Daddy Pig is a bit old. I prefer George, after all the program's are only 5 minutes so you have to be quick
Really? Is it in the dictionary then? I thought it was just a slang term and that either spelling was perfectly acceptable. You learn something every day on this thread from our cerebral scouse friends! Dear.
Please point out any grammatical and spelling errors for me to correct then dearie. It's important that you understand what's being posted.
Because I don't use google as my information centre. Thanks anyway. I think a slang term such as (k)nobhead probably doesn't sit in the Oxford dictionary but if I'm wrong then I accept that and will spell it correctly in future. Is smegpicker on the same reference page as you found the correct way to spell nobhead? Jonesy, if you you want to say people are gay because they watch Strictly and lower it to such a level then be prepared to be shot at. Ok? it's meant to be a banter thread. For the record though, I think deary should have a Y at the end, not IE. TT, by keeping on saying I'm thick does not make it so. Is that the best you can do as you keep on repeating it? Try something new or is thinking for yourself a bit tough? You don't need to do too much of that when you're at the burger hot plate now do you?
I don't have a reference library available to me here at the orifice. I would imagine that 'dickhead' probably appears in the Oxford as it's in very broad usage. Knobhead is a lttle more parochial, so it may or may nor appear. Smegpicker certainly won't as I just made that one up. It would be great if it did though. Why do people that work in burger joints get so much stick? I don't know as I never go in them.
Maybe nobhead without the k is the Welsh version and I've picked it up? I take it smegpicker isn't a compliment then? Cheers.
RR. Both dickhead and knobhead appear in the OED on-line. A stupid, irritating or despicable person. Nobhead, on the other hand, does not. QED
The urban dictionary suggests my name is as follows: Rob = Random occurring boner http://www.urbandictionary.com/names.php?names=rob
That's an interesting sentence. How many people use 'spelt' instead of 'spelled'? I personally prefer the latter, also learned rather than learnt, but is there a correct way? Or is it just preference, like leaving the k out of nobhead?