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The UK has some strange fascination with the word āpantsā; it has some sensual, provocative implication. A couple from Scotland was visiting us in Canada when we passed a clothing store called Pantorama. They immediately began giggling like children; and we had to stop while they took selfies in front of the PANTORAMA sign.
Had an English roommate once back east. A mate of his came to town for a while. They were in a mall and he saw a hair salon and decided he needed a haircut. They went in and the girl behind the counter asked what she could do for him and he said, āIād like a haircut and a bl@w j@bā. This took the girl by surprise, of course, until my roommate spoke up and said, āHe means blow dry.ā (Forgive the minor censure.)
PULL THE OTHER ONE (ITāS GOT BELLS ON!) Exclam. You are joking arenāt you? Used to express a suspicion that one is being tricked or teased. E.g.āI drove round the corner and there was a pink elephant in the middle of the road.ā āYeah sure, pull the other one!ā {Informal}PANTS! Noun/Adj. Nonsense, rubbish, bad. From the standard British English of pants, meaning underwear; also a variation on āknickersā. E.g.āThe first half was pants but I stayed until the end and it was actually a great film.ā [1990s]Exclam. An exclamation of annoyance or frustration. From the noun, (above).
DennisinSeattle about 2 years ago
Help!
Sanspareil about 2 years ago
The Manc who knew too much could have been the snitch on Puss in Boots!
Jayalexander about 2 years ago
Psycho is short for cat.
iggyman about 2 years ago
āFrenzyā is more like it!
Geophyzz about 2 years ago
The UK has some strange fascination with the word āpantsā; it has some sensual, provocative implication. A couple from Scotland was visiting us in Canada when we passed a clothing store called Pantorama. They immediately began giggling like children; and we had to stop while they took selfies in front of the PANTORAMA sign.
Chithing about 2 years ago
I would have thought that saying āknickersā would have been more British than pants, as in āall fur coat, no knickers.ā
WaitingMan about 2 years ago
The Mancunian Candidate?
mfrasca about 2 years ago
The Laddy Vanishes.
dsatvoinde Premium Member about 2 years ago
Had an English roommate once back east. A mate of his came to town for a while. They were in a mall and he saw a hair salon and decided he needed a haircut. They went in and the girl behind the counter asked what she could do for him and he said, āIād like a haircut and a bl@w j@bā. This took the girl by surprise, of course, until my roommate spoke up and said, āHe means blow dry.ā (Forgive the minor censure.)
The Sinistral Bassist Premium Member about 2 years ago
Hitch had a silent film called The Manxman
mistercatworks about 2 years ago
In the UK, āpantsā is underwear, not trousers. It is also used generally as a derogatory term.
Ryan Plut about 2 years ago
PULL THE OTHER ONE (ITāS GOT BELLS ON!) Exclam. You are joking arenāt you? Used to express a suspicion that one is being tricked or teased. E.g.āI drove round the corner and there was a pink elephant in the middle of the road.ā āYeah sure, pull the other one!ā {Informal}PANTS! Noun/Adj. Nonsense, rubbish, bad. From the standard British English of pants, meaning underwear; also a variation on āknickersā. E.g.āThe first half was pants but I stayed until the end and it was actually a great film.ā [1990s]Exclam. An exclamation of annoyance or frustration. From the noun, (above).
Johnny Q Premium Member about 2 years ago
Hitch also had Irish rootsā¦
Scoutmaster77 about 2 years ago
Pants?
JP Steve Premium Member about 2 years ago
And āitās got bells onā comes from Morris dancingā¦
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ionTgFxPgg
I'm Sad about 2 years ago
Mac Manc McManx ā āA Manchester to Broadway play in three actsā¦ā Iād pay to see thatā¦