knock
Bluelighter
No-one's forcing you to read them!
Back at ya:
Back at ya:

When I think of 'slacker' I think of...
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cheech and chong are fucking shit films, a child could have written them.
Spaced is ace.
cheech and chong are fucking shit films, a child could have written them.
Cheech & Chong are fuckin' hilarious. At least they are when you're a teenager for whom the novelty of weed hasn't worn off yet. Probly wouldn't hit the spot quite as much these days but very fond memories. Up in Smoke and Next Movie are classics though
Whilst we may still have a pet American or two around and about the place I have a question that's been bugging me for years (in a fairly minor way admittedly) - y'know how US folks tend to change UK spellings and phrases just a tiny bit for no obvious reason? Fair enough I spose - bit of national teenangst trying to not be so like their parent nation, I presume. There's one I just don't get at all though: "I couldn't care less" became "I could care less". How does that not change the meaning to the opposite? If you could care less then you care more, no?![]()
I thought the loss of "u" and swapping "s" for "z" (and pronouncing "z" as "zee" too for that matter) was cos someone (Mr Webster?) decided to make English spelling more phonetic. Vaguely recall reading that was the reason anyway. Still seems like the act of a petulant teenager determined to be different to its parent to me though. Or the act of a man who saw a moneymaking opportunity in selling slightly different dictionaries.
Snoll-de-Roll: That does sound fairly reasonable actually. Still think it's a bizarro change though... but I could care less (which in this case is actually true cos I care enough for it to bug me just a teensy bit).
Snoll-de-Roll: That does sound fairly reasonable actually. Still think it's a bizarro change though... but I could care less (which in this case is actually true cos I care enough for it to bug me just a teensy bit).
Nah dyslexia would just be universal. Have you ever tried to read an old English source? It's a fucking nightmare! Interestingly, my friend who studied history at Cambridge got taken to a book written by a priest written if I remember correctly in the 1400s, and on the side they'd written 'fuck the priest of xyz', and that is apparently the first record of someone using fuck in writing we have :D
Haha aye, I really can't get my head round half that stuff. Or I can, but it's a bastard; just finished my first module in Renaissance literature and bugger me half the semester was taken up teaching us how to read the original sources.