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Actually, the word soccer originated in Britain. There were several different sports already called football being played, from Rugby to the Eton Wall Game. The name comes from the letters âsocâ in âAssociation Football.â
Then thereâs âfooty.â And Aussie Rules Football, which is just the kind of game youâd expect a bunch of ex-prisoners to create. (âOh, a beautiful right to the jaw!â)
Yes, Sheik, FĂTBOL, In 1968 I was on a team (the only gringo) that whupped a Norwegian team 17-2. You played with our bunch only if you hablaba. VIVA EEUU!
I donât know why theyâre trying to get the World Cup here. Like the Olympics itâs an expensive and destructive event, but Iâm not a sports fan.
From Wikipedia:The vuvuzela, sometimes called a âlepatataâ (its Setswana name) or a stadium horn, is a blowing horn approximately 1 m (3 ft 3 in) in length. It is commonly blown by fans at football matches in South Africa. The instrument requires some lip and lung strength to blow and emits a loud monotone (Bâ). A similar instrument (known as corneta in Brazil and other Latin American countries) is used by football fans in South America. Vuvuzelas have been controversial. They have been associated with noise-induced permanent hearing loss,[4] cited as a possible safety risk when spectators cannot hear evacuation announcements,[5] and potentially spread colds and flu viruses on a greater scale than coughing or shouting. Commentators have described the sound as âannoyingâ and compared it with âa stampede of noisy elephants,â âa deafening swarm of locusts,â[9] âa goat on the way to slaughterâ and âa giant hive full of very angry bees.â
The sound level of the instrument has been measured at 127 decibels contributing to matches with dangerously high sound pressure levels for unprotected ears.
There are those oafs who think it somehow adds to the fun to deafen and annoy people - oh yes, and by sickening them in greater numbers??
Coyoty Premium Member over 14 years ago
No, the game is âsoccerâ, not âsock âerâ!
Hey⊠No, put the vuvuzela down. Put it down! Donât you dareâŠ
ksoskins over 14 years ago
Itâs fĂștbol, Gringos! Those Yankees tied your team, Queen. If Tim Howard were English, heâd have been knighted by now.
MorganZ over 14 years ago
Maybe if Americans had vuvuzelas, weâd be more enthusiastic about the game. They beat air horns.
Edcole1961 over 14 years ago
Actually, the word soccer originated in Britain. There were several different sports already called football being played, from Rugby to the Eton Wall Game. The name comes from the letters âsocâ in âAssociation Football.â
Motivemagus over 14 years ago
Then thereâs âfooty.â And Aussie Rules Football, which is just the kind of game youâd expect a bunch of ex-prisoners to create. (âOh, a beautiful right to the jaw!â)
nameless_clock over 14 years ago
Sometime, Somewhere, when you least expect itâŠâŠâŠâŠâŠ. MONDAY STRIKES!!!!!
Yukoneric over 14 years ago
Yes, Sheik, FĂTBOL, In 1968 I was on a team (the only gringo) that whupped a Norwegian team 17-2. You played with our bunch only if you hablaba. VIVA EEUU!
cdward over 14 years ago
Sheâd be more enthusiastic if England had won outright.
vldazzle over 14 years ago
I donât know why theyâre trying to get the World Cup here. Like the Olympics itâs an expensive and destructive event, but Iâm not a sports fan.
Spyderred over 14 years ago
From Wikipedia:The vuvuzela, sometimes called a âlepatataâ (its Setswana name) or a stadium horn, is a blowing horn approximately 1 m (3 ft 3 in) in length. It is commonly blown by fans at football matches in South Africa. The instrument requires some lip and lung strength to blow and emits a loud monotone (Bâ). A similar instrument (known as corneta in Brazil and other Latin American countries) is used by football fans in South America. Vuvuzelas have been controversial. They have been associated with noise-induced permanent hearing loss,[4] cited as a possible safety risk when spectators cannot hear evacuation announcements,[5] and potentially spread colds and flu viruses on a greater scale than coughing or shouting. Commentators have described the sound as âannoyingâ and compared it with âa stampede of noisy elephants,â âa deafening swarm of locusts,â[9] âa goat on the way to slaughterâ and âa giant hive full of very angry bees.â The sound level of the instrument has been measured at 127 decibels contributing to matches with dangerously high sound pressure levels for unprotected ears.
There are those oafs who think it somehow adds to the fun to deafen and annoy people - oh yes, and by sickening them in greater numbers??
mdupske over 14 years ago
Those are the same people who still try to start the wave at every baseball game I go to.
Possum Pete over 14 years ago
(Bâ)
Is that the âBrown Noteâ?
Coyoty Premium Member over 14 years ago
But my joke doesnât work with âfĂștbolâ.