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Total 17 documents matching your query.

1. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: scotty@dove.net.au (Scotty)
Date: Sun, 1 Dec 1996 22:05:26 +1030
**end of original** Hi Andy, * sensitive types ought to 'bugger off' and read no further* Heh-Heh! The Concise, Macquarie Dictionary.[for use in Australian English,] defines the term, "bugger off"-to
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00002.html (8,994 bytes)

2. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: Geoff Love <engconn@pottsville.infi.net>
Date: Sun, 01 Dec 1996 10:52:02 -0500
As an ex-pat Brit here in Pa.one of whose delights is the richness of the English language, it's nice to know that Aussies are helping Aussies with definitions. The word bugger has several meanings,
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00009.html (11,730 bytes)

3. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: homestay@infolearn.com.au (Syl's Sydney Homestay)
Date: Mon, 2 Dec 1996 16:01:55 +1100 (EST)
There is a particular brand of farm gate that I'm sure most of you have come across at one time or another called a - Buggerto Gate. That is "It's a bugger to open and a bugger to close." Paul
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00014.html (7,648 bytes)

4. RE: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: "john ruse" <hologothic@msn.com>
Date: Mon, 2 Dec 96 18:49:24 UT
Here's a reply from England on 'Buggering off'. Its fairly inoffensive and simply means that one is leaving. it has no associations with its anatomical roots. It is a fairly dated and almost quaint
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00055.html (12,350 bytes)

5. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: OSCALETA99@aol.com
Date: Wed, 4 Dec 1996 05:01:33 -0500
Buggery, To Bugger off. now theres a subject to warm to - presupposing that all are familiar with the literal meaning of the word, and have read John Scotts excellent list of variables (to which othe
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00159.html (8,109 bytes)

6. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: OSCALETA99@aol.com
Date: Wed, 4 Dec 1996 05:09:06 -0500
Oh, - we've moved from Bugger(ing,y,it!) to the F word....hmmm Geoff Love cites it as almost always a verb - however American usage seems to take noun form often "He's a dumb F**K!" etc. and all from
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00160.html (8,052 bytes)

7. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: OSCALETA99@aol.com
Date: Wed, 4 Dec 1996 05:28:11 -0500
innoffensive? dated? quaint? Well, Bugger me and my Aunt Fanny! life has changed in Blighty in 16 years.................. - For any U.S.(or other non-Brit nationals) thinking of using this on a trip
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00161.html (8,187 bytes)

8. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: homestay@infolearn.com.au (Syl's Sydney Homestay)
Date: Thu, 5 Dec 1996 06:07:21 +1100 (EST)
He looked around to see that we were truely alone then he tiptoed up to my ear and said, very knowlingly: "Well Dad the "F" word is...'bum'" Would that we were all so innocent. Paul
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00163.html (8,419 bytes)

9. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: Jeremy Baxter <jeremy.baxter@parallax.co.uk>
Date: Wed, 04 Dec 1996 10:41:09 +0000
I wouldn't use the bugger me one around the soho area, you may end up with a bi of a sore arse.
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00164.html (8,566 bytes)

10. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: jurrasm@genesis.torrco.com (Mark Jurras)
Date: Wed, 4 Dec 1996 08:26:40 -0500
OK, a co-worker of mine is over in the UK at one of our plants till at least January. I have a limited knowledge of British Slang but I like to help him out. I have told him to tell the waitresses a
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00170.html (8,485 bytes)

11. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: Geoff Love <engconn@pottsville.infi.net>
Date: Wed, 04 Dec 1996 09:32:35 -0500
O.K., Jeremy, you deal with this one. If I stick my suggestions in I'll get banned from the list, but it could be a lot of fun. I'll await your suggestions with bated breath. But perhaps one quick(?)
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00173.html (10,560 bytes)

12. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: bleckstein@monmouth.com
Date: Wed, 4 Dec 1996 15:09:10 -0500 (EST)
not that stupid but its fun to try) He might say these things when some gal tells him to knock her up! Mike
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00197.html (8,734 bytes)

13. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: PHILIPPE TUSLER <TUSLER@mp050.mv.unisys.com>
Date: Wed, 4 Dec 1996 13:07:24 -0800 (PST) (21:07 UT)
And for correct context for the meaning: "Habits both foul and unsavory kept the bishop of Surrey in slavery. With maniacal howls he'd bugger small owls that he kept in an underground aviary!" Bugger
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00200.html (8,403 bytes)

14. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: ckr <ragthyme@fls.infi.net>
Date: Wed, 04 Dec 1996 18:11:24 -0500
Mark, try these: Tell him to ask after the best kip house. (brothel, essentially) Have him ask a waitress to go snogging with him. (Sounds harmless enough to Americans ... sort of a euphamism for fre
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00210.html (8,758 bytes)

15. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: Wayne Kube <wkube@iadfw.net>
Date: Wed, 04 Dec 1996 20:03:28 -0600
Well, I remember staying at a Bed and Breakfast in London in the late '70s. A beautiful Finnish lass who was a student at London University and worked at the Bed and Breakfast told me that her alarm
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00215.html (8,490 bytes)

16. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: scotty@dove.net.au (Scotty)
Date: Thu, 5 Dec 1996 20:35:21 +1030
**HUGE snip** ^^^^^ +++++++++'FLAMING'++++ [Did I guess right? ;^) ] **snip**
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00229.html (7,617 bytes)

17. Re: Help w/naughty slang (score: 1)
Author: Paul Hunt <on76@dial.pipex.com>
Date: Fri, 06 Dec 96 19:36:28 GMT
And "fag" or faggot neatly brings you back to buggery. PaulH 73 Roadster (HD&H) 75 V8 (DD)
/html/mgs/1996-12/msg00830.html (7,472 bytes)


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