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#1
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jNS9Pz3VTIA
He believes that the words threat and three begin in the letter f. How can an intelligent man who has obviously been right through the education system end up talking like a Tooting cauliflower salesman who has farted in his space suit and crashed his gyrocopter? |
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#2
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On Mar 3, 6:48*am, Offramp wrote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jNS9Pz3VTIA He believes that the words threat and three begin in the letter f. How can an intelligent man who has obviously been right through the education system end up talking like a Tooting cauliflower salesman who has farted in his space suit and crashed his gyrocopter? Yes, he definitely tends to pronounce "th" like "f' — another example I heard on the video was "fought" for "thought." Is this just some regional English oddity, rather than defect in his speech or education? After all, in various parts of England one may hear "Oy" for "I," "air" for "hair," "in'it" for "isn't it," "flares" for "flowers" etc. In certain parts of the USA you'll hear "yall" for "you all," "heah" for "here," and "ahmunna" or "ahmo" for "I'm going to." |
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#3
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On 3 Mar, 14:40, Taylor Kingston wrote:
On Mar 3, 6:48*am, Offramp wrote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jNS9Pz3VTIA He believes that the words threat and three begin in the letter f. How can an intelligent man who has obviously been right through the education system end up talking like a Tooting cauliflower salesman who has farted in his space suit and crashed his gyrocopter? * Yes, he definitely tends to pronounce "th" like "f' — another example I heard on the video was "fought" for "thought." Is this just some regional English oddity, rather than defect in his speech or education? After all, in various parts of England one may hear "Oy" for "I," "air" for "hair," "in'it" for "isn't it," "flares" for "flowers" etc. In certain parts of the USA you'll hear "yall" for "you all," "heah" for "here," and "ahmunna" or "ahmo" for "I'm going to." It is a defect peculiar to London. I did it myself until I was about 9. |
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#4
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On Mar 3, 1:48*pm, Offramp wrote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jNS9Pz3VTIA He believes that the words threat and three begin in the letter f. How can an intelligent man who has obviously been right through the education system end up talking like a Tooting cauliflower salesman who has farted in his space suit and crashed his gyrocopter? Shut up idiot. The video was very cool, thanks for the link. You seem to have a fetish with farts and spacesuits. RL |
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#5
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On Mar 3, 4:40*pm, Taylor Kingston
wrote: On Mar 3, 6:48*am, Offramp wrote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jNS9Pz3VTIA He believes that the words threat and three begin in the letter f. How can an intelligent man who has obviously been right through the education system end up talking like a Tooting cauliflower salesman who has farted in his space suit and crashed his gyrocopter? * Yes, he definitely tends to pronounce "th" like "f' — another example I heard on the video was "fought" for "thought." Is this just some regional English oddity, rather than defect in his speech or education? After all, in various parts of England one may hear "Oy" for "I," "air" for "hair," "in'it" for "isn't it," "flares" for "flowers" etc. In certain parts of the USA you'll hear "yall" for "you all," "heah" for "here," and "ahmunna" or "ahmo" for "I'm going to." That's because what became Standard Received English was a late 14th century amalgam of Eastern London region dialect (Essex? Wessex? I forget now) and Manchester english from the north, which oddly enough became adopted by the south as more of the northerners moved into London up to and including the reign of Henry the 8th. English also lost its case endings and pronouns/ gender at that time. RL |
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#6
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On Mar 4, 1:07*am, Offramp wrote:
It is a defect peculiar to London. I did it myself until I was about 9. Defect? There's no defect in dialect fool. That's a fallacy, that an 'ideal' language exists. RL |
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