Glider Posted September 19, 2004 Posted September 19, 2004 Audrey Hepburn played Eliza Doolittle in My Fair Lady opposite Rex Harrison. Hepburn was a native of Brussels and moved to London after the war' date=' so English was not her native tongue. How does her Cockney accent compare to the real thing?[/quote'] About as well as Dick Van Dyke's really. How about her refined accent? Better, but noticable as not being a native accent.
deltanova Posted September 20, 2004 Posted September 20, 2004 Crikey! my old pop got a dogs eye the other day, lathered it with a bit of dead 'orse and put the ol' nosebag on,he said the dogs eye was realy fair dinkum cos he payed a good couple of bob for it.
bloodhound Posted September 20, 2004 Posted September 20, 2004 my fav english phrase is. "... and Bob's your uncle"
deltanova Posted September 20, 2004 Posted September 20, 2004 Quote. Here, we say we eat everything from a pig but its squeal. Some people think "mountain oysters" are a real delicacy. Only male pigs have them, and they come in pairs. Sry, i havnt masterd the quote thingie yet, here(australia) we dont have mountain oysters, but we do have prarie oysters, and they come from sheep
coquina Posted September 20, 2004 Author Posted September 20, 2004 Crikey! my old pop got a dogs eye the other day, lathered it with a bit of dead 'orse and put the ol' nosebag on,he said the dogs eye was realy fair dinkum cos he payed a good couple of bob for it. I understand "crikey", (but don't know if there is a literal meaning to it) & "nosebag" (we call them "feedbags"), does "fair dinkum" mean "quite good"? I realize "bob" in a unit of money, have also heard "quid" are they both slang for pound? I sure don't know what "dogs eye" and "dead 'orse" mean.
deltanova Posted September 20, 2004 Posted September 20, 2004 Translation- WOW! my dad got a pie the other day and lathered it with tomato sauce and ate it all. he said that the pie was REALY good cos he paid quite alot of money for it. Crikey, well i dont think it has any litteral meaning either, ive always known it to be an expression of amazement/bewilderment etc.bob is a single unit of money, be it dollar/pound. quid is a thousand units.dead 'orse is tomato sauce (ketchup) dogs eye is a pie, fair dinkum is super good, you cant get any better realy.
coquina Posted September 22, 2004 Author Posted September 22, 2004 After deltanova's translation I thought I'd throw something in that uses the vernacular from my neck of the woods: Southern This is for Southern Belles, Ladies who should have been Southern Belles, and those who would be Southern Belles if they knew the rules. Someone once noted that a Southerner can get away with the most awful kind of insult just as long as it's prefaced with the words, "Bless her heart" or "Bless his heart." As in, "Bless his heart, if they put his brain on the head of a pin, it'd roll around like a BB on a six lane highway." Or, "Bless her heart, she's so buck- toothed, she could eat an apple through a picket fence." There are also the sneakier ones: "You know, it's amazing that even though she had that baby 7 months after they were married, bless her heart, it weighed 10 pounds." As long as the heart is sufficiently blessed, the insult can't be all that bad. I was thinking about this the other day when a friend was telling about her new transplanted Northern friend who was upset because her toddler is just beginning to talk and he has a Southern accent. My friend, who is very kind and, bless her heart, cannot do a thing about those thighs of hers, was justifiably miffed about this. After all, this woman had CHOSEN to move to the South a couple of years ago. "Can you believe it?" said her friend. "A child of mine is going to be "taaaallllkkin liiiike thiiiissss.." Now, don't get me wrong. Some of my dearest friends are from the North, bless their hearts. I welcome their perspective, their friendships and their recipes for authentic Northern Italian food. I've even gotten past their endless complaints that you can't find good bread down here. And the heathens, bless their hearts, don't like cornbread! The ones that really gore my ox are the native Southerners who have begun to act almost embarrassed about their speech. We've already lost too much. I was raised to say "swanee," not swear, but you hardly ever hear anyone say that anymore, I swanee you don't. And I've caught myself thinking twice before saying something is "right much," "right close," or "right good" because non-natives think this is right funny indeed. I have a friend from Bawston who thinks it's hilarious when I say I've got to "carry" my daughter to the doctor or "cut off" the light. She also gets a giggle every time I am "fixin'" to do something. And, bless their hearts, they don't even know where "over yonder" is or what "I reckon" means! My personal favorite was my aunt saying, "Bless her heart, she can't help being ugly, but she could've stayed home." To those of you who're still a little embarrassed by your Southerness: take a dose of sausage gravy 'n' grits and call me in the morning, bless your heart! And to those of you who are still having a hard time understanding all this Southern stuff, bless your hearts, I hear they're fixin' to have classes on Southernese as a second language! Southern girls know bad manners when they see them: Drinking straight out of a can. Not sending thank you notes. Wearing velvet after February, or white shoes before Easter or after Labor Day. Southern girls appreciate their natural assets: Dewy skin, a winning smile, that unforgettable, Southern drawl. Southern girls know their manners: "Yes, ma'am." "Yes, sir." Southern girls have a distinct way with fond expressions: "Y'all come back!" "Well, bless your heart." "Drop by when you can." "How's your mother?" "Love your hair." "Well, shut my mouth." Southern girls don't sweat... they glisten. Southern girls know their summer weather report: Humidity, Humidity, Humidity. Southern girls know their three R's!: Rich Richer Richest Southern girls know their vacation spots: The Beach The Beach The Beach Southern girls know the joys of June, July, and August: Summer tans, wide brimmed hats, mint juleps. Southern girls know everybody's first name: Honey, Darlin', or Sugah. Southern girls know the movies that speak to their hearts: "Gone With the Wind", "Fried Green Tomatoes", "Driving Miss Daisy", "Steel Magnolias" Southern girls know their country breakfasts: Red-eye gravy (or thick white gravy, or chocolate gravy for the die-hards ) GRITS Mouth-watering homemade biscuits Southern girls know their cities dripping with Southern charm: Adlanna (Atlanta as outsiders say, lol) Richmon, Chahleston, S'vannah, Birminham, Nawlins' OH! That city in Alabama? It's pronounced MUNTGUMRY! Southern girls know their elegant gentlemen: Men in uniform. Men in tuxedos. Rhett Butler, of course. Y'all know Southern girls are quick on the drawl. Southern girls know their prime real estate: The Mall, the Beauty Salon, the Ranch with the longest stretch of river bottom Southern girls know the three deadly sins: Bad hair, Bad manners, Bad blind dates. Southern girls know men may come and go, but friends are fo'evah! G. R. I. T. S. = Girls Raised in The South! Now you run along, Sugah, and send this to some other Girls Raised In The South, i. e., Southern Belles, or any females aspiring to be GRITS.
JohnB Posted October 1, 2004 Posted October 1, 2004 Deltanova, a "Bob" was a shilling in the old currency. The Florin, which was 2 shillings is now the 20 cent piece. That's why we say something isn't worth 2 bob. i.e. It's not worth 20 cents. A Quid was a pound IIRC. BTW, amongst some I know the 20 cent piece is now known as a "Hazel". This is a reference to a previous Prime Minister, Bob Hawke and his wife Hazel. After being tossed out of office, Bob divorced the wife who had stood by him all the years to marry his biographer. Hence a "Hazel" is worth "2 Bobs". I'd write more, but I've been flat out like a lizard drinkin'. I'm droving Goannas from the Isa to Hobart.
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