Originally posted by socal
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Derogatory names for people, places and things. Post them.
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Last edited by harrymsmarkle; 12-02-2019, 12:49 PM.Majestically enthroned amid the vulgar herd
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Originally posted by harrymsmarkle View Posta) Take a tour through most of the US, nearly everywhere in Europe or simply ask the nearest Asians what they think of blacks. b) In the event you skipped high school history, the former enslaved the latter. That's a very bitter history to dismiss so lightly...even for a tightly-wrapped white supremacist like yourself, dearest Nigger Chicken.
People hate krauts still too. That is not what i even meant. i didnt mean that people didnt think like racists. i mean acual racist policies and outcomes. They are rare
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There even is a black guy in our tennis club.
Racism is a thing of the past, if it ever existed outside the warped minds of leftist do-gooders, eh socal?Originally posted by Ergenburgensmurgen;n186588
What are you talking about, I don't post on Teakdoor.
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Originally posted by socal View PostIM not racist. I just thought that one was funny. I just surmised that we dont have any black folk as members here. Otherwise i wouldnt have wrote it.
Its just a black bird.
Sea gulls could be called honky chickens. So there you go. It all evens out.
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See you cuvnt crumpets ? Im not the only one who likes this topic. This was on MSN news
Top 20 WW1 slang terms
1. Archie
Apparently derived from an old music hall song called Archibald, Certainly Not!, Archie 2. Basket Case
While it tends to be used in a fairly lighthearted way today (usually describing someone who constantly makes stupid mistakes, or who crumbles under pressure), the original basket case is an unexpectedly gruesome reminder of just how bloody the War became. In its original context, a basket case was a soldier who had been so badly injured that he had to be carried from the battlefield in a barrow or basket, usually with the implication that he had lost all four of his limbs.
3. Blighty
Derived from vilayati, an Urdu word meaning "foreign," blighty4. Blimp
As a military slang name for an airship, blimp5. Booby-Trap
Booby-trapFrom Bapaume to Passchendaele6. Cooties
As a nickname for body lice or head lice, cooties7. Crump-Hole
Crump is an old English dialect word for a hard hit or blow that, after 1914, came to be used for the explosion of a heavy artillery shell. A crump-hole was the crater the shell left behind.
8. Daisy-Cutter
Before the War, a daisy-cutter had been a cricket ball or baseball pitched low so that it practically skims along the surface of the ground. The name was eventually taken up by troops to describe an artillery shell fitted with an impact fuse, meaning that it exploded on impact with the ground rather than in the air thereby causing the greatest amount of damage.
9. Dingbat
In the 19th century, dingbat was used much like thingummy (the British term for thingamajig) or whatchamacallit10. Dekko
Like blighty, dekko was another term adopted into English by British troops serving in 19th-century India that gained a much larger audience during the First World War; the Oxford English Dictionary has no written record of the term between its first appearance in 1894 and 1917. Derived from a Hindi word of equivalent meaning, dekko was typically used in the phrase "to take a dekko," meaning "to have a look at something."
11. Flap
"To be in a flap," meaning "to be worried," dates from 1916. It was originally a naval expression derived from the restless flapping of birds, but quickly spread into everyday English during the First World War. The adjective unflappable, meaning unflustered or imperturbable, appeared in the 1950s.
12. Iron Rations
The expression iron rations13. Kiwi
Kiwis14. Napoo
English-speaking soldiers frequently found themselves serving alongside French-speaking soldiers in the First World War, often with little chance of one understanding the other. So when French soldiers would exclaim napoo, which they took to mean finished, dead, or completely destroyed.
15. Omms-n-Chevoos
omms-n-chevoos.
16. Pogey-Bait
Pogey-bait was candy, or a sweet snack of any kind, among American and Canadian troops. No one is quite sure where the term comes from, but the first part could be pogypogue, a slang word for a non-combatant or weakly soldier.
17. Shell-Shock
Although the adjective shell-shockedshell-shock emerged during the First World War. The Oxford English Dictionary has since traced the earliest record back to an article in The British Medical Journal18. Spike-Bozzled
SpikeSpike-bozzled, or spike-boozled, came to mean "completely destroyed," and was usually used to describe airships and other aircraft rather than weaponry. Exactly what bozzledbamboozled in the sense of something being utterly confounded or stopped in its path.
19. Strafe
strafe into the English language after the outbreak of the War, and variously used it to refer to a heavy bombardment or attack, machine gun fire, or a severe reprimand.
20. Zigzag
Zigzag has been used in English since the 18th century to describe an angular, meandering line or course but during the First World War came to be used as a euphemism for drunkenness, presumably referring to the zigzagging walk of a soldier who had had one too many.
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2. Basket Case
While it tends to be used in a fairly lighthearted way today (usually describing someone who constantly makes stupid mistakes, or who crumbles under pressure)Originally posted by Ergenburgensmurgen;n186588
What are you talking about, I don't post on Teakdoor.
https://thailandchatter.com/core/ima...ies/giggle.gif
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Originally posted by serrollt View PostThere even is a black guy in our tennis club.
Racism is a thing of the past, if it ever existed outside the warped minds of leftist do-gooders, eh socal?
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Originally posted by socal View PostThat's what I am saying basically. A black guy was the priest when my freind got married. None of us thought anything of it.Majestically enthroned amid the vulgar herd
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Originally posted by harrymsmarkle View Posta) Take a tour through most of the US, nearly everywhere in Europe or simply ask the nearest Asians what they think of blacks. b) In the event you skipped high school history, the former enslaved the latter. That's a very bitter history to dismiss so lightly...even for a tightly-wrapped white supremacist like yourself, dearest Nigger Chicken.
The Romans enslaved Germanic people and blue painted people from some islands around the north sea.
why should we dimiss this bitter history of Italians enslaving germans and Brits ?
The earliest recorded account of life in the British Isles came from Roman sources. Rome conquered the British Isle and ruled it between 43 and 453 AD. The Romans enslaved virtually the entire population of Brittany (England) and the other Islands that fell within their grasp.Last edited by socal; 12-05-2019, 12:33 AM.
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Originally posted by socal View PostThis dingbat doesn't realize that i am talking about today.
The Romans enslaved Germanic people and blue painted people from some islands around the north sea.
why should we dimiss this bitter history of Italians enslaving germans and Brits ?
The earliest recorded account of life in the British Isles came from Roman sources. Rome conquered the British Isle and ruled it between 43 and 453 AD. The Romans enslaved virtually the entire population of Brittany (England) and the other Islands that fell within their grasp.
Brittany - A large peninsula in the North West of France.
England - A kingdom which forms the southern part of the British Isles and was founded by the consolidation of minor Saxon and Danish states in 927 A.D.I visited TC a few times as a guest but had to stop. It is a sickening place. - Aging One
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Originally posted by socal View PostThat's what I am saying basically. A black guy was the priest when my freind got married. None of us thought anything of it.
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