Hailey
...me bum? "I don't have time to scratch me bum" So, I learned "I don't have time to scratch my butt" means "I'm very busy". But why "me bum"? Slang?
16 déc. 2010 02:54
Réponses · 28
2
=D In some places like UK "bum" is a slang to say butt. So I guess what you've learned applies here too ^^
16 décembre 2010
2
Yeah, "me bum" is more UK/Australian slang than US but it's slang. "me" is improper English for "my" used rather often in the UK/Australia The word "bum" can mean more than just "butt/backside" depending on usage. Example: "Can I bum a dollar from you?" In that case it's like. "get"/"have"/"borrow" It's like the person who is asking the question is comparing themselves to a homeless person or a "bum" and implying that they are poor; therefore, they need a dollar. Understand? I hope I'm not confusing you. ~ Anyway, to really answer your question it is slang for "I'm very busy" It's saying that they are sooo busy that they can't scratch their own backside.
16 décembre 2010
1
Educated Australians don't say "me bum" , they say "my behind" or "I'm so busy, that I don't have time to scratch myself"
16 décembre 2010
1
I agree with Sarah and Ria, it's a dialectical difference. Plus, the more crass a subject is, the more words/euphemisms we use for it. ;) As an Aussie, I'd use backside, bum, arse or clacker (my fav, very "educated" Australian, heh), but not tush, heinie, ass or butt - other people would use those. As for "me" it's ease of pronunciation. I think "m-ee" is much easier to say than the grammatically correct "m-a-i". So you'll sometimes hear "me" said in place of "my": me mates, me car, me beer...
16 décembre 2010
1
pirate dialect.^^
16 décembre 2010
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