Get Fuzzy by Darby Conley for September 11, 2014

  1. Not quite 70
    unnormal  over 9 years ago

    And I thought I was having a hard time with Downton Abbey!

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    emjaycee  over 9 years ago

    Needs subtitles for the Cockney impaired (moi).

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    michaelyukyuk  over 9 years ago

    Might be rhyming slang; a head is a loaf because head rhymes bread and bread comes in loaves. I think you have to be born/raised in it.

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    Voyager2k Premium Member over 9 years ago

    Some of it is rhyming slang. Loosely translated:

    Ah, brillient! I’ve been looking for your apartment all day, friend, thought I’d messed up! I’m pretty tired, let me tell you. I could use a drink and some sleep. Plus, some guy took my umbrella in the line for the bathroom back in England.

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    Rutho  over 9 years ago

    Very good. I have been looking for your apartment all day. I thought I had made a mistake. I am extremely tired. I would love to have something to eat and short sleep.

    In addition, someone stole my umbrella while I was waiting to go to the toilet back in England.

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    jbmlaw01  over 9 years ago

    MMM was Darby’s funniest conception.

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    Herb Goldschmidt Premium Member over 9 years ago

    Somewhere between Manc and Cockney…

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    RG_Dustbin  over 9 years ago

    The old British dialects whether scouse, cockney or yoksher are all rather quaint. These days the youth all seem to tend towards the Ja-fake-an patois of the mentally subnormal Kingston druggies. Sacha Baron Cohen’s Ali G material was not in fact a comedy but a hard hitting documentary….

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    felinefan55 Premium Member over 9 years ago

    I didn’t find the ad that used to air on BBC America about turning on the “closed captioning” in order to understand what was being said. I always saw it before “Top Gear”. I did however find the DVD warning which is so funny that I figured if you haven’t seen it yet, it might make you smile.

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    flyertom  over 9 years ago

    This is why I turn on Closed-Captioning on blighty-produced TV shows like “Game of Thrones”.

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    lotsalaffs Premium Member over 9 years ago

    Babelfish anyone?

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    Ferret-Fever  over 9 years ago

    Is Mac any relation to Bill the Cat?

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  13. Andy
    Sandfan  over 9 years ago

    England and America are two countries separated by a common language. George Bernard Shaw

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  14. Ugly poor
    Prey  over 9 years ago

    Dont know but I bet he knows Billy the Fish (VIZ mag)

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    Egrayjames  over 9 years ago

    To my surprise, I understand this better than Ebonics. But then again I’ve been watching British television for fifty years.

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    joegeethree  over 9 years ago

    Thanks to all translators, but I think I will wait for Satchel’s version.

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    LOLisgood4U  over 9 years ago

    Blimey, these Yanks are thick as bricks.

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    duanemorgan2013  over 9 years ago

    Remember: “It’s crackers to slip a rozzer the dropsy in snide”.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magersfontein_Lugg

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    Meh~tdology, fka Pepelaputr   over 9 years ago

    My hovercraft is full of eels.

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    emjaycee  over 9 years ago

    Can I just mention how much I love you all for the responses that both educate and amuse me? And I second the notion of the book.

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    mistercatworks  over 9 years ago

    There was a TV series in England with a character from Glasgow, whose dialect was so thickly incomprehensible, his speech had to be “open captioned” for the British audience.

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    pauljmsn  over 9 years ago

    I’ve often wondered how many English dialects are genuine and how many are put on to mess with American tourists.

    Believe me, we’d do the same to you.

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    nfkrueger Premium Member over 9 years ago

    I am confused, though.. Mac is not a new character, so why is Satchel acting like he doesn’t know him?

    Or are we in reruns now?

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    tcar-1  over 9 years ago

    I work with a Civil Engineer from England.

    I asked for a translation. Here’s what he sent me:.Appears to be a mixture of cockney rhyming slang and colloquialisms prevalent in the north of England, therefore I can translate with some confidence:.

    “Havin’ a butchers for” = looking for.

    “Cocked summat up” = screwed something up.

    “Well knackered” = very tired.

    “Bevvy” = beverage, preferably alcoholic.

    “Kip” = nap.

    “Diddled me brolly” = stole my umbrella. Use of “diddled” is questionable in this context. “Kifed” would have been a better choice but might have led to even more confusion.

    “Queue for the khazi” = waiting line for the toilet.

    “Blighty” = England (I suspect you knew that one)

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    Collo Rosso  over 9 years ago

    Thank you Pacopuddy! <3

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  26. Kca mind the snp
    Ryan Plut  over 9 years ago

    To understand what Mac is on about, try googling this site:The Septic’s Companion

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    SharkNose  over 9 years ago

    He’s still more understandable than “Mimi” over at Rose is Rose…

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    GarfieldJune19  over 9 years ago

    Today’s strip makes no sense.

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    Julius Marold Premium Member over 9 years ago

    It does if you speak cockney mate

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    heatherjasper  over 9 years ago

    I understood some of it, due to my Cockney rhyming slang research and watching “Ocean’s Eleven”.

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