Inter Me Nan
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 2 Aug 2012
- Messages
- 11,159
Jesus, the state of Hamann... The bloke has aged like milk...
Scouse ****.
Jesus, the state of Hamann... The bloke has aged like milk...
Scouse DRUNKEN ****.
They were like this last time we got charged mateSky are fucking loving all this shit. Just happened to switch over and Tariq Panja is on acting like all his birthday's and Christmas' have come in one go.
Can you get anybody so bitter to commentate on our games?Carragher is a proper mardarse. Saying that about erling was an absolute belter, he couldn't have come across more bitter, was priceless him saying that.
Just shows you how low these anti city twats scrape the barrel when they talk about us. Neville is so giddy that they're breathing down our necks, that little prick is showing his true colours too.
We'll be laughing come the end of the season.
More brand exposure for the PL, one could almost conclude that there’s an ‘Agenda’ in all this.Sky are fucking loving all this shit. Just happened to switch over and Tariq Panja is on acting like all his birthday's and Christmas' have come in one go.
He is a fucking twat.Sky are fucking loving all this shit. Just happened to switch over and Tariq Panja is on acting like all his birthday's and Christmas' have come in one go.
Who is he? Never heard of him.He is a fucking twat.
From the New York timesWho is he? Never heard of him.
A rag "journalist"Who is he? Never heard of him.
He hates City. You could hear the glee in his interview. The smug bastard.Who is he? Never heard of him.
He's one orrible hairy little shit.I never normally respond in Twitter, but Richard Keys has provoked a reaction tonight!
What have we ever done to him?
Taking the piss, saying 'one thing they can't take away from them, their Champions League trophies'!
He really is a pathetic excuse for a pundit/commentator!
I’m convincedI agree that "get off" is far cleaner and (for want of a more concise expression) better English but... and this is just a hunch of my own but "get off of" might be older than you think.
Norman French had a huge influence on how the English speak er, English.
"To get off" [insert Sid James gif here, if you like] in French is all one word "descendre".
So you'd say ''descendre du l'autobus" (I suppose they were probably getting off a horse back then but bear with me).
The thing is, I think it's that du (from) in the above sentence that's indirectly at work in this case. When French speakers (who would have been more dominant in certain parts of the country) moved towards speaking English for commercial and cultural (and not wanting to get your head chopped off) reasons, they would have been conditioned to placing an extra word in between "off" and "bus". "Off from the bus" just doesn't work, so they might have gone with "off of the bus" instead?
All this is just the theory of a man with a sick head on a Sunday morning. I'm no Suzie Dent and I could be entirely wrong but it makes sense in my tiny suffering little brain.
Another see you next Tuesday.I never normally respond on Twitter, but Richard Keys has provoked a reaction tonight!
What have we ever done to him?
Taking the piss, saying 'one thing they can't take away from them, their Champions League trophies'!
He really is a pathetic excuse for a pundit/commentator!
Every cloud eh.On the plus side, we got a mention on North West Tonight for once!