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jayseven

National Pride

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Eugh!

I cringe whenever I hear an Irish person saying 'mum' or especially 'mom'.

It's supposed to be 'Mam'! :hmm:

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Here's your pride:

 

 

Which for me such proudness for our nation does not exist. What is there to be proud of?

 

Next round of university students are screwed, next round of drivers are screwed, home owners, pensioners the list goes on.

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It's colour for British English., we're not going to take out letters because it's not spelt phonetically.

Spell it the way it's meant to. Some letters need to be there and some don't, but that's how the language is structured and so it will stay that way.

Edited by Diageo

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Eugh!

I cringe whenever I hear an Irish person saying 'mum' or especially 'mom'.

It's supposed to be 'Mam'! :hmm:

 

or if you are from the north, maaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.

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Eugh!

I cringe whenever I hear an Irish person saying 'mum' or especially 'mom'.

It's supposed to be 'Mam'! :hmm:

 

Ugh, no. It's mum, or preferably mummy.

 

Don't you think that 'mummy' is just so much nicer than just 'mum'?

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Ugh, no. It's mum, or preferably mummy.

 

Don't you think that 'mummy' is just so much nicer than just 'mum'?

 

Anyone over the age of 4 who says mummy should be shot.

 

 

Daddy is worse.

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Anyone over the age of 4 who says mummy should be shot.

 

 

Daddy is worse.

 

Yes.

 

It's mam and dad people, get it right. I've heard the odd mum but mummy... Just no.

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I have a friend that calls their parents mammy and daddy, even when talking to his friends. It's ridiculous and shows just how whipped he really is.

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"Daddy" should only be used in the bedroom.

 

Or the alleyway/prison cell.

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When I'm calling for my mum I always call "Mammy!?" in an Irish accent, only because I spent a lot of my childhood on holiday in Ireland, and that's how all our relations speak, and it seems easier to shout than "Mum!?" which doesn't carry so well on the air.

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