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Posted: Mon Oct 30, 2006 11:05 am
Its quite funny to listen to them from a distance. Its always effin this and effin that, we just laugh at them. Seein' as there's usually about double the amount of reasonable people to the Cha(r)vs...
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Posted: Mon Oct 30, 2006 11:07 am
Revolution Is My Name Its quite funny to listen to them from a distance. Its always effin this and effin that, we just laugh at them. Seein' as there's usually about double the amount of reasonable people to the Cha(r)vs... Do you actually pronounce chav, like cha(r)v? I pronounce it ch(ah)v
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Posted: Tue Oct 31, 2006 6:37 am
I favour the latter, chav has a harshness to it that comfortably expresses my feelings on the matter. Charver, or whatever else, is too sedate.
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Posted: Tue Oct 31, 2006 8:34 am
I pronounce it Charv, just becuase thats how we do, the sound of the word doesn't really matter to me. Its the meaning and the utter dislike behind it that matters.
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Posted: Tue Oct 31, 2006 12:12 pm
Invictus_88 I favour the latter, chav has a harshness to it that comfortably expresses my feelings on the matter. Charver, or whatever else, is too sedate. Which is exactly the reason I'll sometimes use 'townie' (when in a particularly soft-hearted (read: wimpish) frame of mind). Alternatively, there's the Bristolian term 'meader', or a 'bemmie' (much less common).
'Chav' is for when I've just had to suffer verbal abuse in the street. mad
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