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The mkiv Supra Owners Club

What's pissing me off today...


Rob

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...on this forum specifically, is the amount of people using "end of." to conclude their posts.

It's a forum, if you want to use your statement to close a discussion then you'd best become a moderator so you can lock threads.

 

Saying "end of" at the 'end of' every post just appears big-headed to me, like "I have spoken, that is the end of the matter"

 

 

 

(wait for it)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Please feel free to discuss the above.

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Kopite, since you've answered I'm going to hijack my own thread...

 

What does "Plastic Scouser" actually mean, and why, in relation to the Mansun song Stripper Vicar, would dobbing on the vicar result in him being called a plastic scouser?

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plastic_Scouser

 

In the English city of Liverpool, Plastic Scouser is a term used to describe a person who sounds Scouse but lives on the other side of the River Mersey to the city itself. Usually people in Birkenhead and Wallasey are referred to by this term. "Plastic" refers to fake or imitation and is also used in other cases such as "plazzy scally" for a middle class person who pretends to be from a working class background in order to gain street credit.

 

"Plastic Scouser" can also refer to someone very proud of, and quick to emphasise their supposedly "scouse" heritage, despite living in a town that is not part of Liverpool, not necessarily just a town on the opposite side of the River Mersey. People on the Wirral tend to speak in a softer Scouse, and are indeed considered "posh" to their fellow Scousers. End of.

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Plastic Scouser (or Placcy/Plazzy scouser round here) is just someone who's not from Liverpool itself but says they are. Like i'm only 10 miles outside the city centre itself so a few people could use that term at me, but i was born in and used to live in the city itself so i wouldn't get that. Normally people from Cheshire etc or the Wirral. Not sure about the song though lol

 

EDIT: Jake already answerered.... serves me right for watching Top Gear while posting :D

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So do you get Plastic Cockneys then? All those people that say they're from London when they actually live in Surrey or Berkshire?

I suppose I'm a Plastic Skate then, cos I always say I'm from Pompey but actually I live about 10 miles away.

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So do you get Plastic Cockneys then? All those people that say they're from London when they actually live in Surrey or Berkshire?

I suppose I'm a Plastic Skate then, cos I always say I'm from Pompey but actually I live about 10 miles away.

 

Don't see why not, dunno how long the terms been round here. Same for "wollybacks" too which is the same thing really

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Mockney

 

From Wikipedia,

 

In British English, the term mockney (a Portmanteau of "mock" and "cockney") has come to be used, predominantly in the media, to describe those who present themselves as cockneys (or, by extension, other working-class groups) with the intention of gaining popular credibility. A stereotypical mockney comes from a middle or upper-middle class background in England's Home Counties.

 

The mockney speaks, or attempts to speak, in the working-class London accent popularly known as "cockney" (although spoken by many who are not cockneys at all) and often referred to as estuary English.

 

It is an affectation sometimes adopted for aesthetic purposes, other times just to sound "cool" or in attempt to generate street credibility. The phenomenon was first named in the mid-1990s and was made famous in describing Britpop bands such as Blur and, on occasions, politicians such as Tony Blair. Mick Jagger is often accused of having been the first celebrity in modern times to overplay his regional accent in order to boost his street credibility ("street cred"). Another highly influential rock act, The Kinks, are also pointed to as a mockney band.

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