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		Ask for help > quickie     
			
		 quickie 
		
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 jarek2011
 
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							| quickie 
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							| I know that "qucikie" is the word for short, passionate sex but someone in the forum used this word in another context, namely in describing a quick question and they set me thinking: 
 Can you say in English:
 Can I ask a quickie?
 
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 Gaby141
 
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							| We wouldn �t say  �can I ask a quickie? �   If we don �t want to take up somebody �s time then we might say  �Just a quickie, did you ........? �   Hope that helps :-) |  9 Nov 2011     
					
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 ueslteacher
 
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							| I remember short Garfield cartoons which were called "Garfield Quickie", so it �s not always about sex. You can call any activity which takes a really short time "a quickie" but I guess there will always be people who will accuse you of being ambiguous:) Sophia |  9 Nov 2011     
					
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 perma
 
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							| Hi Jarek! It was me who used the word on the forum yesterday  I �ve read the expression "just a quickie" numerous times on another british forum, where all members are british, and no one seemed to take offence so i gather it �s a common expression. Actually I hadn �t known that there was another meaning to the word, until I read your comment today! 
 
 
 
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 jarek2011
 
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							| thanks to all of you for clarifying this issue for me. I am very keen on learning new phrases and when I stumble across sth that I don �t know then it sets me thinking whether it �s correct or not or whether/ which context I can use it :) |  9 Nov 2011     
					
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 Olindalima ( F )
 
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							| Hi there 
 Sometimes these post are hilarious. People from all around the globe, each one of us with... as we say here " our monkeys in the attic " ( this one was discussed here sometime ago ), we do learn tons of    USEFUL (??? ) things.
 
 I didn �t have any idea of the sexual side of the word,but, in fact, GOD, ... HOW could I be so silly? So similar to Portuguese.
 
 BTW, if you want to spread your foreign language knowledge?
 It goes like this:
 
 Rapidinha
 
 And if you say such a thing, everyone will think ...yes, exactly what you are thinking. Something good   you do in a glimpse.
 
 God, I would like to know who invented the short, abridged form of such a wonderful thing that can last......well, better to stop here.
 
 I would kill him. LONG AND LAST
 
 Sorry, no emoticons, no pictures available, hope you don �t misunderstand my message.
 
 Sleep well, midnight, SHARP
 
 C u
 
 ( I can write this " c u ),,because only a small part of us are Portuguese, because, in Portuguese " cu" is a nasty word for bottom.
 
 C   U
 
 Linda
 
 
 
 |  10 Nov 2011     
					
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 kinho
 
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							|  Oh, Linda......................!!!! |  10 Nov 2011     
					
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 MoodyMoody
 
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							| The meaning of "quickie" probably depends on your dialect. I �m American, so the connotation for me is the sexual one. Sounds like the Brits are more clean-minded than I am... |  10 Nov 2011     
					
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 joy2bill
 
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							| Sorry but in Australia, I would not ask for a quickie unless I was paying a prostitute and I was broke! |  10 Nov 2011     
					
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 douglas
 
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							| You can use it in that way (we also do in American English), but it is usually done  with the intention of implying the double entendre.   In common use a quickie is actually anything that is done quickly (usually in a rush) and takes just a short period of time.   Douglas   "I �ve got a quick question for you."   I �ve got a quickie for you" |  10 Nov 2011     
					
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 douglas
 
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							| You can use it in that way (we also do in American English), but it is usually done  with the intention of implying the double entendre.   In common use a quickie is actually anything that is done quickly (usually in a rush) and takes just a short period of time.   Douglas |  10 Nov 2011     
					
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