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Nostalgia aint what it used to be... The "I remember when......." section is finally with us - lets reminisce!


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Old 01-08-2006, 17:50   #106
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Re: Soft Mick.

Quote:
Originally Posted by mickmc
Somebody takin' me name in vain again !!!

Its a good job it don't upset me or I'd end up "scriikin"
Nah, wouldn't 'take the mickey' mick.
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Old 01-08-2006, 18:38   #107
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Re: Soft Mick.

"'begger this for a bunch 'o soldiers' seems one vowel had been changed in the first word, but better than swearing I suppose."

Oh oh, is "Bugga em" considered a swear? My mom uses that expression alot!

Brian
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Old 01-08-2006, 19:27   #108
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Re: Soft Mick.

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
QUOTE,,,,Also...She used to talk about "Fred Fernackerpan" (sp?) dunno who he was!.....QUOTE
.................................................. ..................................................
Lady Jane if youve heard of The Haughten Weavers ,they sing a wonderful comic song about Fred Fernackerpan,,,,,,,,,,,,,I think the meaning is meant to be some youth who is very gormless,,,,,,,,
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Old 01-08-2006, 19:37   #109
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Re: Soft Mick.

dad used to grow chrysants......and always used coddy muck......

when I was young I decided to get a crew cut........comment from Mum....."I,ve seen better hair on bacon".......
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Old 17-09-2006, 22:04   #110
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Re: Soft Mick.

"Not sure if we have had 'gormless': clueless, dim-witted. Just read an explanation and comes from 'gome' , circa AD1200 for 'to take heed' Amazing"

That makes sense, I was always told to "tek no gorm" of people trying to take the mick (soft or otherwise)
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Old 17-09-2006, 22:09   #111
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Red face Re: Soft Mick.

Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnW
I always thought that 'mard' meant soft, as in a wimp. eg. "Don't be so damn mard, what ya cryin' for?

Another one my mother used to come out with was: "You're as soft as my pocket." meaning mard as I described above.

Some more:
If you were doing something and making a bad job of it my father would say; "You shape like John Smith" or "You're not fit to wrap toffee up at Tommy Hodsons"
I always thought that it was "marred" not "mard", meaning spoiled. One of my mum's was/is "He's marred while he stinks"- usually one of my mates who she considered especially spoilt
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Old 04-03-2007, 01:40   #112
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Re: Soft Mick.

Not sure if this is the right thread, but who else says 'skrike', or however it's written, meaning cry?

I was going to post in another thread I was having 'a good skrike', as it's a word we use in our family, but then I thought perhaps no one else uses it, or wouldn't inderstand what I meant.
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Old 04-03-2007, 01:42   #113
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Re: Soft Mick.

Yep, we use it - apart from Busman. He may not have heard it yet.
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Old 04-03-2007, 01:55   #114
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Re: Soft Mick.

Quote:
Originally Posted by WillowTheWhisp View Post
Yep, we use it - apart from Busman. He may not have heard it yet.
Thanks for confirming it is indeed a real, used word. I've also just found it listed on this Lancashire dialect site, as well as a few other crackers. Like 'cack handed'. That always makes me smile, wondering about it's origins, or perhaps it's just I'm mucky mind, and it's nothing at all to do with visiting the privvy.


http://www.manchester2002-uk.com/lan...-dialects.html
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Old 04-03-2007, 01:56   #115
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Re: Soft Mick.

Quote:
Originally Posted by garinda View Post
I was going to post in another thread I was having 'a good skrike'
I used to, my family always used it "stop skriking!" Now I just say I was having a girly moment .... my last girly moment was because my pc died and I lost all my music
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Old 04-03-2007, 06:09   #116
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Re: Soft Mick.

don't know if i've come into this too late but i found this:

soft mick
Encyclopedia : S : SO : SOF : soft mick


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Soft Mick is a name used to describe an extravagance in East Lancashire and West Yorkshire

The phrase to have more than Soft Mick means to posess an extravagant quantity of that thing.

Soft Mick is seemingly used more in Accrington in conjunction with shoes "More shoes than Soft Mick" Leading some to believe that Soft Mick may have been a Irish shoe peddler working around Accrington, East Lancs, in the early 1900s

dunno if it helps?


*thinkin about it i used to know a guy from sheffield way who used the phrase "am stood ere lik soft mick"*
along the lines of stood ere like cheese at fourpence(just another variation i suppose)

Last edited by jedimaster; 04-03-2007 at 06:14.
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Old 04-03-2007, 13:10   #117
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Re: Soft Mick.

Another one I've heard used (thanks Mum,) along the lines of cheese at fourpence, is 'stood/stuck here like a wet lettuce'.
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Old 04-03-2007, 14:15   #118
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Re: Soft Mick.

Quote:
Originally Posted by garinda View Post
'stood/stuck here like a wet lettuce'.
Very common in Lancs. that one Garinda .. always thought that a wet lettuce would be fresher .

This is one form of language ... similies (sp) ? I find myself saying things like this, starting with summat and then petering out because I can never think quick enough of what the first bit is like ... Hope ya' ged it.

If you listen to Corrie the writers give characters like Eileen some wonderful ones ... try to remember them, but never can.

'Not on your Nellie' confused me .. just wondered where my Nellie was ?
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Old 04-03-2007, 14:19   #119
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Re: Soft Mick.

Quote:
Originally Posted by katex View Post
'Not on your Nellie' confused me .. just wondered where my Nellie was ?
Love it.

It's so easy to forget these phrases, and they may well die out in the future, but they are fascinating.

Who was Nellie, and why on earth would people go on her?
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Old 04-03-2007, 14:24   #120
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Re: Soft Mick.

Quote:
Originally Posted by garinda View Post

Who was Nellie, and why on earth would people go on her?
Just looked this up Garinda (never gonna' get me ironing done at this rate!).

Seems should really be 'Not on your Nellie Duff' rhyming slang to 'not on your puff' (not personal ... tee hee), meaning 'not on your life' Still no explanation though to the personage of Nellie Duff, just made up I guess as most rhyming slang.
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