From blushing to snort laughing. I am making myself out to be a real princess :D
The fair shoulder comment was an "Irishism" though, I'm sure of it :D At least, I was sure until you didn't point it out! Do you say that in America too?
No. I had listed "fair shoulder" because I had no idea what it meant other than context clues meaning "to push someone out of the way" or something. I thought maybe it was just an idiom I had not heard before, so I removed it from the list before posting. I wasn't sure.
I googled before my initial bulleted list post, but I didn't find anything about "fair shouldered" except relating to childrens' names.
So I guess that is a non-American thing after all.
[–] thinANDintelligent 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
From blushing to snort laughing. I am making myself out to be a real princess :D
The fair shoulder comment was an "Irishism" though, I'm sure of it :D At least, I was sure until you didn't point it out! Do you say that in America too?
[–] ShitlordLovesOreos 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago (edited ago)
No. I had listed "fair shoulder" because I had no idea what it meant other than context clues meaning "to push someone out of the way" or something. I thought maybe it was just an idiom I had not heard before, so I removed it from the list before posting. I wasn't sure.
I googled before my initial bulleted list post, but I didn't find anything about "fair shouldered" except relating to childrens' names.
So I guess that is a non-American thing after all.