Typical Brummie girl : )

Yeah, hmmm. Another one doing the rounds a Scottish lady effing and curring to her two young kids. Someone left a shit I flushed, you are fucking disgusting.

What chance do they have!?

And then onto the sex pistols....

She was a girl from Birmingham.....!
 
I've just posted this in the ice bucket thread. Dreadful such an angelic child knows such words but funny
 
Parents are automatically blamed when she could have heard that anywhere, it's society's problem, it doesn't help though when you hear kids at the Villa coming out with all sorts, everyone's laughing, so it encourages that behaviour.

 
How long until its considered part and parcel of everyday language. When i was a kid saying bloody hell was considered risque and very rude. In gators day saying twerp was punishable by the birch.
 
Walk up and down a street, seems pretty part and parcel now sadly, with few knowing time and place and getting younger by the year!
 
SKEGGY - 26/8/2014 21:13

How long until its considered part and parcel of everyday language. When i was a kid saying bloody hell was considered risque and very rude. In gators day saying twerp was punishable by the birch.
LOL Cheeky twerp I would say it's already a part of everyday life certainly seems to be the case in the North East.
 
upthevilla - 26/8/2014 23:10

The phrase 'give me a child till the age of 7 and I'll give you the adult' springs to mind.

Why quote Rolf Harris here?






:86:

 
Juan Mourep - 26/8/2014 20:51


Parents are automatically blamed when she could have heard that anywhere, it's society's problem, it doesn't help though when you hear kids at the Villa coming out with all sorts, everyone's laughing, so it encourages that behaviour.

I disagree with this. The little girl at two years old has already associated swearing with being shocked/hurt/angry. She is swearing here because the water has shocked her. If she had just heard it in a post office or wherever she would have no association with the words.

She has seen her parents use those words in certain situations and the good old social loafing theory is in full force. It is 100 percent the parents doing.
 
One of the differences I notice between Dublin and "over here" is that people swear a lot more in Dublin.
 
I'd not be happy if a kid of mine used that phrase as I'd feel I'd let them down as I would imagine at that age they'd have got it from me.

I don't think I'd have been laughing. She does that at school and she's bang in trouble.

Looks cute :6: :6: :6: but standards really have slipped with the English language and with foul language.

Funny if it isn't your own!

I remember my nephew dropped a coat when he was about 3 in a restaurant. 'Oh bugger' was his response.. I wonder if he'd seen unlucky Alf in the fast show. The people in the restaurant and parents laughed. It then took them ages to stop him as it became oh bugger for everything!

Not society that one in my humble.
 
The Scottish one on Facebook recently was worse, it was the mom talking to two little kiddies.

Who didn't flush their shit, you are fucking disgusting.

Why on earth would they then put it on YouTube? And what chance do the kids have with that sort of parenting!?
 
Its a funny old world - we bunch a few letters together and then we call it a "swear word"..