WORDS THAT SHOULD EXIST
WORDS THAT SHOULD EXIST
Every so often I come out with words that should exist but aren't in the dictionary yet.
Words like:
Groanads (tank/bollock interface)
Bed-raggled (alternative to "bedraggled", but much more accurate.
Any more you can think of?
Words like:
Groanads (tank/bollock interface)
Bed-raggled (alternative to "bedraggled", but much more accurate.
Any more you can think of?
It's not falling off, it's an upgrade opportunity.
Re: WORDS THAT SHOULD EXIST
groanads is a word that exists http://www.awpi.com/Combs/Shaggy/468.html and is a gland near the funny bone,is that what you hit on the tank?tony.mon wrote:Every so often I come out with words that should exist but aren't in the dictionary yet.
Words like:
Groanads (tank/bollock interface)
Bed-raggled (alternative to "bedraggled", but much more accurate.
Any more you can think of?
A Rat fag! A rodent that likes it butter on both sides of the bread?tony.mon wrote:I've got another one.
RATFAG.
The furious smoking my wife does when she's too annoyed with me to speak.
How's it going with the POLL: Y want a cracker?
(it was suggested to me that i was getting too obscure again).

I see myself as a sensitive intelligent man but with the heart of a clown that causes me to **ck things up right at that crucial moment........'Jim Morrison'
Spot on!Timbo wrote:That would be a Ratbi - a ratfag only likes boy ratsBeamish wrote:A Rat fag! A rodent that likes it butter on both sides of the bread?tony.mon wrote:I've got another one.
RATFAG.
The furious smoking my wife does when she's too annoyed with me to speak.
How's it going with the POLL: Y want a cracker?
(it was suggested to me that i was getting too obscure again).![]()
I have heard Cankle, isnt that when the 2 are sort ofmerged into 1?
I see myself as a sensitive intelligent man but with the heart of a clown that causes me to **ck things up right at that crucial moment........'Jim Morrison'
- LotusSevenMan
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Reminds me that quite often I've noticed that when you are intergrating yourself into a family with a new girlfriend etc they often seem to speak a different English from you!
I have heard all these so know them to be true. Where they come from g*d only knows!!!
Polee (pronounced pole-eeee) for a persons head. Example:- "I have a polee ache"
Handipuds for hands (not too bad I guess)
Eyecal (prounounced eye-calls) for eyes. Example:- "I have a spec of dirt in my eyecal" ???
Weeker (prounounced week-er) for ears. Example:- "You have cold weekers" ???
Breasticles (pronounced breast-iculls) for a woman showing signs of cold breasts. Icicles/nipples etc I guess.

I have heard all these so know them to be true. Where they come from g*d only knows!!!
Polee (pronounced pole-eeee) for a persons head. Example:- "I have a polee ache"
Handipuds for hands (not too bad I guess)
Eyecal (prounounced eye-calls) for eyes. Example:- "I have a spec of dirt in my eyecal" ???
Weeker (prounounced week-er) for ears. Example:- "You have cold weekers" ???
Breasticles (pronounced breast-iculls) for a woman showing signs of cold breasts. Icicles/nipples etc I guess.


"Only ride as fast as your guardian angel can fly" !!!


I came across this recently, probably more appropriate for VTRgirl, or anyone who works in a hospital

Hospital slang uncovered
A leading doctor has explained some of the colourful slang used by staff on Britain’s hospital wards.
Young doctors have developed their own dictionary of secret terms for patients and colleagues, reports the Daily Telegraph.
They include a 'Hasselhoff', for a patient who gives doctors in accident and emergency a bizarre explanation for their injury.
It was coined after former Baywatch actor David Hasselhoff said last year that he had hit his head on a chandelier while shaving.
A disco biscuit is an ecstasy tablet, while a Father Jack, after the drunken old priest in Father Ted, is a confused and elderly patient who constantly shouts and tries to get out of bed.
The dictionary of slang was compiled by a consultant in palliative medicine, Paul Keeley, of Glasgow Royal Informary.
He said: “It’s something I have picked up over the last few years from teaching junior doctors.
“I have always had an interest in language and I noticed that junior doctors seem to have picked up a whole vocabulary of language that older doctors like me don’t have.”
Other examples include blamestorming - a session of mutual recrimination in which a team tries to find someone to blame for an error.
A MacTilt describes how a Macmillan nurse tilts his or her head to convey sympathy while a Jack Bauer describes a doctor who is still up and working after 24 hours - after the lead character from the TV series 24.
Chris.
- LotusSevenMan
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