Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostOh, yes - there weren't any genuinely posh people in my birth town: just a considerable number of people who said "threpney" and "pardon?" and who were amused by the others who said "thrupney" and "what?".
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Oakapple
Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI wouldn't really object to "one pence" unless feeling exceptionally pedantic that day - any more than "six foot", which we have got used to saying.
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Originally posted by Oakapple View PostI bet the Americans never talk about one cents. And a six-foot man and a nine-stone woman sound quite correct, not an error that has just gained acceptance through usage. We would never talk about a six-feet man, unless he had to wear three pairs of shoes all the time perhaps.
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Originally posted by Oakapple View PostI bet the Americans never talk about one cents. And a six-foot man and a nine-stone woman sound quite correct, not an error that has just gained acceptance through usage. We would never talk about a six-feet man, unless he had to wear three pairs of shoes all the time perhaps.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
[ ... I once knew a Whitlock-Blundell, who was actually quite nice - as well as being quite posh ]
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostInteresting that predecimally "pence" would usually come out as an unstressed "pəns" whereas under the decimal system it mostly seems to get the full vowel sound - "six pence" as against "sɪkspəns". The people who say "one pence" nowadays wouldn't say "onepəns"".
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