My old pal and celebrity Millwall fan used to hate a fella shouting, 'Play the way you're facing'.
Never heard that down the City though.
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My old pal and celebrity Millwall fan used to hate a fella shouting, 'Play the way you're facing'.
Never heard that down the City though.
Is the phrase “Woman on” used now in the female game?
@bryansgunn on Twitter is worth a follow, he makes funny videos with common phrases and Dion Dublin always makes a cameo. It’s class
This his latest:
https://x.com/bryansgunn/status/1698...xyPQF8Betlv1bw
He’s done loads
https://x.com/bryansgunn/status/1695...xyPQF8Betlv1bw
It appears there are no "top" teams or players at the moment. They all seem to be 'top top"
And I know this is different but it used to make me cringe when Souness always said " Kelly, when I played with your Dad"
Hugh Johns used the term very adjacent
And this ( a goal , a nice goal but scored throughout football on a regular basis ) is why this ( the Premier league ) is the greatest league in the world !
Absolute bollocks
"there's an appeal for hands"
Anything spouted by Emma Hayes (Hoddle sound-alike), in particular the previously mentioned Double Pivot, High Press and Low Block...... aaaaarrrrggghhh !!!
Another new one that people may not have heard of is ‘flat track bully’
Some of the phrases are decent enough. I like the word 'clip' 'Pinged' 'Whipped' it really does paint a picture for me. Low block, two banks, double pivot is painful, not even Pep would sound good if he used those phrases. Thing is, talking about football, or being descriptive about it is difficult, i say difficult, i mean it's difficult not to sound like a cock. I read back what i've put on here sometimes and i'm thinking '**** me' you sound a tit, and you were even trying not too
Stop doing a Drippy - Get the ball forward faster
I reckon there’s a good couple of coaches who run these courses for pro licenses etc who probably get bored with doing the same stuff, and every now and then they’ll have a bet with each other on who can influence and introduce the latest buzz words or phrases.
At the end of each course they probably piss themselves laughing at the dozy knob head, whose saying all the “new” innovative terminology
Coach A
I’ve got one for transfer day
‘In the building “
Coach B
Don’t be so daft, I’ll have a score on that one
Coach B
Going through the protocols
Coach A laughing “I’ll have £50 on that one, no one will use that unless there a right muppet, it will be like watching an episode of the Office
Then along comes Morison🤔
I’m lost for words, yet they still carry on talking.
Back of the net, if you hit the back of the net, you’ve misses !
Words such as.. 'well' and 'so', even the expression 'uhm', are often referred to as discourse markers.
As you said, they can help you sound more natural.
They often have a purpose of giving you a moment to think about what you're going to say.
In English language tests, such as IELTS and TOEFL, they can actually help improve your score if used timely.
I always thought 'from the get go' came from athletics as a shortened version of 'on your marks, get set, go', and not necessarily from the African American communities in the US?