View Full Version : Is mrsydney straight or a poof, wooly moof
andrewcraig
March 3rd, 2006, 17:05
I have lurked for years on this and many other boards
This is the first time I have wanted to post
To ask mrs ydney are you a poof.
Why does he not answer the question asked here.
http://www.sawatdee-gay-thailand.com/fo ... php?t=7162 (http://www.sawatdee-gay-thailand.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=7162)
Aunty
March 3rd, 2006, 17:25
he's just a big girl's blouse mate. I wonder if he'll wear a pink thong when he does the chicken-walk on his next visit to Pattaya. Maybe he might wear it on his head?
I wonder if he'll wear a pink thong when he does the chicken-walk on his next visit to Pattaya. Maybe he might wear it on his head?
Who'll know the difference?
Of course he's not a poof!
He'll only go with a real lady...boy.
One with a big...um...handle: just to have something to hold on to: to keep `er from running away?
Or to have some place to sit while he...plays.
Oh, and ladyboys must be strong enough to throw him down the stairs: why his fave hotels have no elevator.
Would someone please send him a list of hotels...hotels with balconies.
as he claims to be an Aussie from Dubbo Dubbo or whatever it's called and as it seems that it is compulsory for all Aussie men to wear frocks at some stage of their life..hetro or homo..he really could be anything.
he's just a big girl's blouse mate.
I'd never heard this expression until I read it here.
Twelve hours later; I'm reading a book, Disorderd Minds (How fitting.) by British Author, Minette Walters, and there it is again.
Please tell me, what the hell does it mean? (Guess: Cockney rhyming slang for, louse?...tit mouse?)
It's a sexist put down. He talks a lot loudly in a macho way, but it's all talk.
I think it's more North of England than Cockney.
Aunty
March 4th, 2006, 15:16
its origins actually, I'd always assumed it was a New Zealand thing (Kiwi slang- we have a lot), but maybe it's not?? Yeah it's a sexist putdown as NorthStar says. Soemone who's all talk and swagger, but underneath it all they're just a big girl.
Now it makes perfect sense...to me...and you all know what that means.
cottmann
March 6th, 2006, 13:44
he's just a big girl's blouse mate.
I'd never heard this expression until I read it here.
Twelve hours later; I'm reading a book, Disorderd Minds (How fitting.) by British Author, Minette Walters, and there it is again.
Please tell me, what the hell does it mean? (Guess: Cockney rhyming slang for, louse?...tit mouse?)
Big girl's blouse. A weakling; an ineffectual person. The expression originated in the north of England in the 1960s and was popularized by television programs such as the North of Britain-based program "Nearest and Dearest" (1968-72), featuring Hylda Baker and Jimmy Jewel as brother and sister Nellie and Eli Pledge who inherit a pickle-bottling factory.
paulg
March 6th, 2006, 17:58
Big girl's blouse. A weakling; an ineffectual person.
The expression originated in the north of England in the 1960s and was popularized by television programs such as the North of Britain-based program "Nearest and Dearest" (1968-72),
featuring Hylda Baker and Jimmy Jewel as brother and sister Nellie and Eli Pledge who inherit a pickle-bottling factory.
I dont think mrs ydneys pickle is worth bottling.
I dont think mrs ydneys pickle is worth bottling.
:laughing3:
That's funny!
:hello1:
:wav:
And where would one find enough more to fill a two-ounce jar!
lonelywombat
March 7th, 2006, 17:45
I dont think mrs ydneys pickle is worth bottling.
:laughing3:
thats funny
:hello1:
:wav:
And where would one find enough more to fill a two-ounce jar!
reminds me of a song of the sixties.
"Little things mean a lot'" in this case not much at all
maybe the seventies song."Is that all there is,"
any more songs????
cottmann
March 8th, 2006, 05:20
I dont think mrs ydneys pickle is worth bottling.
:laughing3:
thats funny
:hello1:
:wav:
And where would one find enough more to fill a two-ounce jar!
reminds me of a song of the sixties.
"Little things mean a lot'" in this case not much at all
maybe the seventies song."Is that all there is,"
any more songs????
What about Frank Sinatra's "I did it my way!"
Of course, if he continues to do the chickenwalk, frighten the natives on Jomtien, etc., maybe "Dead Skunk In The Middle Of The Road"? (Louden Wainwright III)
paulg
March 10th, 2006, 07:47
reminds me of a song of the sixties.
"Little things mean a lot'" in this case not much at all
maybe the seventies song."Is that all there is,"
any more songs????[/quote]
Was searching for the lyrics of Master of the House from Les Miserables, for a concert.
Loved this verse
Thinks he's quite a lover
But there's not much there
What a cruel trick of nature
Landed me with such a louse
God knows how I've lasted
Living with this bastard in the house!
THENARDIER & CHORUS
Master of the house.
MME. THENARDIER
Master and a half!
THENARDIER & CHORUS
Comforter, philosopher
MME. THENARDIER
Ah, don't make me laugh!
THENARDIER & CHORUS
Servant to the poor. Butler to the great.
MME. THENARDIER
Hypocrite and toady and inebriate!
THENARDIER & CHORUS
Everybody bless the landlord!
Everybody bless his spouse!
THENARDIER
Everybody raise a glass
MME. THENARDIER
Raise it up the master's arse.
ALL
Everybody raise a glass to the master of the house!
http://www.stlyrics.com/lyrics/lesmiser ... ehouse.htm (http://www.stlyrics.com/lyrics/lesmiserables/masterofthehouse.htm)
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The one they often play in Pattaya bars: Don't Want No Small-Dick Man.
Mae West in a scene from Myra Breckenridge:
Mae: "Um, you're a big one. How tall are you, Tex?"
Tex: Six-foot, eight-inches, Mam."
Mae: Wee-eell...let's forget about the six-feet--And talk about the eight-inches."
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