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Two countries separated by a common language.
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De
10/11/2008 12:17:15
 
 
À
10/11/2008 12:10:53
Information générale
Forum:
Politics
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01360537
Message ID:
01360941
Vues:
7
>>>>>>>For Dragan.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>Excuse the paraphrase of (I think) Oscar Wilde. For one of your lists:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>Hairdressing:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>US Bang = UK Fringe
>>>>>>>US Pompadour = UK Quiff.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>Not sure of the US terms but men can have sideburns, sideboards or louse-ladders.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>Perfect - none of the expressions make any sense to me, except sideburns (which is only something I know, and it does make _some_ sense, but not much :). The last is ingenious, though :).
>>>>>
>>>>>BTW, Dragan, you're always going on about the paucity of words in English, well it seems the US is richer:
>>>>>
>>>>>US Suspenders (keep your trousers up) - UK Braces
>>>>>US Retainer (shape the teeth) - UK Braces
>>>>
>>>>A retainer and braces are not the same thing. Here typically braces are worn for a couple of years and then when the braces are removed, a retainer is worn during the night only. Are both really referred to as 'braces' in the UK? Braces are attached and a retainer is not.
>>>
>>>I've never heard of someone wearing a retainer on his teeth here - that's why, whn I heard the expr. on a US prog t'other day my ears pricked up.
>>>
>>>A retainer would be a fee paid to a solicitor (lawyer) to secure his services, or a domestic servant, such as a butler, such as, in the book/film by Viv Stanshall (Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band), "Sir Henry at Rawlington End", the reference to the ancient butler: "Old Scrotum, the wrinkled retainer"
>>>
>>>:-)#) (wearing braces)
>>
>>that little plastic thing the orthodontist gave my son is a retainer and that was in Bristol. Maybe everyone has bad teeth in Brighton.
>
>Don't know, but they seem to inherit them in Bristol! :-)~
>
>I thought you replied earlier that they were the both called braces?

Not me guv
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