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- #21
Ah, I'm alright then.
You mean you have more books?
Ah, I'm alright then.
"Oooh, this restaurant has SQUARE plates! Dead posh, that."
You mean you have more books?
He's probably included his extensive range of 1980's porn.You mean you have more books?
Haha, I should but I don't. I have waaaay too many dvds.
Now there's a thought. Is something posh if you feel that you should like it/do it, but don't? An element of guilt involved, perhaps?
It's the class system what done it.
Oh la-de-da, look at me quoting GBS."It is impossible for an Englishman to open his mouth without making some other Englishman hate or despise him." George Bernard Shaw preface to Pygmalion.
Oh la-de-da, look at me quoting GBS.
Does anyone think Alan Sugar is posh?
Yep - many people will feel this, I'm sure. But what about the self-made man who has money pouring out of his ears? Alan Sugar, for example. Does anyone think Alan Sugar is posh? He does have multiple houses, a Roller with the number plate AMS 1 and any number of things that would presumably qualify him as posh (if it weren't for the fact that he's a street kid done good).
Oh la-de-da, look at me quoting GBS.
When you're alone and life is making you lonely you can always go downtown - Sandi Shaw, not wearing shoes.[/QUOTE]
Or Petula Clark, wearing hob nail boots.
New money etc. He's certainly got a working class accent - in the traditional, almost outdated sense. The term 'posh' is almost impossible to pin down now, perhaps due to the far more fluid class system of post WWII Britain. It's a derogatory term that seems to be based on little more than someones accent. For example, I was at a wedding over the weekend, one of the guests was incredibly well spoken and I thought to myself 'hmm, he's posh', only to later find out he's skint working a dead end job.
I suppose I'd fundamentally consider posh to mean aristocracy (if I had to). To have expensive taste seems to be classed as 'cultured' these days.