[QUOTE=Elendil’s Heir]
“Judas Priest, Frank!” - Hill Street Blues (best said with an air of disgusted resignation, as Lt. Howard Hunter so often did)
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Good old Howard. I combined a couple or three of his for “Prelimbic, single-helix mutoids!”
Not really historical or fantasy, except for Joyce Davenport.
I had a friend who used to say “Ohhhhh…Piffle!” It always sounded as if she was ging to say something more forceful, even obscene, but she never did. She’d been to a proper girls’ school, where they taught them to eat bananas with a spoon.
Don’t know of anyone in fiction or fantasy who used “Piffle”, though.
[QUOTE=corkboard]
Not at all historical or fantasy, but I’m partial to “ooh, fiddlesticks”, in a Montgomery Burnsian voice, of course. Cracks my kids the hell up.
[/QUOTE]
I’m rather fond of “frig” and “bugger”. Most Americans have no idea what the words mean, so they think you are using a euphemism, like “darn” or “heck”.
When my mother learned what “bugger” means, she was appalled at how often the Brits use it.
[QUOTE=mbh]
I’m rather fond of “frig” and “bugger”. Most Americans have no idea what the words mean, so they think you are using a euphemism, like “darn” or “heck”.
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You don’t get hit by little old ladies in supermarkets if they over hear you muttering, “Where’s the bloody, buggering fish paste this week?”
Unless they’re ex-pats. :eek:
[QUOTE=mbh]
When my mother learned what “bugger” means, she was appalled at how often the Brits use it.
[/QUOTE]
You think the Poms use it a lot? We developed an entire ad campaign (for Toyota utes, in case anyone was wondering) around the word.
“Bugger” is a really, really handy word. It’s not as bad as “Shit”, but carries more weight than “Crap” or “Dammit”. It’s ideally best used when something breaks down or otherwise fails, but it has plenty of uses in everyday situations as well.
Then again, Australia is a country where it’s considered perfectly acceptable to say “Fuck” on television after 8.30pm and one of our Government-funded TV channels plays a lot of movies that are only considered “Art” because they have subtitles as well as soft-core porn in them.
[QUOTE=Martini Enfield]
You think the Poms use it a lot? We developed an entire ad campaign (for Toyota utes, in case anyone was wondering) around the word.
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As a Kiwi (Ex-Pat if you must) you should know the BUGGER ad (advertisment) was a Kiwi ad not an Aussie ad. The bugger dog sadly died a few years ago but he was a gorgeous dog. His trainer (Mark Vette) and he were all Kiwi.