I always liked that Lincoln joke; I think it's even funnier when you ask Jackie how she liked Dallas. Anyway...
Jennifer Connelly was the only reason I could sit through Mulholland Falls. Or Inventing The Abbotts, for that matter.
Quote:In Jr. High School, I would take a gummi bear, squeeze its ears into points so it looked like Yoda, and then I would say to it "Eat you, I will!". And of course then I would it eat.
21-Mar-2012, 7:50 PM
(This post was last modified: 21-Mar-2012, 7:52 PM by BigOto2.)
I use a ton of them. My grandma is British, which is where most of them come from. In normal conversation you will hear me say "Oi!" to get attention from someone, "Bloody Hell" as one of my many swear words upon expressing anger, and quite a few Spanish swear words too just because I know them.
Not sure I even want to know where "sacculus" originated from.
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Dave Varberg
Sheistkopf! That's the only german one I know.
"Bad news, bad news came to me where I sleep / Turn turn turn again" - Bob Dylan
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Lessinath
I called someone something very very inappropriate today using British slang. To be fair, they were British, so it makes sense in context.
Quote:You tested your own land mine. It worked!
I've started picking them up as a substitute for traditional swearing: "codswallop" is one example. Sometimes I've invented my own swears, and just as often I steal from the CCBBC: "Oh sacculus" is reasonably common, but one of my favorites is "OH SHIITAKE!" because it actually does sound like a real swear. It's not necessarily just because I find swearing is below me, but because I like to challenge myself and devise something more inventive as a consequence of staying family-friendly; oftentimes, it's been funnier than the original word could have been!
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J.B. Lewis
...not to mention that it appeared in "Spy Kids"!