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[News] Old fashioned words you use



Redinpeace

Well-known member
Apr 27, 2023
341
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Gwylan

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
32,138
Uffern
I'm sure I have loads - as I am old. One that immediately springs to mind, and which confuses the hell out of young people, is when I'm asked the time at 2.25, say, and, out of habit, automatically reply "Five and twenty past two". It's how I learnt to tell the time many years ago but kids don't get it.

Mrs Gwylan manages to confuse me as she weighs herself regularly and talks about stones and pounds, which involves a bit of mental arithmetic. I did once ask her how many groats did a pound of sugar cost, but she wasn't amused.
 






The Clamp

Well-known member
Jan 11, 2016
27,215
West is BEST
I always refer to eye glasses as spectacles.
Dry food cupboard is the pantry.

And I call people twerps and wallys.

Not an affectation, just what I’ve always said.
 






schmunk

Well-used member
Jan 19, 2018
11,035
Mid mid mid Sussex
A while back I was called out by some young whippersnapper for using "centre half".

Fortunately this sort of thing fits in with my whole "man about 50years out of time" vibe so I'm pretty relaxed about it.
Centre Half is available as a drop-back tactical preset for CDMs in the latest "FIFA" game (EA FC 25)
 




Eeyore

Munching grass in Queen's Park
NSC Patron
Apr 5, 2014
28,201
Outwith (although this is because of working with so many Scots folk now. I don't say outside anymore)
Eyup (always say this without humour intended. Picked it up from my Yorkshire boss)
Service till (I don't say ATM, not that folk use them much now)
'I'm paying in cash'
 




loz

Well-known member
Apr 27, 2009
2,614
W.Sussex
Being in the vacuum industry I use Flange everyday.

But I always say Wireless, as a joke to start with but now all the time 🤷

And I use “under-drawers”I heard it in a period drama and thought it’s a nicer word than all the modern ones for pants and knickers.

I have always used “ in the midst” which I then have to explain.
 




METALMICKY

Well-known member
Jan 30, 2004
7,465
I've always loved ' procrastination '. Bizarrely the origin is an old bastard of a physics teacher who banged on about " procrastination being the thief of time ".
 










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