Spunk is excellent for cleaning leather. Particularly shoes. I found out this gem of information after getting a **** aff a burd oot the back of ma local discotheque circa 1980. Ma shoes looked amazing afterwards.
My understanding of 'Hun' originated from the shipyards,German owners only employed Protestants and invariably associated themselves with Rangers but the team may have come from the docks like a lot of teams not just in Britain but all over Europe.A lot of teams came from industry and was a way of giving the workers something back and a day out,similar to today when workers from McDonalds,Wonga,Oxfam,Leaflet -R-Us etc swap shifts to go and watch the team that used to be Rangers in whatever guise they are this year.
I've heard all the supposed reasons Mick but I recall Rangers fans at games singing "Go home ya Huns" to Celtic fans, over the years both sets of fans have used it, only in the last 30 years or so (I think) has Hun come to mean Rangers Fan. As far as I'm aware it means Protestant in NI, but it's never meant Prod to me nor I suspect, the vast majority of Celtic fans.
Who gives a flying a ****. If you are offended by a word then you're the ****iest ***** to end all ****y *****s
I heard my mates from Glasgow and Belfast using it but as a Dub meant nothing to me and you would never hear it in Dublin and as JC says harmless banter.
For the record, I have never tasted my spunk or anyone else's for that matter. Only H*n Celtic fans do that.