madjockmcferson Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 I'm starting college as a full time student in January. The wife is a political science asst prof at Virginia Wesleyan College, Virginia, USA. I'm going back to do Earth and Environmental Sciences (Bachelor of Science).....those skills are really sought after by employers over here, where there is a shortfall of science graduates. I'm doing a couple of classes at the moment and its great to have the chance to do a second degree....and its free cos the wife works here! Link to comment
Bluto10 Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 No chance, I've never once seen it spelled with Z even in literature. youre nae likely to find that word in the beano ro dandy min. Link to comment
Bluto10 Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 Sorry to dissapoint tup - but i didn't use no spellcheck. I just wrote it aff the cuff - as it sounded in ma heid you ken. Your accusations are quite hurtful. But seeing as its yourself i'll assoilzie you of any wrongdoing. bollox fat man. if you wrote it off the cuff, you would have used S. spellchecker pulled you up and you accepted the change to Z. loser. Link to comment
Big Man Posted November 16, 2011 Author Share Posted November 16, 2011 bollox fat man. if you wrote it off the cuff, you would have used S. spellchecker pulled you up and you accepted the change to Z. loser. :hysterical: Link to comment
Redstar Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 I know a few people who studied geology and now have very well paid and shit hot jobs in drilling. Far from a mickey course as zander says. Yeah but ask anybody from a drilling background and they will tell you....Geologist are a bit strange...you can pick out the Geologist in a room of a 100 folk no problem.... they look ....different Link to comment
Bluto10 Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 :hysterical: why else would you spell it with a Z if you british? only foreigners who speak pidgeon english, like the yanks, use a Z Link to comment
Big Man Posted November 16, 2011 Author Share Posted November 16, 2011 why else would you spell it with a Z if you british? only foreigners who speak pidgeon english, like the yanks, use a Z Alright, i'll ride the bus to the next stop... How would you spell agrandizement bluto? Link to comment
tup Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 Alright, i'll ride the bus to the next stop... How would you spell agrandizement bluto? Aggrandisement. However that is a yank term. Link to comment
Big Man Posted November 16, 2011 Author Share Posted November 16, 2011 Aggrandisement. However that is a yank term. Ahh ahh ahh.... I know you can spell tup - lets see what bluto would do? Link to comment
tup Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 I'll plump for: Agrranisdemetn. Link to comment
Bluto10 Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 Ahh ahh ahh.... I know you can spell tup - lets see what bluto would do? numbers are my forte fat man. besids, still wouldnt spell something the yank way.why the fcuk would i do that? Link to comment
Big Man Posted November 16, 2011 Author Share Posted November 16, 2011 numbers are my forte fat man. besids, still wouldnt spell something the yank way.why the fcuk would i do that? Right way, wrong way, yank way - its not important. What is important is that i am - yes? p.s. on a serious note some yank spellings have become accepted and are now considered english language words in common usage. Sulphur Vs. Sulfur for example. Link to comment
tup Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 Eggplant FFS. What is an eggplant? Last I checked eggs came out of a chicken's arse. Could give whole new meaning to the 'what came first' argument, Darwinism hastily revised. It wisna the fucking chicken or the cuntin egg, it was the bastardin eggplant. Damn those yanks. Link to comment
Bluto10 Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 Right way, wrong way, yank way - its not important. What is important is that i am - yes? youre not really right though, thats the point. you arent american so spell it the english english way. Link to comment
Big Man Posted November 16, 2011 Author Share Posted November 16, 2011 youre not really right though, thats the point. you arent american so spell it the english english way. Aye but thats the way the new breed are being taught to spell bluto. What your telling me is entirely analogous to some cunt saying ''why are you using pounds and pence you should say it in shillings and half-pennys''. U ken fit i mean? Link to comment
Bluto10 Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 Aye but thats the way the new breed are being taught to spell bluto. What your telling me is entirely analogous to some cunt saying ''why are you using pounds and pence you should say it in shillings and half-pennys''. U ken fit i mean? no, sorry i'm losyt youre way too brainy for me. Link to comment
Big Man Posted November 16, 2011 Author Share Posted November 16, 2011 no, sorry i'm losyt youre way too brainy for me. I severly doubt that. Can we attribute this to an age difference - how old are you bluto son... Link to comment
Dynamo Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 I severly doubt that. Can we attribute this to an age difference - how old are you bluto son... By looking at his posts you'd probably guess about 13, I reckon he's in his 30's though Link to comment
Bluto10 Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 Cheeky fcuker dynamo! Link to comment
Dynamo Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 Cheeky fcuker dynamo! Ach, it's all in jest! Link to comment
Bluto10 Posted November 16, 2011 Share Posted November 16, 2011 Ach, it's all in jest! I know. Good guess btw! ;-) Link to comment
Henry Posted September 18, 2012 Share Posted September 18, 2012 EDIT: Taken from the Guardian Student slang is a rapidly changing lingo, and you don't want to get caught out during freshers week confusing "hench" with "dench". In the interests of preserving your cool, here's our glossary of well-worn faves. Feel free to add local variants and new witticisms in the comments.BareNot actually anything to do with nudity, bare is an adjective meaning "a lot of", or "obviously". "I can't come to your party, I've got bare work to do." "He bare fancies that girl he's talking to. I really hope he doesn't start telling her about his birthmark in the shape of Italy." Used by: Hipsters, at first; slowly but surely filtering down through the student ranks. BnocAn acronym standing for "big name on campus". A Bnoc (prounounced bee-knock) is a self-proclaimed campus celebrity – often the chair of a society or involved in student politics. The term is often used to mock the subject for their delusions of grandeur, rather than as a compliment. "Sam thinks he's such a Bnoc, but really he's just deputy treasurer of the cheese appreciation society." Used by: The weary friends of CV-obsessives who live in the student's union. ChunderVerb meaning to vomit, usually due to over-consumption of alcohol. The word found fame in the satirical "gap yah" video on YouTube in 2010, but remains in common, if faintly ironical, use. Folklore suggests it may be a contraction of "watch under" and was shouted by seasick passengers on colonial voyages to those down below when vomiting over the edge of the top deck. "I thought that drinking whisky neat would make me look suave like that guy from Mad Men, but now I think I might chunder." Used by: People who think it's funny and original; people who think it's funny to pretend they think it's funny and original. ChundergradChundergrad is a general term for anyone studying a bachelor's degree, regardless of their vomiting history. It is thought to derive from the partying tendencies of those studying for their first degree. "Having a job is seriously going to affect my partying quota. I had better make the most of my years as a chundergrad." Used by: Final-year students who are painfully aware that, in six month's time, vomiting into a pint glass dressed as Santa Claus will no longer be an acceptable form of social interaction. DenchA generic term meaning that something is good. Dench was invented by rapper Lethal Bizzle, and has since become the name of a clothing range which he launched with Arsenal midfielder Emmanuel Frimpong. It is unknown whether the word was inspired by British national treasure Dame Judi Dench, but the two have become inextricably intertwined. Sports broadcaster Talksport even produced T-shirts with Dame Judi's face on them as a hoax (see: lads). "I just found a pound coin on the floor, what a dench trip to Tesco this turned out to be." Used by: Those in the know, slangoisseurs, if you will. (Submitted by @sashwatson on twitter) DesmondNickname for a lower second-class degree (2:2), after the former archbishop Desmond Tutu. "I had better stop watching repeats of Arthur on iPlayer instead of revising, or I'm going to end up with a Desmond." Used by: People who want to make light of the fact that they're cruising for a 2:2. HenchHench is a term denoting a large and muscle-bound individual. More recently, it has been used to describe anything of voluminous size. "Let's go to Perfect Fried Chicken, their portions of chips are hench." Used by: Lads. To describe themselves. JelA contraction of "jealous", first popularised by the cast of The Only Way is Essex but now common in student circles. If the situation calls for it, a student may even pronounce themselves "well jel". "You've finished your dissertation? Jel." Used by: Closet TOWIE fans LadA noun used to describe a student alpha male. Connotations of being deemed a "lad" include, but are not limited to: promiscuity, heavy drinking, sporting prowess, a fondness for protein shakes, love of practical jokes and a general arrogance in most aspects of life. Often used ironically, the term may be compounded to describe someone who has had particular luck or success in a certain field, as in example two below. "Did he just swig some sambuca on the rugby pitch whilst making sexual advances towards multiple women? What a lad." "He got a first? Geography lad." Used by: Like it or not, the lad is a universally recognised phenomenon LibesAffectionate term for the library. "Meet me in the libes, I'm on the second floor." Used by: Frantic essay writers who need to conserve all of their formal language ability for their work. SickHaving replaced the conventional meaning of sick with chunder, students found themselves with a leftover word which they weren't quite sure how to use. That is until one bright spark decided to do something "crazy" and invert it completely: sick now means good or impressive. "The Worcestershire sauce on these beans on toast is sick." Used by: Middle-class rap fans from Hampshire. TCAcronym standing for "tactical chunder", a phenomenon which involves purposefully vomiting during a night out with the aim of being able to drink more afterwards. "I was feeling rough at first, but after my TC I had a brilliant night!" Used by: Only the most dedicated drinkers. (Submitted by @annafost on twitter) ThoraCockney rhyming slang for a third-class honours degree, in honour of the actress Thora Hird. An alternate form of this is a "Douglas", after the former Tory minister Douglas Hurd. "I really need to spend less time googling cute kittens or I'm going to get a Thora." Used by: Those who want to bring a bit of vintage kitsch to the third class. RahA derogatory term for a student who displays a set of physical characteristics and attitudes specific to the upper middle class. The stereotypical rah hails from the home counties, has a penchant for Jack Wills and Hollister clothing, and sports a hairstyle which is deliberately unkempt. A received pronunciation accent is essential, along with a repertoire of tales from their gap year in South East Asia and, if female, a horse. "Fiona is such a rah, I heard she asked her boyfriend to change his name to Jack Wills." Used by: Those who are unappreciative of the rah's unique sense of style. RegretamineA play on the narcotic ketamine, which will no doubt be stolen by the anti-drugs lobby and used in an advert in due course. Regretamine may refer either to the drug itself, or to the adverse effects it produces in an individual. "I woke up to find I'd repeatedly vomited in my laundry basket instead of the toilet. Major regretamine." Used by: Those unfortunate enough to get on the wrong side of ketamine. VacNot the vacuum cleaner your Mum had in the 90s, but a contraction of "vacation" which can refer to any university holiday period. Usage is prevalent among students at Oxford, who also refer to their faculty as the "fac" and a tutorial as a "tut". "I've got a tut, but I'm hoping to leave the fac building early to go home for the vac." Used by: Oxbridge students and the extremely time-poor. I hate students. Link to comment
Bluto10 Posted September 18, 2012 Share Posted September 18, 2012 whe i was a student i was cool. but students these days are just a embarassment. i hate to think what student life is like in the facebook and smartphone era. Link to comment
Henry Posted September 18, 2012 Share Posted September 18, 2012 Anyway cunt in chinos and a rugby top stole my mates drink off the table as we were standing there. I would've thought you would have recognised a kindred spirit Dazzy. 1 Link to comment
Karl Fletcher Posted September 18, 2012 Share Posted September 18, 2012 I hated students even when I was one. Awful people. Link to comment
Sheeptastic Posted September 18, 2012 Share Posted September 18, 2012 I'm in my fourth year at Aberdeen and hate being a student. Walking around campus, I feel so out of place that it makes me angry. Full of utter erseholes. Worked hard at school and got grades but because I hadn't figured out what I wanted to do, I took something that I was good at and enjoyed. As a result, I've wasted four years of my life doing a history degree (now hate the subject) and I'm now looking at having to do a post-grad in order to have the slimmest chance of getting a job. Had a few cracking nights out, stories and laughs over the years but I know I'm going to look back and think 'what was I doing?'. Totally agree with the sentiments that anyone can get in these days. Swear if I see another person walking around in a body-warmer, canterbury trackies and socks/sandals then I'll snap. Link to comment
The Boofon Posted September 18, 2012 Share Posted September 18, 2012 Tommo1903 used to be a student. He isn't a student anymore. Link to comment
dj_bollocks Posted September 18, 2012 Share Posted September 18, 2012 Just popped into Glasgow Uni... I'd fucking love to be a student again... Although admittedly i'd stick out like an old sore thumb.... Link to comment
Foster14 Posted September 18, 2012 Share Posted September 18, 2012 Just popped into Glasgow Uni... I'd fucking love to be a student again... Although admittedly i'd stick out like an old sore thumb.... Jack and Victor got on fine from a social perspective. Link to comment
rgudon Posted September 18, 2012 Share Posted September 18, 2012 I'm in my fourth year at Aberdeen and hate being a student. Walking around campus, I feel so out of place that it makes me angry. Full of utter erseholes. Worked hard at school and got grades but because I hadn't figured out what I wanted to do, I took something that I was good at and enjoyed. As a result, I've wasted four years of my life doing a history degree (now hate the subject) and I'm now looking at having to do a post-grad in order to have the slimmest chance of getting a job. Had a few cracking nights out, stories and laughs over the years but I know I'm going to look back and think 'what was I doing?'. Totally agree with the sentiments that anyone can get in these days. Swear if I see another person walking around in a body-warmer, canterbury trackies and socks/sandals then I'll snap. Do the QS postgrad at RGU, 1 year, you would have to be a complete spanner not to get a job at the end of it. Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now