I think that one's universal!Do I now have to explain what I DON'T mean by, hemhem, "amusing myself"?
In Australia, poof was a nasty derogatory word for a male homosexual. Thank goodness you rarely hear it anymore. When you do it's usually from someone very old ( & bigoted).
Language is fascinating as well as weird. There are so many variations & I find most of them amusing. G & I have trouble understanding English accents. It's funny how so many of us can speak the same language, but make it sound so different!
Language is fascinating as well as weird.!
I wondered about it but only because I've read you live in ViennaOr mine.
My cousin moved from Massachusetts to Edmonton about 10 years ago. She picked up the local accent, and she says aboot. Which is fun, but when she uses metric for casual conversation, I get all confused ("It was 18 degrees at home!" "So that's.... good?"), plus winter in Edmonton is no joke.Oh by the way - we don't say aboot for about and ruffs for roofs-LMAO.
My wife is from central NY, and you wouldn't think there's a CNY, but there is. She rarely has it, but when she sees friends or family from there, it comes back. I feel obligated, as a loving husband, to taunt it away as soon as she's back in accent-free Connecticut.
My cousin moved from Massachusetts to Edmonton about 10 years ago. She picked up the local accent, and she says aboot. Which is fun, but when she uses metric for casual conversation, I get all confused ("It was 18 degrees at home!" "So that's.... good?"), plus winter in Edmonton is no joke.
She and her Jersey-born husband both say it! I wonder if they really were just looking for excuses to talk like they went to DeGrassi High School!I honestly don't know anyone around her that says aboot-haha.