity and wrath until 2026, and that the people wake up and do elect enough from the opposition party to retake the House and Senate so that we can put a stop to this nonsense.  

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