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Question about British terminology
I have a question for my friends from England. I was talking to my niece today. She mentioned a word that an English friend of hers said. She referred to a term, possibly referring to foul weather boots. It is "wallies" or "willies." Can anyone help us with this? What it the correct term, and what does it refer to?
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It's Wellies, referring to the Duke of Wellington's boots.
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Wallies are rather stupid people and willies are used for draining lager out of male poms.
Wellies are rubber boots favoured by farmers and sheep worriers from Yorkshire. |
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So some wallies eat wallies which gives me the willies. |
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Uh....... OK... then...................
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I thank you all. :salute: |
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<O> |
I'
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Guess it's now free for all inquiries: How did you call chavs before there were chavs? Did you go directly from 'yob' to 'chav', or was there an evolution stage between?
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The US...the UN of languages :)
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The history of English in 10 mins: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rexKqvgPVuA
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