Brit Insults

monster • May 18, 2020 2:54 am
Just popping this link here for when I need it later.

http://septicscompanion.com/category/insults/
Carruthers • May 18, 2020 4:48 am
They missed out 'lummock'.

Gormless bunch. Two bricks short of a load, the lot of them.


Further material for the discerning etymologist here:

Link
Griff • May 18, 2020 7:01 am
Billy no-mates.
That one could sting a bit, think I'll apply to my brother at a later date.
xoxoxoBruce • May 18, 2020 9:56 am
Sure is a lot of words referring to women of loose moral standards.
Carruthers • May 18, 2020 10:25 am
'Poltroon' is a good one but it's recorded as archaic so, on the one hand, it's pretty pointless using it but on the other hand you can still insult someone and live to tell the tale.
lumberjim • May 18, 2020 8:50 pm
What was that movie, where the old fat dad character shoots a guy for calling him that?
Urbane Guerrilla • May 20, 2020 10:33 pm
Carruthers;1052820 wrote:
'Poltroon' is a good one but it's recorded as archaic so, on the one hand, it's pretty pointless using it but on the other hand you can still insult someone and live to tell the tale.

Archaic or obsolete I doubt; I'll use it, no hesitation.

Though if there were a schtick about the clueless guy who asks, "Who's this Paul Troon, and what'd he do?" somebody might bring some fun to a story.
DanaC • May 21, 2020 1:50 pm
Cockwomble was notable by its absence.

That's currently my favourite insult
DanaC • May 21, 2020 2:01 pm
Carruthers;1052811 wrote:
They missed out 'lummock'.

Gormless bunch. Two bricks short of a load, the lot of them.


Further material for the discerning etymologist here:

Link


Funny you should point out 'lummock'

I've been listening to a series of audiobooks (zompoc fiction) and it follows several different groups in different locations, mostly in the US but with a few storylines in other countries. One of the groups being in London - and as much as I love the story overall, I find that storyline difficult to listen to. The author is clearly familiar with the UK - the physical descriptions, some of the routes he describes and some of the slang and culture....but: it's so not today's Britain. It's definitely written by someone familiar with rather than born of the UK - the slang and speech patterns are off kilter - along with some of the cultural notes. Its supposed to be set in 2013 but is a mish mash of 1950s -1980s slang and attitudes.

One of the words that jarred with me was 'lummock' used by someone in their late teens/early 20s :P Along with a 14 year old addressing a woman in her 30s as 'mum' (ma'am) on first meeting - and then later exclaiming 'what the blazes was that?' ....ya know like the teenz do.

There are a bunch of those details that really pull me out of the narrative. But 'lummock' was one of the first, along with descriptions of someone with a 'stiff upper lip'
Carruthers • May 21, 2020 2:48 pm
Lummox

Though the etymology of lummox is heavily disputed, one thing is for certain: It came from East Anglia, the coastal outcrop of Britain above London.
There, around 1825, someone threw out the word as an insult, and it stuck, becoming a typically British go-to term.
Some linguists believe it comes from the word lummock, which typified a lummox: it means a clumsy oaf.


If pressed, I'd have put its origins in the West Country.
It just doesn't sound as if it originated in East Anglia.

LINK
monster • May 22, 2020 2:51 am
DanaC;1052988 wrote:
Cockwomble was notable by its absence.

That's currently my favourite insult


I see a lot of people liking that -it emerged since I left.... my main problem is there's a lovely family local to me with the last name Womble. So.... zipt. for now. :D.
Carruthers • May 22, 2020 3:15 am
monster;1053017 wrote:
I see a lot of people liking that -it emerged since I left.... my main problem is there's a lovely family local to me with the last name Womble. So.... zipt. for now. :D.


Do they hail from Wimbledon Common by any chance?
monster • May 22, 2020 3:23 am
Carruthers;1053018 wrote:
Do they hail from Wimbledon Common by any chance?


no, bless. They have no idea of such things. Completely innocent. As are most of our mutual friends. We've never actually met. We nearly did by Zoom a few weeks ago but apparently she was struggling with it and it was all I could do to stop myself asking if maybe Tobermory could help her figure something out
Carruthers • May 22, 2020 3:39 am
monster;1053019 wrote:
no, bless. They have no idea of such things. Completely innocent. As are most of our mutual friends. We've never actually met. We nearly did by Zoom a few weeks ago but apparently she was struggling with it and it was all I could do to stop myself asking if maybe Tobermory could help her figure something out


No mention of great uncle Bulgaria then?
footfootfoot • May 22, 2020 10:16 am
DanaC;1052988 wrote:
Cockwomble was notable by its absence.

That's currently my favourite insult

Is the distaff version Twatwaffle? because that's my current favorite.
BigV • May 22, 2020 12:28 pm
Carruthers;1053018 wrote:
Do they hail from Wimbledon Common by any chance?


And if they do, I bet they never fall down.
monster • May 22, 2020 3:05 pm
BigV;1053034 wrote:
And if they do, I bet they never fall down.



cross-breeding Weebles and Wombles is a scary thought....
monster • May 22, 2020 3:13 pm
Carruthers;1053018 wrote:
Do they hail from Wimbledon Common by any chance?



Wimbledon Common is home to regular Wombles. Greater Spotted Cockwombles are found a little down the road at Kenley Common
monster • May 29, 2020 11:22 am
https://www.dictionary.com/e/swear-nerds/