I am going to try to get back on track here any minute now....but, in the meantime, and via Language Log, here is Peter Kay.
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They do what they do.
Thinking about schools and peers and parent-child attachments....I came across one of my favorite posts .
5 comments:
This is funny, but there's a British vs. American English problem. I doubt there's such a thing as an American popular song that even uses the word "vicar". Similarly, an American would never hear "our soul" as "****hole".
Also, there's an American song that I for years misheard as a complaint about a "medieval woman". It's by Electric Light Orchestra.
Very funny!
SusanS
I had a hard time with the first few minutes because I didn't know the original songs. Then I quit listening.
But my mother-in-law hears an AC/DC song lyrics as "dirty jeans, tie-dyed cheap."
Now I do too :-)
-Mark Roulo
Peter Kay speaks non-standard English; he uses "were" for "was", as in, "I thought it were 'birdseed'"! I don't know what his dialect is.
Part of the "vicar" problem is that in Black English, a short "i" is used where White English uses a short "e", so, for instance, "pen" is pronounced like "pin". That's how "record" can be heard as "vicar".
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