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		Message board > Phrase of the day for 12/09/2011 (Round two}     
			
		 Phrase of the day for 12/09/2011 (Round two} 
		
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 Redbull
 
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							| Phrase of the day for 12/09/2011 (Round two} 
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							| England has many unusual sayings. How would you explain this one? 
 Here is the link to the other comments....... http://www.eslprintables.com/forum/topic.asp?id=30341
 
 "It �s the dog �s bollocks".
 
 Deleted the picture, as some of you find my unorthodox
 Ways not to your taste.
 
 
 
 The reason I chose this phrase is because the meaning is sooooo different from what it actually says on text!.
 
 Now, please don �t cheat and look the phrase up before you enter your definitions.
 
 Good luck people and wish you all the best.
 
 Redbull gives you wings you know
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 Sainte-Marie
 
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							| This is a sandwich with poor reputation -- baloney or boloney what  means Nonsence |  13 Sep 2011     
					
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 douglas
 
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							| For years I thought bollocks were some kind of an English meal, more specifically I thought them to be either sausage or soem kind of a cabbage dish.  This picture still comes to mind whenever I hear the word "bollocks"--my brain has to correct itelf every time.   So when I hear "the dog �s bollocks" I picture a dog standing at its feeding bowl and happily eating away at a bowl full of cabbage and sausages.     (PS- thanks for pulling the picture.  My desk at work is in a pretty public arae and when I have something like that on the screen it gets a bit of negative attention) |  13 Sep 2011     
					
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 almaz
 
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							| @Douglas: 
 For all anyone knows,  �bollocks � might really be the name of something eaten in some odd corner of England. Remember, this is the nation which - apart from its  �magnificent bastard tongue � * - gave us such gastronomic delicacies as  �spotted dick �,  �toad in the hole � and  �faggots �. And who could possibly pass on an offer of  �bubble and squeak �? 
 * �John McWhorter |  13 Sep 2011     
					
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 valentinaper
 
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							| Since dogs have a special way of treating their private parts (by the way, I �ll never understand how nature works!), in my mind this phrase is instantly related to a lollipop candy meant for animals! |  13 Sep 2011     
					
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