Get Fuzzy by Darby Conley for July 03, 2020

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    DennisinSeattle Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    As usual, waiting for those helpful souls who can translate.

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    alaskajohn1  almost 4 years ago

    It’ll take years, if ever, before good ol’ Satchel understands Cockney.

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    rekam Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    When we were in England, the only thing we couldn’t understand or figure out was the cockney.

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    catmom1360  almost 4 years ago

    Reminds me of the song in My Fair Lady – Why Cahn’t The English Learn To Speak… (He was referring to cockney).

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    Kind&Kinder  almost 4 years ago

    Colloquialisms are one thing, but Cockney rhyming slang is quite another. It’s fun to listen to, but really like a foreign language to learn. We can’t arrange it for ourselves, but it takes a native to have it mastered and to be up on the changes. My brother lives in London. The first time I heard my brother’s friend say he was Brahms and Liszt the night before and then found out he meant he was “pissed” (drunk), I realized I’d be dead in the water trying to learn it.

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    Cpeckbourlioux  almost 4 years ago

    Brassic, peppered, skint, pants, gotta love the urban dictionary.

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    iggyman  almost 4 years ago

    Does Babbel offer this language?

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    Michael Gorman Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    It’s “boracic” meaning broke not ‘brassic.’ British slang for broke is “skint.” Skint rhymes with “boracic lint” (a sort of medicated bandage)—hence “boracic” (pronounced ‘boreassik’). Cheers.

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    cubswin2016  almost 4 years ago

    Sometimes I wish I had one of those Babel fish to stick in my ear like they had in Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy.

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    Breadboard  almost 4 years ago

    3 M me thinks you had to much of an adult beverage ;-)

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    Markov Da Robot  almost 4 years ago

    I DON’T GET IT WHY MAC WHY

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    diskus Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Satch is the perfect host. Great listener

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    morningglory73 Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    What’d he say what’d he say??????

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    Steverino Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    So Mac went to California. You know, L.A.

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    mistercatworks  almost 4 years ago

    Oddly enough, in the UK “pants” refers to underwear. So, in reference to soiled underwear, something gone bad or disagreeable is “pants”. “Grafting” is working. “Graft” in the U.S. means nearly the opposite, getting something for nothing (usually illegally). La La Land is NOT Mancunian slang. “Brassic” means “skint” or dead broke or “Peppered” (not pepper-sprayed as might happen on a trip to La La Land recently). Mancunians have a lot of words for being out of money. Many people miss the point that the dialect is deliberately employed to make “outsiders” uncomfortable. I suspect they all speak like BBC news readers when they’re at home. :)

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    oldlady07 Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    My husband loves to explain things to me. I do my Satchel impression.

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    kd1sq Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    Funny how ‘boracic’ has commonly become ‘brassic’ in common use.

    Seen it in a few places now.

    (Cockney rhyming backslang – ‘boracic lint’ = ‘skint.’)

    I grew up in the environment and well knew such stuff. Getting to be far less common except among wold be Guy Ritchie gangster types.

    Gotta go, time for a pony!

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    KevDoneIt  almost 4 years ago

    Darby, please add one panel with definitions for the words

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    Daeder  almost 4 years ago

    The real mystery is why does a Cockney cat support Man City instead of West Ham?

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    finnygirl Premium Member almost 4 years ago

    I love MMM, even though I go crazy trying to understand him. Many cities have their own various dialects within them. A city in Germany where I worked had its own dialect – even a few billboards used it! I worked for a family business, and I couldn’t understand a thing the grandpa said. Fortunately, the kids understood and translated it into “high German” for me!

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