Tara: Do you have any books on robots? Giles: Oh, yes, dozens. There's a lot of research to be done in order to--no, I'm lying. Haven't got squat. I just like watching Xander squirm.

'Get It Done'


All Ogle, No Cash -- It's Not Just Annoying, It's Un-American

Discussion of episodes currently airing in Un-American locations (anything that's aired in Australia is fair game), as well as anything else the Un-Americans feel like talking about or we feel like asking them. Please use the show discussion threads for any current-season discussion.

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Steph L. - Feb 27, 2003 10:36:27 am PST #2302 of 9843
I look more rad than Lutheranism

I was talking about dialects and sounding American or British I know you can understand the words

It's more than understanding the words -- we're familiar with UK phrasing.


Sue - Feb 27, 2003 10:37:02 am PST #2303 of 9843
hip deep in pie

We used to play all kinds of different tag. Freeze tag, TV tag, ball tag. My best friend Kerrie used to have a pool, so our summers revolved around that. We often played "Love Boat", and we all fought over who got to be Julie McCoy.


Am-Chau Yarkona - Feb 27, 2003 10:37:44 am PST #2304 of 9843
I bop to Wittgenstein. -- Nutty

Yes-- everybody here copes staggeringly well at the sometimes momentarily Victorian way I tend to phrase my sentances.


P.M. Marc - Feb 27, 2003 11:08:35 am PST #2305 of 9843
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

I was talking about dialects and sounding American or British I know you can understand the words, think about being an actress, or posting on a board where everyone speaks funny.

What Steph said.

It's more than understanding the words -- we're familiar with UK phrasing.

We've a large number of UnAmericans. They don't feel a need to change their writing style. My mother doesn't write like a USian, or speak like one. We understand each other perfectly.

Jilli's husband is English. He makes perfect sense. Both the men I called grandfather were raised in Scotland. I didn't need them to translate for me when they were talking. ita is an international superstar globetrotting type. We know what she's saying.

And then we have Fay. Who always makes sense, even when she's claming she doesn't.


DXMachina - Feb 27, 2003 11:12:48 am PST #2306 of 9843
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

Oh! It wasn't the back that was unique, it was the front. It was an Indian Cent. Must've been older than 1923, then. I wonder if I still have it somewhere.

Cool! I never found one of those. Definitely older, because they stopped making them in 1908, when they switched to the Lincoln cent. I don't recall how long they made them, but definitely back into the 19th century. (Yes, I did collect coins as a child. How did you know?)


brenda m - Feb 27, 2003 11:31:39 am PST #2307 of 9843
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

Man, Red Rover was a brutal game. I remember it as a recess game though, not gym class. Which means we were doing it voluntarily. Kickball and dodgeball were more structured, I think.

The general rule in our neighborhood was you had to come home and check in when the streetlights came on. But then it was usually back out after dinner for a rousing game of Bloody Murder, sort of a tag variant that involved lots of screaming. Can't imagine kids being able to do this today, and that makes me sad.

You can have a perfect British accent and still sound like an American doing a bad impression because the word usage is wrong and vice vera.

This comes up a lot in fic - you can convey an accent through through word choice and patterns without having to mock up some sort of weird spelling and dialect. (See RayK patois. If you can stand it.)

Zoe, please, no need to alter your chosen language on our account. (Part of me wants to say "dumb it down for the Americans," which I suspect is not really what you intended to say.)


Zoe Finch - Feb 27, 2003 11:39:18 am PST #2308 of 9843
Gradh tu fhein

Part of me wants to say "dumb it down for the Americans," which I suspect is not really what you intended to say.)

Thankyou for the benefit of the doubt. I mean what I say as a complement unless I deliberately say otherwise.


shrift - Feb 27, 2003 11:43:21 am PST #2309 of 9843
"You can't put a price on the joy of not giving a shit." -Zenkitty

See RayK patois. If you can stand it.

Brenda, nobody deserves RayK patois.


Noumenon - Feb 27, 2003 12:17:56 pm PST #2310 of 9843
No other candidate is asking the hard questions, like "Did geophysicists assassinate Jim Henson?" or "Why is there hydrogen in America's water supply?" --defective yeti

The woods behind our house served as various imaginary lands, though since my mom is a champion worrier, I could only

I misread your mother to be the champion warrior of these imaginary lands...

My house had a big ravine with a river and a stream. We dammed up the stream a couple times. Sometimes there'd be police helicopters over the ravine with searchlights, but we never saw any criminals or anyone at all.

My favorite game: Prisonball. In a gym, you throw head-sized Nerf balls at the opposite side. When you hit someone, they go to prison, which is behind your side, so you're sandwiched between. They get out of prison if they hit you. If you catch the ball someone throws at you or is trying to throw to their prison, they go to prison. It seems more interesting than straight dodgeball, but we never really played that.


Rebecca Lizard - Feb 27, 2003 12:37:09 pm PST #2311 of 9843
You sip / say it's your crazy / straw say it's you're crazy / as you bicycle your soul / with beauty in your basket

Four-square is alive and kicking in all the playgrounds I've known.

And dodgeball fucking rocks. Last sport I was ever good at. See, I could never quite throw with any sort of accuracy; but I could dodge like nobody's business. It was lovely. Oh! The best game variant? Was when you had two teams and when someone got hit they went and joined the other team, instead of going to a jail area. There were a great number of balls being used all at once. The game ended once everybody ended up on the same team. And it was clever, you know, because everybody won-- the people who ended up on the big team felt good because they ended up on the side that picked off everyone, and the last few people left on the small side felt good because they had lasted the longest.

Believe it or not, USians are more than capable of understanding UK English. We don't need it translated.

Wrod.

I mean, I've a couple times in private correspondence (with John) had amusing moments of confusion, but they're usually pronunciation stuff (I don't need any more mix-up! I pronounce things ridiculously strangely as it is!) and you're not speaking aloud....