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Huh. Legolas Send a noteboard - 15/12/2015 07:58:59 PM

View original postIt's like how apparently "shag" is the equivalent of "fuck" in the UK, but in the US it typically refers to a type of carpet.

I guess that's yet more proof for just how bad us continental Europeans are at distinguishing British from American English - if you asked me, I would have called it British rather than American, sure, but I would also have assumed it was universally understood among native speakers of any origin. Among adults, anyway.

Perhaps the SATs and similar tests should focus on this sort of vocabulary, instead of knowledge of words that literally nobody uses, even in academia.

View original postIn fact, I only heard it [i.e., "bugger" ] in Monty Python and thought it was just another funny English word like "codswallop" or "git" or "odds bodkins" (the last of which was so bizarrely English that I didn't even attempt to understand what it was supposed to mean). It wasn't until I got to law school that the word came up during a Constitutional Law discussion of sodomy laws (which at the time were still legal - this was 1997 and I was 22).

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not specifically but then again I could never tell a joke *NM* - 14/12/2015 07:08:19 PM 210 Views
LOL, awww. - 14/12/2015 07:28:04 PM 456 Views
If my daughter is a gauge that last until around 7 - 14/12/2015 07:59:30 PM 467 Views
Well, I never had one, but that is my sense of how this works. - 14/12/2015 08:36:49 PM 519 Views
When you misspell "booger" as "bugger" there is a huge level of confusion that can arise. - 14/12/2015 09:21:26 PM 575 Views
Yes, especially on a predominantly non-US site *NM* - 15/12/2015 02:59:54 PM 235 Views
You mean Americans genuinely don't recognize that word? That does surprise me. *NM* - 15/12/2015 07:17:56 PM 176 Views
I never heard it in America growing up. Not once. - 15/12/2015 07:45:49 PM 456 Views
Huh. - 15/12/2015 07:58:59 PM 477 Views
Right. What Tom said. - 15/12/2015 08:58:48 PM 460 Views
Divided by a common language. - 15/12/2015 08:10:37 PM 479 Views
Less so with globalization - 15/12/2015 10:09:57 PM 434 Views
I think it is killing accents - 17/12/2015 02:34:50 PM 434 Views
Much less so in the UK / Europe, I think. - 17/12/2015 08:04:29 PM 447 Views
I just thought that no one nose the answer. *NM* - 29/12/2015 11:40:17 AM 207 Views

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