SpiralusSancti
Bluelighter
Well tests required to pass level of advanced English or what’s rated as equivalent to native speaker to me always seemed as something harder than 99% native speakers I met could solve.
I noticed a lot of EU speaks English as a 2nd language more properly than I do as an American. A few people in Amsterdam passively corrected my English.Well tests required to pass level of advanced English or what’s rated as equivalent to native speaker to me always seemed as something harder than 99% native speakers I met could solve.
Yes, I agree with you.Well tests required to pass level of advanced English or what’s rated as equivalent to native speaker to me always seemed as something harder than 99% native speakers I met could solve.
Ay up arr lad, yau sez yau spok rung inglish but arrm tellin yau in be blocke cuntry we speekz va closist ta Inglish yau'll find cauze it ay ta far from olde Englis-h.I noticed a lot of EU speaks English as a 2nd language more properly than I do as an American. A few people in Amsterdam passively corrected my English.
Me: "Can I get a pack of Marlboro Reds?"
Cashier: "uhh.. I think it is possible"
(Americans always use "can" instead of "may" when requesting something)
I still think about that interaction, lol. I think it's just a natural thing, because we learn English as children before they teach us textbook English in school, and it's difficult to correct afterwards.
Have you ever heard the origin story of the name @Zopiclone bandit ? It is quite hilarious.Maybe the BLer lived up to their name and simply posted after too much zopiclone? I'm just guessing.
As a first-generation British-born Punjabi we were not allowed to speak English in the house .. Oh is the one unifying ur English has a lot of Punjabi words added mostly swear words like sister nfucker donkeys dick. My friend's wife was from India and had to pass a life in the UK test to get leave to remain In Punjabi all non-government schools teach in English one class every day English is the unifying language in India they all taught it
I called a boiler geezer for years i thought that what it called then friend said it the punjabi word .I remember an Indian friend hearing the word 'radiator' and she KNEW what it meant, but couldn't work out if it was a Hindi or English word... but you are SPOT ON.
English isn't like French (who protect every word). If a new word arrives and it's useful, it's used and becomes part of the language. So in hundreds of years expect English to have many more loan-words.
Wheni first went to school i hardley knew english my mom nspoke to me in punjabi first day when we stand up and say pour name and where we lived i had an punjabi accent a kid laughed i punch him punjabi and the doaba region we from it its a rough languageEveryone would understand 'boiler geyser' (I see you have a scientific mind) and so it's an English term. It might not be the official word, but language is a method by which we communicate and so as long as we both understand, it's fine.
I'm in a FB group where examples (images) of bad grammar are laughed at and derided. I don't. I find the context and often you find out that their are manifold reasons for the errors. A sign written in haste by someone for whom English is not their first language. Auto-correct errors and in newspapers, space.
If I cannot understand the statement and more particularly when it means something else entirely, those are the ONLY cases where the sign fails to
do it's job. A sub-set of those ARE funny. But mostly it's just people wanting someone to 'be better than'. Let's face it, in this hyperconnected world, you have to presume human error is not the most likely cause.
But Yubacity - if you hadn't mentioned it, I don't think anyone would have known English wasn't your first language. I have some Dutch and a little Latin & French.... but nothing to match your standard. It's really impressive.
D’ya wanna be in my gang, my gang!He's a fuckin national institution mate. Nobody does paedos quite like the UK (except for The Vatican)...
D’ya wanna be in my gang, my gang!
I met the drummer for Alvin stardust last week randomly walking around Berryhill Park in Nottinghamshire.Heh, I must have been 5 or 6 years old when that track was in the charts. I remember seeing him on TOTP and even at that tender age, I thought he looked decidedly dodgy with his overly tight glitter suits accentuating his premature, yet fully developed flabby dad bod.
No. I preferred Alvin Stardust. He was loads cooler (must have been the leather) and slightly less creepy...