Just Need to Wank

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  • momof3boys
    momof3boys Member Posts: 896
    edited May 2012

    I think you should've told that dentist when he asked about your prognosis, "well, it's obviously pretty good because otherwise I wouldn't be spending my last days bothering to get my teeth cleaned!"

  • momof3boys
    momof3boys Member Posts: 896
    edited May 2012

    Lol just read all of your posts... You are all very bad girls! Hehehe

  • Myleftboob
    Myleftboob Member Posts: 1,469
    edited May 2012

    Wank has the same meaning in Canada as in Britain.  I just had to click and read on LOL!  Sorry!

  • Stormynyte
    Stormynyte Member Posts: 650
    edited May 2012

     So sorry you had to deal with that. I hate when people grill me about anything, but especially this crap. I try by best not to think about it and that sure doesn't help.

    Re the topic title...

    I worked for a guy from England a few years ago. We also had a guy from China, one from India, another from Australia and a lady from I believe Germany.

    We were all talking about how we all used words that meant nothing or something totally different to the others in the group. We were explaining this word means that when I use it and means this when so and so uses it.

    I had heard the term wanker, never from my boss, but somewhere, and asked him what it meant in front of the whole group. It was the one and only time I ever seen the man speechless. After he regained his composure his reply was "Oh my god! I can't tell you that!"

  • lrr4993
    lrr4993 Member Posts: 937
    edited May 2012

    This all reminds me of a man I worked for years ago right after getting out of college.  He was an older and very distinguished southern gentlemen - would NEVER say anything offensive.  He and a younger female executive were carrying on one day joking around with each other.  The woman said something smart ass to him.  He responded - and I know he meant it in good humor -  "Laura, you are such a twat."  TWAT.  He meant TWIT.  Laura had the most shocked look on her face.  The rest of us in the room just cracked up.  The man was all confused, at which point my good friend went up to him and whispered in his ear what a twat is - he turned beet red.  I felt so bad for him.  But it was so damn funny.

  • Mardibra
    Mardibra Member Posts: 1,111
    edited May 2012

    A few years ago I was hosting a customer from the midwest.  Somehow we got on the topic of ice cream and I told him I liked my ice cream with jimmies (chocolate sprinkles here in New England).  They guy turned 5 shades of red....evidently in the midwest, jimmies are condoms!  Oops!

  • gillyone
    gillyone Member Posts: 1,727
    edited May 2012

    Like rubbers - we Brits say that for the eraser at the end of your pencil. I've just realized how funny THAT is!!!

  • nora_az
    nora_az Member Posts: 720
    edited May 2012

    I have a friend who moved her family here from England. Her 8 year old son was in class one day, made a mistake on his paper and asked the teacher for a rubber because he didn't have one. She nearly passed out!

  • DCMom
    DCMom Member Posts: 624
    edited May 2012

    And let me add I never thought twice about saying shake your poon tang and then my husband corrected me after I said it to my 9 year old daughter.  I was quite embarassed.  In addition we spent years in Italy raising our glasses and saying "chin chin" which in Japanese is slang for male genitalia (or so I was told)  Never did chin chin again without a slight smirk.

    I have only ever heard teenagers express distrespect for a friend as "he is such a wanker" .  I assumed it was more along the lines of a goober

    but as they say "now I know the rest of the story".Embarassed

  • Trisha-Anne
    Trisha-Anne Member Posts: 2,112
    edited May 2012

    In Australia it means the same as in Britain and not usually used in polite conversation.  A "wanker" here is someone who is stupid, idiotic, a jerk.  Usually only applies to men lol and interstingly is used more often than wank.

    I must admit the title really caught my eye too, and have had a laugh.  Elizabeth - you've certainly taken a lot of minds off bc today!

  • MaryNY
    MaryNY Member Posts: 1,584
    edited May 2012

    I had an elderly cousin in Boston who was quite gentile. I never fell off my seat when I heard her say someone was so disorganized/incompetent "that she would bollocks up a one-car funeral." Again not a word that would be used in polite conversation in the UK or Ireland. But I have since seen it used in print here in the US to mean to muddle or botch something.

  • sbelizabeth
    sbelizabeth Member Posts: 2,889
    edited May 2012

    My goodness.  I certainly didn't mean to light this firecracker!  Where I come from, "wank" means "complain."  You learn something new every day, I suppose.

    Glad to be a source of comic relief!

  • Jennt28
    Jennt28 Member Posts: 2,021
    edited May 2012

    Oh Elizabeth, I was so scared to click in here because of that word - did think it was an unusual thing to announce to the world... :-0.



    I would just have stated that I was not comfortable sharing right now... I quite often find myself saying to people "enough about me, how are you doing?"



    Jenn

  • IndigoMont11
    IndigoMont11 Member Posts: 1,095
    edited May 2012

    Elizabeth, glad you checked back in! I haven't even had the prognosis discussion with my MO; although he was positive iwith me about everything, he didn't say and I didn't ask. I never used to be very outspoken but in recent times I'm changing my ways. If anyone, let alone someone who's not a particular friend, were to ask me that I would make sure I knew what they were asking, and then tell them I really don't appreciate that question.



    I haven't had too many questions yet or strange looks generally, but now that I'm losing my hair, I'm sure that's about to change.



    All the best - and while I know it wasn't intentional, the reactions to the thread title really did give me my daily dose of lol - and I learned a few things too.

  • Sommer43
    Sommer43 Member Posts: 600
    edited May 2012

    Oh Elizabeth, it was the best! 

    Just to see it written up there, like that, for a Brit, or Aussie or Canadian, it was hilarious, am pleased you took it all in good fun.  You certainly brightened up my evening! 

    You "wank" away, you have every right to. 

  • Joanne_53
    Joanne_53 Member Posts: 1,477
    edited May 2012

    Good question -- but having the thread with that name sure got us to read it .... lol

    It means the same thing in Canada that it does in the UK so ....

    She must have meant RANT !!! and yes where did she go ???

  • Joanne_53
    Joanne_53 Member Posts: 1,477
    edited May 2012

    Good question -- but having the thread with that name sure got us to read it .... lol

    It means the same thing in Canada that it does in the UK so ....

    She must have meant RANT !!! and yes where did she go ???

  • aussie12
    aussie12 Member Posts: 462
    edited May 2012

    Hi all

    Here in Australia "He's a wanker" is used all the time, it means he's an idiot, stupid, up himself etc. They use it on tv and everywhere, we Aussies don't really get offended by that saying.

    Saying wank is a bit different though, I think that offends people??

    When I saw that title I just had to look!!!

  • Sommer43
    Sommer43 Member Posts: 600
    edited May 2012

    On another board, I post on, they have competitions for best thread, best titled thread, well even if no competition here, this thread title gets my vote. 

  • Celtic_Spirit
    Celtic_Spirit Member Posts: 748
    edited May 2012

    Yeh, that title caught my eye, too! I'm not a Brit, but I've spent enough time there and in New Zealand to know the "other" meaning of that word! And I've been known to refer to obnoxious people locally as "wankers" because they haven't a clue that they've just been insulted!

    To answer your question, whether people see you as a "huge ball of breast cancer" depends a lot on you. If you talk about it, if you go without a wig, then people are going to feel free to quiz you. I didn't want to be "cancer girl," so I kept the circle very small and wore a wig. I did tell my dentist and hygienist about my bc because I needed to let them know I was on Zometa.Fortunately, their reaction was akin to someone telling them they had a sprained ankle, and no big deal was made.

    BTW, if you're ever in England and someone tells you that a pub has "good crack," they're not telling you where to get drugs. "Crack" means good conversation, good beer, good all-around atmosphere.

    I had a friend from England who was a smoker who came to visit a while back. I told him not to go into the neighborhood convenience store and ask for "fags," especially since there was a gay bar just around the corner!

  • pupmom
    pupmom Member Posts: 5,068
    edited May 2012

    LOL, Celtic Spirit! Got to remember all these tidbits about the "locals' " dialogue. Is there an "Urban Dictionary" for the world?

  • cooka
    cooka Member Posts: 278
    edited May 2012

    Yes Somer, I agree this is an A1 title. I say we make sure it stays alive...every time I see it I giggle...and I am not generally a giggler:)

  • Mardibra
    Mardibra Member Posts: 1,111
    edited May 2012

    I'm still laughing. Too funny.

  • Sommer43
    Sommer43 Member Posts: 600
    edited May 2012

    Oh it is still tickling me too. 

    There are so many language differences between American English and British English.  I worked for an American school, and the students would be ribbing me over the things I said. 

    The fags one is a good one.  Plus, I was in a bar in Texas once, and a bloke said to me, "I would love to smack your fanny" 

    Fanny here, is a colloquialism for vagina.  I went all Virgin Mary about it.   

  • IndigoMont11
    IndigoMont11 Member Posts: 1,095
    edited May 2012

    To all you Brits out there - do people still call women "birds?"  (as some would say, in a mildly deprocating way here - "broads" or "chicks"?).  Or is that totally 1960s-'70s?

  • IndigoMont11
    IndigoMont11 Member Posts: 1,095
    edited May 2012
    I also remember, years ago, we had diversity training on my job and learned that a lot of commonly used phrases here are actually quite insulting.  For example, I was enlightened to find out that calling a woman a "gal" is actually an insult, because back in the middle ages or Renaissance or something, it was short for "gallivanting whore!"  Frankly, speaking as a woman myself, I've never had any issue with someone calling me a gal - well, someone who I knew in a casual way, anyway - and I'd much prefer that to being called a "broad"!  Smile
  • gillyone
    gillyone Member Posts: 1,727
    edited May 2012

    I always thought "gal" was just a form of "girl". Oh well. Indigo - I'm not sure about whether "birds" is still used. I've been here too long!!

  • carberry
    carberry Member Posts: 1,153
    edited May 2012

    This thread really caught my eye!!!  At first I thought it was a typo, then thought well.....it would make sense if it was a guy saying that, however very inappropriate.  the stories that have followed are hilarious, and now I have had my good laugh for the evening.

    I am aware though of all of the insensitivities in people.  My dearest girlfriend, with a heart of gold, is always asking me to talk to someone she knows that has just been diagnosed with some sort of cancer (all kinds)   In her words "because I have been through it, and I am a nurse" Ha  I guess that makes me the spokesperson for all cancers great and small.  Most of the time I dont even know these people and I imagine the last thing they want is me giving them advice and support. i just nod my head and tell her I will offer support if the person asks. BTW  I was a adolescent psych nurse.

    thanks for the fun ladies!!

  • Mardibra
    Mardibra Member Posts: 1,111
    edited May 2012

    My parents are from Ireland and as a kid I remember my Dad saying (in front of my friends) that he needed to get his rubber dollies (sneakers). One of my friends asked me "your Dad plays with dolls?".

  • Isabella4
    Isabella4 Member Posts: 2,166
    edited May 2012

     OMG... I thought it was a spammer !!!!!

    I too am howling with laughter .

    Isabella.

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