Icebear
Andlig Ledare
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2011
- Messages
- 18,781
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Nay-up was exactly what I was thinking as I read through the thread Sonny.Play to level of competition - a fakewalk or duckpoop
Missed layup - a nayup or lameup
Nay-up was exactly what I was thinking as I read through the thread Sonny.Play to level of competition - a fakewalk or duckpoop
Missed layup - a nayup or lameup
This was an enormous amount of fun and demonstrated that our Boneyarders are collectively and individually highly creative. Let me sign off (this thread only and only for me) by providing a couple word fugitives from the book that we can all identify with:Great Thread Kibs...
I'm from Windber, Pa, a coal town, hard against Johnstown, a steel town. When I went to college, the greater New York metro guys had field day with me. They all wanted to learn a new language. Reminded me of Eliza Doolittle at the races with her new language.I am an old Yinzer myself and am thus totally accustomed to "redding up" interior portions of my domecile and I know that when it rains heavily or snows lightly that the sidewalks will become "slippy." And those excessively curious people are "nebby."
This just happened to me yesterday!!! I got a call from someone I have been trying to reach for months, (incidentally, to make arrangements to see West Virgina) and he left a long message, then ripped through his cell phone number in about a second (he was calling from an airport pay phone, so I couldn't simply look at caller ID). I had to replay the message several times before I could get all the digits.
- Then there are those who leave long, meandering messages on answering devices, then rattle off their phone numbers at lightning speed at the end (making it necessary to hear the entire recorded monologue again to get to those important digits with pen in hand to copy them): Consider prestodigitators, prolixity-split, or number-mumblers (or shorter version, numblers).
My wife and I almost served a Lutheran Church in Windber.I'm from Windber, Pa, a coal town, hard against Johnstown, a steel town. When I went to college, the greater New York metro guys had field day with me. They all wanted to learn a new language. Reminded me of Eliza Doolittle at the races with her new language.