Re: Canadians 'eh'......
Originally Posted by caretaker
(Post 12906903)
How to grow a mouse in a beer bottle to get a free case: Wisdom for the ages. :lol:
My Uncle definitely used to use 'eh' a lot (so perhaps generational?). I have often heard 'aboot' but pronounced more subtly - more like abouwt - quite distinctive when you do hear it, but not now widespread. It's a bit like the 'definitive' test for whether someone is a New Zealander or and Aussie - say 'sex' - NZ pronouces as 'sucks'! |
Re: Canadians 'eh'......
Originally Posted by Jerseygirl
(Post 12906904)
:scaredhair:
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Re: Canadians 'eh'......
I was too young so don't remember this SCTV, but watching a few on youtube, quite funny.
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Re: Canadians 'eh'......
Originally Posted by no good name
(Post 12906105)
Example.
I was once asked, "Do they have pizza in Scotland?".... :eek: "Do they have lakes in Scotland?" :nod: My brother in law (in the UK) asked me "so you can go swimming in the lakes in Canada?" I say yes, "we do it all the time" he says, "with a wet suit"? .. Me: "err... no just in your swimming trunks..." his reply oh I didnt know it was that warm and clean".... and my brother in law certainly isn't stupid! People in who live and one country don't know much about others, thats why that saying "travel broadens the mind" (it is so true) |
Re: Canadians 'eh'......
Just wait until you hear about the Brit who flew to Toronto to see the bears and mountains of Canada. :lol:
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Re: Canadians 'eh'......
Originally Posted by Lychee
(Post 12907402)
Just wait until you hear about the Brit who flew to Toronto to see the bears and mountains of Canada. :lol:
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Re: Canadians 'eh'......
Originally Posted by caretaker
(Post 12907582)
I knew someone who got kicked out of the RCMP for riding his horse through a nurses residence in Ottawa. That's fairly Canadian.
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Re: Canadians 'eh'......
It has always been a Brit who has asked the following questions, and getting my replies ......
Them: Where do you live? Me: In Canada Them: Oh, my aunt/cousin/sister lives in Toronto. Do you know her? She works in a shoe shop. Me: Unlikely. Canada's a very big country, and we don't live in Toronto Them: I thought everyone would know everyone else there. DOH! Mind you, it was Texans who asked did we live in igloos and have dog sleds. |
Re: Canadians 'eh'......
When I was a teenager I worked in a hotel in Perthshire and we used to get a lot of coach holiday tours stopping for lunch. Mostly it was retired people from the UK but we also had Canadian and American tour parties. Even at that time we were able to distinguish the Canadians from the Americans, not by their accents, but by their clothes. My goodness, Canadian retirees in the 1980s had a unique dress sense... polyester central, tartan trousers, shiny jackets, badges, baseball caps... it was like a uniform.
Mind you, it was an American southern chap who proudly told me, "Mah ancestors came from Loch Ness!" |
Re: Canadians 'eh'......
Originally Posted by scilly
(Post 12907606)
Mind you, it was Texans who asked did we live in igloos and have dog sleds.
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Re: Canadians 'eh'......
Originally Posted by ann m
(Post 12906141)
Oh good grief, we know you’re not happy here, but that’s a silly and provocative thread title. I’m sure we can all find examples of ignorance around the world. Many Brits are dumb as they come too you know.😉
But, "do they have pizza and lakes in scotland?" C'mon |
Re: Canadians 'eh'......
Originally Posted by no good name
(Post 12907704)
Yeah fair point. The title did come across worse (written), than what was intended.
But, "do they have pizza and lakes in scotland?" C'mon "it's their corporate ethos, innit?" I typed. "You're such a wordsmith" she responded "Eh?" "Ethos, how do you know the word 'ethos'"? The conversation moved on to Trump and I said I hoped there's a lamppost in his future and then I explained that was a reference to Mussolini and, when prompted, that he was a dictator in Italy. My colleague asked how I knew that and I guessed I originally learned it in school and she asked if, in the UK, "students" were taught about things that happened outside the UK. At this point I was tired of conversing with the token cradle but later I was reminded of my children complaining that, since there's no history in Canada they had to study the Plains of ****ing Abraham every year and me asking them how come they didn't always get 100% if the material was always the same. Oakville Woman is nice enough and she doesn't need to know about anything that doesn't happen in Oakville but it's a bit limiting that, if you want to talk to someone here who has a broad knowledge of the world, Mennonites are the best bet. Informed, but smelly. Granted, I don't suppose the cast of TOWIE could manage the names of three famous dictators between them but there does seem to be a lack of focus on anything besides the US, and Canada, in Canadian education. |
Re: Canadians 'eh'......
Originally Posted by dbd33
(Post 12907719)
Oakville Woman is nice enough and she doesn't need to know about anything that doesn't happen in Oakville but it's a bit limiting that, if you want to talk to someone here who has a broad knowledge of the world, Mennonites are the best bet. Informed, but smelly.
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Re: Canadians 'eh'......
Originally Posted by caretaker
(Post 12907803)
What I find most disturbing is that she attended, and presumably graduated from university. .
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Re: Canadians 'eh'......
Originally Posted by caretaker
(Post 12907803)
For what it's worth, I've met some incredibly stupid people from the UK, but they are definitely in the minority.
Similarly, most Brits in the UK have a very positive view of Canadians. But, likewise, that's because they haven't met so many of them :) |
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