Thursday, September 08, 2011

talk


verb [ intrans. ]speak in order to give information or express ideas or feelings; converse or communicate by spoken words the two men talked |we'd sit and talk about jazz it was no usetalking to Anthony [ trans. you're talking rubbish.


"It's been ages since i went to see a band"

"I went to see one of them old punk bands, what were they called?"

"Sex Pistols"

"No"

"Damned"

"No, it'll come to me"

"Buzzcocks, that was it, they were terrible"

blokes phone rings. What is Love by Haddaway ringtone.


"Yeah there is a new restaurant in town, down from the station, Simon what's it called?"

"Oh, I can't remember, something French, I think"

"We were in the mosher pit at Kaiser Chiefs"

"Mosher Pit?"

"Yeah down the front"

blokes phone rings. What is Love by Haddaway ringtone.


"I saw David Bowie in March and he was gorgeous"
"Really!"

blokes phone rings. What is Love by Haddaway ringtone.


"I said to my friend today, you should see my underwear drawer, it's bloody chaos"


eavesdrop |ˈēvzˌdräp|verb ( -dropped -dropping ) [ intrans. ]secretly listen to a conversation she opened the window just enough to eavesdrop on the conversation outside.DERIVATIVESeavesdropper nounORIGIN early 17th cent.: back-formation from eavesdropper( late Middle English [a person who listens from under the eaves,] from the obsolete noun eavesdrop [the ground on to which water drips from the eaves,] probably from Old Norseupsardropi, from ups ‘eaves’ dropi ‘a drop.’

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