My Dad used to say 'I'll toss yi around the room 'til I loss ya' and he was a **** (he was a boxer . . . . a real one not a ****ing dog) and he was a 'hit first . . . . talk later' type of blerk Having said that, he never ever laid a hand on any of us . . . . the soft ****e My mam had a slipper, though 'You'll be laughing on the other side of your face' or 'I'll wipe that smile off ya face' or 'I'll give you something to cry about' were all quite 'popular' too Oh, and our porch was a conservatory, parrentlies
My dad used to tell me when a was really young that if the ice cream van played a tune it meant there was nowt left!
My mother would say "look at the clip of you" rather than kip..It's amazing the difference in terms used even in different areas of Sunderland..
My mam once chased me out of the house with that slipper, just because I'd pushed my sister into the fire . . . . she (my mam) fell over and grazed her knees, and I 'got' the slipper after she'd dragged me in . . . . oh how we laughed
The dreaded words. Gan outside and get some coke for the fire.. You ****ing what. It was always hoying down when my turn.
Probably said in every house. Pass the remote i wanna check the news on teletext.. Aye cos the world is about to end since you last looked 10 ****ing minutes ago