Well played, good sir. Well played.stu_thomo said:... you are from england![]()
OT: ...When you talk like Yahtzee?
Well played, good sir. Well played.stu_thomo said:... you are from england![]()
I love you! XDSsilverR said:OH MY FUCKING GOD ...... dude .. no joke, that's my desktop wallpaper LOLJoshGod said:When this becomes a reality.
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and yeah .. what he said .. also
When you're convinced that people can't spell and contantly remind yourself that there's more than 1 english (but we all know that there's only 1 REAL English XD)
When you only add capitals in fron of "England" or "Great Britain" but scotland, whales, america, russia, china, ect.. don't get one
When you think half-pints or quarter-pints are just wrong .... just ... so wrong
When you can't go 1 day without being sarcastic
Aaaand my personal favorite ... When you run out on a hot day to try to get as MUCH sun as possible on those rare sunny days .... and still complain about the weather (now it's too hot LOL)
And are you British?Jazoni89 said:Cockney rhyming slang is easy.Xanadu84 said:I'm not British, so this bit of opinion is pure heresay. Take this as you will, and I concede to an actual Brit disagreeing with me...however, I imagine that a British person, and only a British person, would ever think that Cockney rhyming slang makes a single lick of sense.
Also to be clear, there is sure to be a "Not all rectangles are squares, but all squares are rectangles" situation here. All people who think Cockney rhyming slang makes a lick of sense are British, there is no one outside of the country who would ever call it sensible, making it a sure fire indication of being a Brit, but plenty of Brits don't think it makes a lick of sense. It can prove that you are British, but it can't prove that your not. That fair to say?
Apples, and pears - Stairs
Dog, and bone - Phone
Pork pies - Lies
Skin, and blister - Sister
Tommy Tank - Wank
You just have to find two things related and rhyme it with another word. It was used in London as a sort of inside language, that most people wouldn't get. I would love to confuse an American with it though, that would be quite the laugh.
Well, no shit Sherlock...I kid, I kid.Xanadu84 said:And are you British?Jazoni89 said:Cockney rhyming slang is easy.Xanadu84 said:I'm not British, so this bit of opinion is pure heresay. Take this as you will, and I concede to an actual Brit disagreeing with me...however, I imagine that a British person, and only a British person, would ever think that Cockney rhyming slang makes a single lick of sense.
Also to be clear, there is sure to be a "Not all rectangles are squares, but all squares are rectangles" situation here. All people who think Cockney rhyming slang makes a lick of sense are British, there is no one outside of the country who would ever call it sensible, making it a sure fire indication of being a Brit, but plenty of Brits don't think it makes a lick of sense. It can prove that you are British, but it can't prove that your not. That fair to say?
Apples, and pears - Stairs
Dog, and bone - Phone
Pork pies - Lies
Skin, and blister - Sister
Tommy Tank - Wank
You just have to find two things related and rhyme it with another word. It was used in London as a sort of inside language, that most people wouldn't get. I would love to confuse an American with it though, that would be quite the laugh.
Hah, priceless. ^_^sravankb said:The covenant are British?T8B95 said:You know you're British when you start using the word "glass" as a verb.
Thisash-brewster said:You know you are British when you roll your eyes every time you encounter a British person playing the typical villain in films and computer games.
Yeah that is a good one to lol.GideonB said:Thisash-brewster said:You know you are British when you roll your eyes every time you encounter a British person playing the typical villain in films and computer games.
You know you are British when every american says to you I LOVE YOUR ACCENT OMG because briitsh accents are cool. Apparantly. lol
See the upcoming Uncharted 3.ash-brewster said:You know you are British when you roll your eyes every time you encounter a British person playing the typical villain in films and computer games.
The phenomenon known as "Glassing" also known as "Bottling" - to hit someone over the head with a glass pint glass or bottle. quite common in the U.K.aba1 said:never heard that one before but I'm not British eitherT8B95 said:You know you're British when you start using the word "glass" as a verb.![]()
Doesn't that classify you as a republican?(just a joke)Nimcha said:When you use 'could of' or any variation thereof.
Or being extremely xenophobic.
...Meaning you have strengthened my hypothesis.Jazoni89 said:Well, no shit Sherlock...I kid, I kid.Xanadu84 said:And are you British?Jazoni89 said:Cockney rhyming slang is easy.Xanadu84 said:I'm not British, so this bit of opinion is pure heresay. Take this as you will, and I concede to an actual Brit disagreeing with me...however, I imagine that a British person, and only a British person, would ever think that Cockney rhyming slang makes a single lick of sense.
Also to be clear, there is sure to be a "Not all rectangles are squares, but all squares are rectangles" situation here. All people who think Cockney rhyming slang makes a lick of sense are British, there is no one outside of the country who would ever call it sensible, making it a sure fire indication of being a Brit, but plenty of Brits don't think it makes a lick of sense. It can prove that you are British, but it can't prove that your not. That fair to say?
Apples, and pears - Stairs
Dog, and bone - Phone
Pork pies - Lies
Skin, and blister - Sister
Tommy Tank - Wank
You just have to find two things related and rhyme it with another word. It was used in London as a sort of inside language, that most people wouldn't get. I would love to confuse an American with it though, that would be quite the laugh.
Yeah, but i don't see how it's confusing if you know about it, that is.
Unless you don't have a mental capacity to rhyme words, then yeah.
I'm Norwegian and I already fill those demands fine. I speak with a proper British accent, I am the master of sarcasm, and I've got a decent chavvy English.akfg666 said:You know you're British when: you're fluent in British, sarcasm and chav