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Location: 1st street on the right
Registered: November 2002
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Foreignisms and their meanings (i can't say wog here can I)
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Mon, 11 August 2003 04:55
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We all know that many people will use various references to refer to their or others cars. But do we all know what it means? This is sparked by what I heard today and I actually had to ask what it meant. "It's gutter to gutter way sik maate!"
Aparently means fishtaiols that badly that it bounces off each gutter. Why you'd want to do this I don't know.
Any othersubmissions for oddities like this?
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Location: Cabramatta, NSW
Registered: May 2002
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Re: Foreignisms and their meanings (i can't say wog here can I)
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Mon, 11 August 2003 04:57
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"It's so siik, it's sickening!"
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Location: ballarat
Registered: April 2003
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Location: Canberra
Registered: December 2002
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Re: Foreignisms and their meanings (i can't say wog here can I)
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Mon, 11 August 2003 05:44
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Gonna kill you dead!!!!
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Club Member
Location: Sydney, NSW
Registered: May 2002
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Re: Foreignisms and their meanings (i can't say wog here can I)
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Mon, 11 August 2003 10:01
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Oh my god bro, it's fully sik bro... It's lowered, it's got like a big exhaust, it's got MOMO's elair...
...
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Location: Adelaide
Registered: June 2003
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Re: Foreignisms and their meanings (i can't say wog here can I)
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Mon, 11 August 2003 13:08
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ehendrikd wrote on Mon, 11 August 2003 15:00 | "fooly sik, f**k'n ray" - i don't what the 'ray' bit means
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its short for hooray, but its kind of more sarcastic
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Location: Adelaide
Registered: June 2003
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Re: Foreignisms and their meanings (i can't say wog here can I)
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Mon, 11 August 2003 13:09
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broadsiding: what country people call doing doughies/ringies/circle work
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Location: Epping, Sydney
Registered: April 2003
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Re: Foreignisms and their meanings (i can't say wog here can I)
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Mon, 11 August 2003 14:06
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Umm I think this is what you are all looking for.
http://www.wog.com.au/
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