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OneOfOne
29-01-2007, 08:26 AM
Morning guys,

On Australia Day 2007 I started a linguistic experiment. I have been thinking that at some time, someone said "cool" for the first time...and it caught on. Those of us lucky, or unlucky, enough to have teenagers will have heard "sweet". The list of these words is probably infinite if you had the time to research it.

I have therefore started a little experiment. I am going to try to say "smooth" every time someone says something where you could normally reply with "cool" or "sweet". I will be interested to see how long before a total stranger replies with MY PHRASE. I will have left my mark on our language.

Please feel free to try to propagate "the word" and take part in my little experiment. Our teenage daughter thinks it is pretty dumb, maybe even embarassing...but so is everything we do anyway, and more so many of the things she does!

leon
29-01-2007, 08:55 AM
Hi 1 of 1,

Funny that you brought that up, i'm trying to get people to say 2007, as Twenty 0 seven, not 2 thousand and seven. Before the year 2000, we all said 1999, not one thousand, nine hundred and 99

Cheers leon

[1ponders]
29-01-2007, 09:53 AM
Sweet, but dad's aren't meant to be kewl. ;)

Dennis
29-01-2007, 10:16 AM
"Smooth" was big at my school in the UK back in the 60's and 70's in a context similar to "neat", "cool" and "rad" (radical).

Cheers

Dennis

Dujon
29-01-2007, 10:28 AM
[OoO] That's cool, dude, almost as good as a glassy. *cue some Atlantics music*

[leon] I'm not sure what's going on. 1907 or 1807 were always 'nineteen seven' or 'eighteen seven' to me. The current year becomes 'twenty seven'.

Of course, when I'm a hundred years old, I'll refer to 2007 as being "back in '07" . . . just as I do now when I say "back in '45" or suchlike.

Confusing? Not really.

ving
29-01-2007, 10:50 AM
@-}}---

the weirdness never ceases... O_o

all yuor sayings are belong to us!
:P

theres always in words, and tehy usually come from someone covering up a mistake... prolly... :shrug:

OneOfOne
29-01-2007, 12:32 PM
I would say

"1901" as nineteen o one etc up to 1909, nineteen hundred and one is just not smooth....
"1910" as nineteen ten etc up to 1999
"2000" was two thousand

funny that "2001" was two thousand and one and not twenty o one!

I am waiting to see if people use twenty ten (I will be) or will continue to use two thousand and ten.

OneOfOne
29-01-2007, 12:36 PM
Hmmm....I am afraid I don't think it made it to Oz back then, but I can't actually remember what the "in" words were! At least I am not old enough to remember "the cat's meow"!

If "smooth" catches on (again?), just remember you heard it first on IceInSpace, and we have the thread to prove it!

cahullian
29-01-2007, 12:51 PM
I have three teenagers at home so I will use smooth with them and see how it goes.

Gazz

RB
29-01-2007, 12:52 PM
Your hedgehogs are smooth Gazz !
Now there's an oxymoron !

cahullian
29-01-2007, 01:00 PM
lol Andrew

jjjnettie
29-01-2007, 01:03 PM
When I read " Conneticut Yankee" by Mark Twain I was surprised at the number of slang words/phrases in it that I thought were contemporary.

"Dude" is one example that comes to mind.

I'll have to reread it to jog my memory for more.

matt
29-01-2007, 01:13 PM
Yeah, jjjj.

I think "Catcher In The Rye" is another good one for slang.

Very "cool" book

Outbackmanyep
29-01-2007, 05:03 PM
you wanna hear something funny...my aunty used the word "Bonza" At a family BBQ....we all sat in shocked silence!

Then burst out laughing......lol

I ALWAYS say "Hooroo" getting off the phone.....:rolleyes: ...dunno why....:lol:

I noticed watching some old 80's shows that the word "Excellent" was used a lot....must have caught on from those old tv shows such as "who's the boss" and "family ties" etc.......ahhhh those old school day afternoons at 3:30.....:cool:

Cheers!

ving
29-01-2007, 05:08 PM
i have started using the word mate of late... i never used to :(

matt
29-01-2007, 05:14 PM
Watch Keanu Reeves in "Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure" (1989) for the ultimate use of that word:lol:

Sausageman
29-01-2007, 05:54 PM
:lol: Bring back Rhyming slang as well.
Well it's time for a jimmy riddle then head up the apples and pears for a bo peep.

How "smooth" is that :rofl: :rofl:

Mike.

Sausageman
29-01-2007, 06:05 PM
The Cats Miaow,
Never heard that saying before, only "The cats whiskers".

Mike.

GrahamL
29-01-2007, 07:01 PM
LOL.. give up now ..oneofone ..I have a house full of yougins 17 - 23
and there friends .. running this by them ... methinks your daughter is being
very gratious and a little less than honest about what she really thinks
in regard :whistle:.


smooth is so last centuary dude !!!;)


jjj I loved that book but never noticed .. I did find it a bit strange first up and put it down for a few years .. when I got round to reading the whole thing it turned into one of those reads that you always remember.. mark as an
author and social comentator I've since found is one of the best IMO.

Ric
29-01-2007, 07:17 PM
"Trick" was a great 70's word. The older members of the motorcycle fraternity may remember it as a word to describe a hotted up motorcycle.

Cool

OneOfOne
30-01-2007, 07:39 AM
A guy I used to work with years ago said that back in the 70's when he was in his late teens he was introduced by the boss at work to a rather important guy from America. He could hardly hold the laughter in when they said "I'd like you to meet Chuck Bonza...":rofl:

Outbackmanyep
30-01-2007, 04:05 PM
LOL...FAIR DINKUM!?
Thats Hilhairyass!

i remember watching a show at school once, and we had this relief teacher that was indonesian, a real funny lady, and although i cant remember the name of the show but it was all aussie and set in the 50's/60's and through the show they constantly use the word "mate" and "fair dinkum" and even "bonza!" etc...and the teacher complained that no-one she knew talked like that and the movie was a load of rubbish....i turned around and yelled "FAIR GO!".....she burst out laughing too....hit her for six i did!


Speaking of rhyming slang.....we had a customer in at work once, his name was Joe Blake :lol:
i also noticed that all around here where i live the townsfolk always refer to someone as "old mate".....
Just yesterday i had someone ask if i could fit a "wireless" to their vehicle! :rofl:
'11 wires and a coax lead to attach and he called it a wireless' i thought....:screwy: ...:rofl:

Cheers!

ving
30-01-2007, 04:16 PM
i used to use "trick" re mountain biking... "that bike is so trick" or "tricked out"

how bout leet or 1337. its a bit 90s' but people use it online alot still.

Ric
30-01-2007, 10:55 PM
Hi Ving, you've lost me with "leet" and "1337". :shrug:
But I'm influenced by the 70's and can still remember it.:whistle: :D

Far out, man :)

ballaratdragons
30-01-2007, 11:15 PM
Where I used to work as a Manager of a youth training centre we had access daily to hundreds of Ballarats youth. One of the youthworkers working for me tried the same thing as you Trevor. To invent a new cool word and see if it would catch on.

He replaced the words Dork, idiot, spaz, dropkick, d--- head etc with 'spoon'.

whenever one of the kids would say something stupid, he would call them a 'Spoon'.

Every time he said it to them they said things like 'Geez your an idiot' and 'shut up ya old fart' :lol:

Needless to say, after about 6 months of trying, it didn't catch on :rofl:

larry brockman
30-01-2007, 11:32 PM
In Southern California in the 50's and 60's if something was really good, good looking or had a great deal of appeal it was referred to as "*****en"