MikeBravo
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,301
- Location
- Melbourne, Australia
I miss the old days when one could go out "galavanting". Interchangeable with "dancing and prancing"
I miss the old days when one could go out "galavanting". Interchangeable with "dancing and prancing"
I was brought up in that generation by those who had been through the 30's and 40's and world war, Depression..etc, and they as kids had been influenced by their Victorian and Edwardian parents and relations, so I guess, I'm the last of that generation to have been directly influenced in their language and codes of behaviour.
Words that were commonly used in our household (yep, it was a household, we had a pantry, living room, drawing room, breakfast room..etc), and which I still come out with when not thinking...
Balderdash; baloney; Poppycock; Blaggard; Guttersnipe; Chum; Piffal; the flicks; okey doke; toodleloo; cheerio; hoover; a gas; ...
Stop that quagswagging you bloody jollux hoddypeak! I'm making time with this illecebrous and freckish yummybundle!
I prefer poodlefaker, myself. One can engage in the act of act of cake consumption without being a poodlefaker, but I think it would be dashed difficult to practise poodlefakery without being a poodlefaker.
I'm making time with this illecebrous and freckish yummybundle!
Drugstore cowboy.'Milksop' seems to roll off the tongue better to me.
A helot is an agrarian slave of Sparta. They were an undercaste, okay to brutalize and even kill ritually, but necessary for the survival of the state. (I guess one step down would be someone unnecessary, ie: a good-for-nothing bum.)