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Proper odd combination them when you think about itScrewball, from an ice cream van, with a Gowie in the bottom.
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Proper odd combination them when you think about itScrewball, from an ice cream van, with a Gowie in the bottom.
Proper odd combination them when you think about it
Definitely did yeah, you’re not wrong!Aye but it worked.
Aye and can you put monkeys blood on that 99Hockle.
Screwball, from an ice cream van, with a Gowie in the bottom.
Not heard hockle for donkeys yearsHockle.
Screwball, from an ice cream van, with a Gowie in the bottom.
Me and Mrs Coat (no) - had a marshmallow oyster each with monkeys blood from the Ice Cream man earlier this afternoon.Aye and can you put monkeys blood on that 99
Always used to ask the ice cream gadgee if he had any broken wafers anarlUsed to gan out to the ice cream van on a Sunday afternoon after dinner with a bowl, get a few scoops, and me Nana always wanted monkeys blood on it.
Loved me Nana ❤❤❤
I still call all hosses Galloways to this day. Dad had a pub in Hetton, and that's just what all the pitmen called hosses.That'll dee for me
Nah, as previously mentioned -
"Ken" - is to a phrase, do you know..
Answer would be - "Aye I ken".
Aye. Haad ya whist ( stop talking ) . I was in Dublin a couple of weeks ago and heard two Irishmen talking and they used the term. Hold yer whist.
In The Lambton Worm song from 1840’s - Whist lads haas ya gobs - meaning shut up and listen.
Just look Ken up in the dictionary. Meaning Knowledge related. ie Know.
Same here marra
Have you never heard Jocks speak like?Said nee one ever
He's as thick as mince Marra. Ken?Have you never heard Jocks speak like?
Aye, ah kenHe's as thick as mince Marra. Ken?
He's as thick as mince Marra. Ken?
Class manUsed to gan out to the ice cream van on a Sunday afternoon after dinner with a bowl, get a few scoops, and me Nana always wanted monkeys blood on it.
Loved me Nana❤❤❤
Always used to ask the ice cream gadgee if he had any broken wafers anarl
I still call all hosses Galloways to this day. Dad had a pub in Hetton, and that's just what all the pitmen called hosses.
Another one that seems to have gone is "tubloaden".
One of the shifts the miners hated doing.
Narky was a turnip on my patch.Narky is a swede.
A turnip is a different thing.
Trust me I grow swedes and turnips along the allotment.
It's all down to local colloquialisms - not the true names.
I've never heard that before like.Physicked, as in "that bloody curry has physicked me".
Eiderdown at me grannies when I was a bairnContinental quilt.
Jerkin for jumper or cardy tooGanzee sounds the same and means the same in Norwegian. Same as bluey for lead and hjem for home.
Narky was a turnip on my patch
Top coat for us.I've never heard that before like.
It's interesting how areas that are pretty close use totally different words.
Eiderdown at me grannies when I was a bairn