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Posted

Could this play a part in our dealings?

 

FWIW, I think there's a good amount of hot, moist clunge in Soton. Sure, much of that is inexperienced at the highest level but I see much temptation about town.

 

Compare it to a northern town where the gash is sweaty fatty boom boom and addicted to chips and I think our sleek, warm, tight otter's pockets stand us in good stead.

 

What do you thnk, Saints fans?

Posted

True, although once they realise they have to sing one verse of kareoke it would put a right spanner in the works...

Posted
There may well be, but it's just a shame for you lot that the clunge is attached to Western women (and even worse, English women).

 

Eurgh.

 

Says the man who bought a wife ;-)

Posted
Could this play a part in our dealings?

 

FWIW, I think there's a good amount of hot, moist clunge in Soton. Sure, much of that is inexperienced at the highest level but I see much temptation about town.

 

Compare it to a northern town where the gash is sweaty fatty boom boom and addicted to chips and I think our sleek, warm, tight otter's pockets stand us in good stead.

 

What do you thnk, Saints fans?

 

Have you just been watching The Inbetweeners?

 

I remember a few years ago, after 'The Football Factory', loads of people were using the 'mugged off' phrase.

 

It's amazing the power films have over simpletons.

Posted
I dont know, the uni students in Sheffield are decent but I suppose the standard of football lets them down.

 

the incredible thing about students is their ability to register at a university which is not their home town... try going there out of term time ;)

Posted
Have you just been watching The Inbetweeners?

 

I remember a few years ago, after 'The Football Factory', loads of people were using the 'mugged off' phrase.

 

It's amazing the power films have over simpletons.

 

No. hth.

 

"clunge" predates the Inbetweeners as a word for the gash.

Posted
Could this play a part in our dealings?

 

FWIW, I think there's a good amount of hot, moist clunge in Soton. Sure, much of that is inexperienced at the highest level but I see much temptation about town.

 

Compare it to a northern town where the gash is sweaty fatty boom boom and addicted to chips and I think our sleek, warm, tight otter's pockets stand us in good stead.

 

What do you thnk, Saints fans?

 

What the F are you on about? If you think such drivel adds to your street cred it tells us all we know about your leanings and your judgement.

Posted
No. hth.

 

"clunge" predates the Inbetweeners as a word for the gash.

 

It might predate the Inbetweeners, but there is no doubt that its widespread use today is down to the programme. Before the programme about the 4 adolescents, clunge was very rarely used. Fanny, Axe-Wound, Beef Curtains or growler were all far more popular, as well as the really special word, c*nt.

Posted
Western women or Weston women?

 

Interestingly I had a dance from an Eastern woman in Weston once.

She beat me up with her boobs - was pretty much assault.

Was awesome.

Posted
The place for quality clunge is at Polo matches, not chip shops or Primark, good selection of Eastern and Western.. HTH

bit posh for your ordinary saints fan. what about cricket ? i suppose 1 day or 20/20 would be better than tests, as test matches seem to attract more older ladies. not interested in in flappy clunge tbh.

Posted
Could this play a part in our dealings?

 

FWIW, I think there's a good amount of hot, moist clunge in Soton. Sure, much of that is inexperienced at the highest level but I see much temptation about town.

 

Compare it to a northern town where the gash is sweaty fatty boom boom and addicted to chips and I think our sleek, warm, tight otter's pockets stand us in good stead.

 

What do you thnk, Saints fans?

 

I notice you are only surmising. Perhaps when you grow up in a few years time and you are about 13 years old you will be able to speak from experience.

Posted

Have to disagree, chaps. Unless the quality of Southampton ladies has dramatically improved in the last 20 years, I'd have to say that nice looking women up here are more plentiful and approachable.

Posted
It might predate the Inbetweeners, but there is no doubt that its widespread use today is down to the programme. Before the programme about the 4 adolescents, clunge was very rarely used. Fanny, Axe-Wound, Beef Curtains or growler were all far more popular, as well as the really special word, c*nt.

 

I've never watched the Inbetweeners, but I've been a fan of clunge for years...

Posted
Have to disagree, chaps. Unless the quality of Southampton ladies has dramatically improved in the last 20 years, I'd have to say that nice looking women up here are more plentiful and approachable.

 

I'm with this i tend to find the women in southampton either of a fairly poor standard or totally up themselves and pretentious. Also there's been a spate of tango'd women in hideous brightly coloured dresses in town recently too (& i'm not talking about the Oompa Lompa types either, these are otherwise alright).

 

Personally i think this city struggles due to students and people that want to think they dress like londoners, but actually dress like provincial people trying to dress like londoners.

 

Mind you it could be worse it could be pompey.....

Posted
I've never watched the Inbetweeners, but I've been a fan of clunge for years...

 

It's well worth a watch. Will remind you of being a teenage idiot again.

Posted
I notice you are only surmising. Perhaps when you grow up in a few years time and you are about 13 years old you will be able to speak from experience.

 

I'll gain an insight into the important factors influencing football transfers?

Posted

I will stick my winkle into anything with boobs and flaps, and there must be some footballers that share my view, otherwise how do you explain all the footballers in Norwich?

Posted
I will stick my winkle into anything with boobs and flaps, and there must be some footballers that share my view, otherwise how do you explain all the footballers in Norwich?

 

They are all related? :)

Posted
They are all related? :)

 

I knew it. My missus was lying, I AM marrying into the largest family in the world. (Besides Portsmouth.)

Posted
It might predate the Inbetweeners, but there is no doubt that its widespread use today is down to the programme. Before the programme about the 4 adolescents, clunge was very rarely used. Fanny, Axe-Wound, Beef Curtains or growler were all far more popular, as well as the really special word, c*nt.

 

I must disagree. Up north, the word clunge is used regularly, interchanged with flange. I certainly knew and used the clunge word over 10 years ago. Gash is also used a lot, but not always as an alternative to clunge, particularly in Merseyside, often "gash" means rubbish/sh*t etc. As in: "did you watch the match last night? - that Traore was gash, wasn't he?"

Posted
I must disagree. Up north, the word clunge is used regularly, interchanged with flange. I certainly knew and used the clunge word over 10 years ago. Gash is also used a lot, but not always as an alternative to clunge, particularly in Merseyside, often "gash" means rubbish/sh*t etc. As in: "did you watch the match last night? - that Traore was gash, wasn't he?"

 

I'm old school. You can't beat fanny.

 

Another favourite that hasn't been mentioned is *****.

Posted

Hairy axe-wound

*****

Growler

Flange

Fadge

Cockpit

Beaver

Badger

Gash

Clunge

Tw*t

****

****flaps

Pussy

 

All classics.

 

"Get your rat out!"

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