Wilson has a very punchable face at the best of times.
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Grown men and women referring to their pets as their "wee boy" or "wee girl" - or even more tragic and puerile - call themselves their mutt's "Mummy" or "Daddy".
I feel there's no need to explain why that's so cringeworthy.
How frequently leaders in my workplace (one in particular) use the word ‘fundamentally’ or ‘fundamental’
Watching the WC in Sweden and they change the channel the are showing the game on at half-time does my nut in
Fuds in the crowd at The World Cup waving their phones in the air with the light on.
Allowing myself to believe that I can move a brick wall by trying to reason with it.
Drinking games. What’s the point, unless you’re a teenaged girl?
In my experience: they’re not fun or funny. The whole “drink two fingers thing” means you’re drinking less than if you were just sitting enjoying your drink as normal. And the objective of the game (to get you pished) is what will happen if you just sit and drink with your mates anyway.
Or then there’s the ones where there’s one minging drink for someone to down at the end of each round, where inevitably the loud mouths and bullies of the group will ensure one person gets absolutely slaughtered.
Give me sitting arguing endlessly about stupid topics any day of the week, while I enjoy my bevy.
I'm a bit peeved that Zara Philips has had a baby. I've now dropped down yet another place in succession to the throne.
This might have already been covered, but people who end sentences with the word "but". (... other than in the way that I've just done it...). I'm no stickler for grammer, I couldn't care less about most things, but I would assume to wait for more information when someone says the word but. (done it again)
"The shop shuts at 9 but" ... I don't know when it started and I don't know why it started, but it confuses the heck out of me.
In hindsight, there were a lot of but's in that post.
You get this a lot in the German language in some regional dialects. In the south west they end their sentences with "gell", in the north west with "nah" and in the Prussian heartlands with "wa". It does my head in because it makes everything sound like a question.