I've heard it. But it's obviously wrong.I have heard this twice over the last couple of days. Is it normal? Does anyone else every say "nil all" when referring to a 0-0 scoreline or, like me, would you say "nil nil" ?
I've heard it. But it's obviously wrong.I have heard this twice over the last couple of days. Is it normal? Does anyone else every say "nil all" when referring to a 0-0 scoreline or, like me, would you say "nil nil" ?
I first came across "winningest" in a book i was reading on Kindle. The sentance was something like " and he is the most winningest coach in high school history" meaning he had won more matches than anyone else. I used the dictonary to check that it was a word, and indeed it came up as "informal Noth American:having achieved the most success in a competion"But what does winningest mean? And is there a losingest? Or even a drawingest?
I'd have sent Jacko the bill.Does anyone remember the Minder episode where Terry looks after professional footballer Jacko from Brush Strokes? He (Jacko) referred to a one nil win as “winning one - plonk”
My wife still hasn’t forgiven me for putting a kitchen chair through the TV screen.
This is not american, I had never heard a sports score referred to as "nil" before moving to Brighton. As another poster said I initially thought "Nil all" was a euphamism for F*** all, not a scoreline.I thought nil all was american, I have also noticed roster is creeping in more and more.