I agree, pure Goon Show. To be pedantic, the correct name is The Dreaded Lurgi. (I'd be very surprised if Spike Milligan wasn't involved somewhere).Nico. Interestingly it's not certain where the word lurgi actually comes from but one theory:
"1950s (originally spelled lurgi): used in the British radio series The Goon Show and probably invented by its writers, though possibly from an English dialect term"
My vote goes to the Goon Show version! Viv.
"Mardy" I'd heard before but I don't think I ever heard the expression "meither" till I came to live in this neck of the woods." Oh do stop mithering"
"He's right mardy today"
I've used both these sayings down here in the south and no-one understands 'mithering' or 'mardy'. Do people still say these in the Midlands? Or are they words which are disappearing from use? Viv.
Nan used to say stop mithering me, mither rhyming with eye ther, and I was mardy, some rough kids at school said mardy .... and also lard .... if you were considered fat or lazy. Nan also said she was flummoxed. If some was said how are you she would answer"oh fair to middlin;" my mate's Dublinn Gran would say she was malojan, and would sing "skinny malig malojan legs," and if she was tired she could collopse!" Oh do stop mithering"
"He's right mardy today"
I've used both these sayings down here in the south and no-one understands 'mithering' or 'mardy'. Do people still say these in the Midlands? Or are they words which are disappearing from use? Viv.
I can't get over your 2 hairnets Baz is that Brummie?"Mardy" I'd heard before but I don't think I ever heard the expression "meither" till I came to live in this neck of the woods.
Well I heard it from a Smethwick bloke I knew, in The Queen's Own Hussars and he was as "Brummy" as they come.I can't get over your 2 hairnets Baz is that Brummie?
Dad once said he used to say yang, ptang, kipperbang at school. Mum gave him a look and said they were a funny lot at his school (a Cov Grammar) They also said hip bar hip bar mee mee mee! ??? A slightly older friend said to me lately, infra dig! I had a writer friend now almost 90 use that in something she wrote. Is that 60's for hip?
infra-dig from the latin,infra dignatem,beneath ones dignity.Yes, I think it is.
I've seen it used somewhere or was it mentioned in a song.......?!
Yanp Ptang Kipperbang was the title of a TV drama and something about Danny Blanchflower comes to mind. That is what prompted my dad to tell us he used to say it at School.infra-dig from the latin,infra dignatem,beneath ones dignity.
yang,ptang,etc was the title of a film.
keegs