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MisterBadIdea 
"PLZ GET MILK, KTHXBYE"

Posted - 04/24/2008 :  06:42:03  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
"You're welcome" is fast disappearing.
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BaftaBaby 
"Always entranced by cinema."

Posted - 04/24/2008 :  08:55:33  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by turrell

quote:
Originally posted by Salopian

quote:
Originally posted by duh

What about them apples.

I never understood what he was going on about in Good Will Hunting. I asked here once, and was not much the wiser. It doesn't seem to mean a great deal!



It pretty much means"How you like me now?" or "What do you think about that" (knowing I just blew your mind).



What he said

Ref
quote:
The correct form is "How do you like them apples?" The phrase is cousin to "Put that in your pipe and smoke it!", and to "How about THAT?" (as opposed to the rather modern slang expression, "How ABOUT that?"), and so "So there!", simple and enduring.






Which reminds me ... "put that in your pipe and smoke it" can be added to our list



Edited by - BaftaBaby on 04/24/2008 08:56:55
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bife 
"Winners never quit ... fwfr ... "

Posted - 04/24/2008 :  09:08:47  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
Very politically incorrect, but pretty sure anybody growing up in the UK in the 80's will remember the phrase "My name's Joey Deacon" said with tongue between bottom lip and teeth in response to anything really dumb said by a classmate.

And sal, I'd forgotten all about "Itchy chin", abreviated later on to just 'chinny' or as you say, just the action of stroking your chin, making it very clear that you don't believe one word being said. I also remember this being adapted into "chinny rec on", but i never really understood if that was meant to be rude, or was merely a contraction of 'chinny reckon'. Ah well, the mysteries of teenage language, never clear even as a teenager.
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Sal[Au]pian 
"Four ever European"

Posted - 04/24/2008 :  10:42:10  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by bife

Very politically incorrect, but pretty sure anybody growing up in the UK in the 80's will remember the phrase "My name's Joey Deacon" said with tongue between bottom lip and teeth in response to anything really dumb said by a classmate.

I don't remember his name being used in full, but someone being termed a joey was widespread -- and I think still is. I did not actually know until a few years ago that it was based on someone called Joey, as his fame via Blue Peter had passed me by, and assumed that it referred to a gangly baby kangaroo. The story of Joey's autobiography is quite charming -- one friend could understand Joey's speech and relayed it to another who wrote it down, for a fourth who could not previously read or write to type out. Makes The Diving Bell and the Butterfly seem efficient!

Even now, I have to stop myself from doing the tongue-behind-the-lower-lip thing, as it became so ingrained as a child before I realised that it was aping a disability.
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Sal[Au]pian 
"Four ever European"

Posted - 04/24/2008 :  10:43:52  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by MisterBadIdea

"You're welcome" is fast disappearing.

I love using this in contexts where people have failed to say Thank you, though.
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bife 
"Winners never quit ... fwfr ... "

Posted - 04/24/2008 :  12:15:09  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Salopian

The story of Joey's autobiography is quite charming -- one friend could understand Joey's speech and relayed it to another who wrote it down, for a fourth who could not previously read or write to type out. Makes The Diving Bell and the Butterfly seem efficient!



I am not going to dispute it, wikipedia is probably more reliable than an 11 year-old's memory 20+ years later, but I only remember Joey and his friend, not a team of four.

And I must be a couple of years older than you Sal, I do remember joey and his friend from Blue Peter, and although 'Joey' could be used for a minor infraction, to really knock someone down you had to use the full name. Shocking really, looking back, how widespread and unchecked the usage was
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Sal[Au]pian 
"Four ever European"

Posted - 04/24/2008 :  12:31:48  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by bife

I am not going to dispute it, wikipedia is probably more reliable than an 11 year-old's memory 20+ years later, but I only remember Joey and his friend, not a team of four.

I've read about the foursome before, on another website (although it could be the sole source of the article -- I haven't checked). Probably just two went on Blue Peter.
quote:
And I must be a couple of years older than you Sal

I would hope so -- you've got about ten children, haven't you?!
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bife 
"Winners never quit ... fwfr ... "

Posted - 04/25/2008 :  10:27:41  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Salopian

I would hope so -- you've got about ten children, haven't you?!



Not quite, but it does feel that way sometimes ...
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BaftaBaby 
"Always entranced by cinema."

Posted - 04/25/2008 :  10:42:00  Show Profile  Reply with Quote
A couple I haven't heard in a while:

What the Sam Hill?!! [which I guess evolved after some people didn't want to say 'hell']

You bet your bippy! [which swept the nation after Rowan and Martin said it every week on Laugh In]

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