So Camelot is not big in Oz...?
... I was thinking of Simon & (Art) Garfunkel!
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So Camelot is not big in Oz...?
I know. Art is short for Arthur.... I was thinking of Simon & (Art) Garfunkel!
I know. Art is short for Arthur.
The king in Camelot was...?In which case what's the Camelot connection?
Philip...?What do you call someone that that tops off the tank?
...it must be living in the colonies, @Crossbred! I seem to be as unable to think about King Arthur as "Art" as I am of thinking of the Queen as "Lizzie" or Prince Charles as "Chuckie"...
...but I have no issues thinking of our illustrious(not) PM as ScoMo, SloMo, Scummo, Scovid or any other such nickname Guardian readers like to bestow upon him, and the COALition...
I don’t know anything about politics in Australia, but “SloMo” and “Scummo” made me LOL
“Scummo” would be a good nickname for some of ours too. Lol
Never heard of it. But I have ideas for drag names and quite a few I’ve come up with are not taken or even slightly modified for a performer. I mean how is Hugo Furst not a drag king’s name yet? I got the idea for it after Mimi Imfurst’s name. Also very surprised that Hugh Eego hasn’t been taken in some form.Did you ever read Sandman, @Captain Jigglypuff? Hal was a cool character in that. And a drag queen!
I'm temporarily out of name jokes!
In southern england it was common to be called father if you were a man and there is a name Christmas so in that family he would be known as father christmasI think I mentioned this before, but this name cracks me up. My uncles name is Odd. It`s a common name here. And it is pronounced exactly the same as the English word odd. So he goes to the US and says to people, "Hello, I`m Odd". And the Americans look at him, what..?
I also know two guys named Even, that is also a common name. Odd and Even goes on vacation to the US, it sounds like the start of a joke.
Try England every prime minister has had every name known to man...it must be living in the colonies, @Crossbred! I seem to be as unable to think about King Arthur as "Art" as I am of thinking of the Queen as "Lizzie" or Prince Charles as "Chuckie"...
...but I have no issues thinking of our illustrious(not) PM as ScoMo, SloMo, Scummo, Scovid or any other such nickname Guardian readers like to bestow upon him, and the COALition...
My husband's name is Brett and that is also the German word for "plank" - as I explained to him years and years ago. You'd have to be careful introducing him to Germans. If you say, "Ich bin mit einem Brett verheiratet!" it means I am married to a plank. So I have to say, "Ich bin mit Brett verheiratet!" so it at least sounds like, "I am with Plank married!" which is a bit better...
In southern england it was common to be called father if you were a man and there is a name Christmas so in that family he would be known as father christmas
In Norway you are married to a serving tray...
Brett means tray/serving tray here. It also means
fold, a fold, like a napkin fold.
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That is a fairly common girls' name over here.Once, at the start of a year, I had to really work on keeping a poker face when reading through the class roll to take attendance, and realising the next name on the list was "Bambi"... thankfully this 13-year-old girl was a cheerful character, and after several weeks I knew I could ask, while they were engaged in groupwork and it wasn't going to be the focus of the whole class, "I was wondering if there is a story behind your name?"
To which the girl airily replied, "Yes. My mother and father are stupid."
Brett would like everyone to know that his name really means "the smiter of the foe"...
(Yes, but he probably uses a plank to do so...)