Sweeney Todd
New member
Spawny-eyed, parrot-faced wazzock...
A pedant writes: They were actually 5 1/4". The smaller ones were 3 1/2", and, there were 8" ones too.
I read somewhere that "Can I get" is an Americanism that has somehow crept in over here, apparently because they can't understand the concept of "May I have". To an American, 'may I have', sounds like you want what ever it is for nothing, where as 'Can I get', implies you are going to then pay for it.
Oh, and I also bloody hate the saying.
I lived in Moulsecoomb from 1967 until 1988 in The Crescent, off Hillside. I went to Stanmer and left 1973. Did you go to Stanmer or Moulsecoomb or even Fawcett? I hope it wasn't Westlain (sorry old habits)!! We must have had mutual friends?Brought up in Moulsecoomb, lived there till I was 25, completely new phrase to me
Back at school in the eighties, that saying really drove me nuts. Thinking about it, it still does as I have absolutely no idea what it means.
"Turn the telly over when you get up from the sofa"
" It's looking black over Will's Mothers" .....(when rain clouds approach)
"Blimey, they would have heard that over Slonk Hill!" ......
Me (as a youngster): What's for dinner, Mum?
Mum: Oh, Air Pie and Walk Round...
Actually, on reflection, although I know it was supposed to mean 'wait and see', now I'm no longer in the yoof generation, I still don't know how it can mean that.
Dad always sais there was 'bread and pull it' for tea..
A pedant writes: They were actually 5 1/4". The smaller ones were 3 1/2", and, there were 8" ones too.
Me (as a youngster): What's for dinner, Mum?
Mum: Oh, Air Pie and Walk Round...
Actually, on reflection, although I know it was supposed to mean 'wait and see', now I'm no longer in the yoof generation, I still don't know how it can mean that.
Back at school in the eighties, that saying really drove me nuts. Thinking about it, it still does as I have absolutely no idea what it means.