Chatting Bollux n Bull with Lynne and Tracey

Twists, Turns and Double Twirls: Navigating the Curious Terrain of Language!

Lynne and Tracey Episode 15

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Ever been caught out by double meanings or stumbled over regional dialects? Join us for a raucous romp through the twists and turns of language, where rhyming words sneak into our casual chats and phrases often carry more weight than we realize. We'll laugh about our hilarious experience at a Stranger Things musical parody and share an amusing workplace incident that underscores the need to think twice before we utter certain words or phrases.

We don't just stop at the quirks, though. We confront the darker side of language use, examining how certain common phrases can unintentionally suggest that some emotions are wrong. We even question the origins of sayings that have somehow wormed their way into our daily conversations. We'll also unravel the mystery behind the phrase 'raining cats and dogs' and ponder how language - often misunderstood - affects neurodiverse individuals. As we step into the world of regional dialects, we share anecdotes about living in a multi-dialect household and how it has enriched our understanding of language. This is not just a light-hearted conversation, but one that could potentially change how you perceive and use language.

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Lynne:

Hello, hello, hello, hello, hello, hello, hello, hello, hello, hello. How are we doing? All right, how are you? Yeah, I'm good. Thank you, Good glad it's a bit chilly, isn't?

Tracey:

it. It's not quite bolted. That's a little bit of an exaggeration, no, that's. But the heat are on. It's a bit chilly. I don't say chilly weather if I have one, but I haven't, so it's fine. Why do we think we say that? Because it just rhymes. I'm getting, don't we Chilly willy? Because it rhymes. We like rhyming words, don't we? Yeah, people are just trying to think of something else now. Now, I can't think of any. What chilly willy? Yeah, thank you, punky. Oh, yeah, you ready. Thank you, punky. Next one Minds are going blank. Silly Billy, silly Billy, silly Billy. You're a funny, aren't you? Yeah, it's just obviously that rhyming tone of it that I wonder why. I don't know. Oh God, this could be a rabbit hole. It could be, couldn't it? I don't know why we like. Thing is. I don't know why. I don't know why we don't like, why we like rhyming words. No, me neither. No, it's a bit weird. Anybody has the answer.

Lynne:

We need to know this Interesting.

Tracey:

Why do we like rhyming words? It sounds funny in my head, so you sound funny in your head, yeah.

Lynne:

I wonder why you sound funny in your head.

Tracey:

I don't know, I think it's my headphones, but I sound funny in my head. That's not unusual, I was going to say. But I just you are funny in your head. It sounds a bit strange. In what way it's a bit strange in there. You look bloody strange in that head. Talking is strange. Oh what? This is completely random, but that's just made me think of our when we went to Cardiff the other week.

Lynne:

Oh.

Tracey:

Stranger Things. God, what a good night that was. I do sound strange, Sorry. I thought for a while, oh that was such a brilliant night Completely not what we were expecting. So we went off to Cardiff to watch Stranger Things. So if you know Stranger Things the series, this was Stranger Things the musical and well, personally, I thought it was going to be lots of sing along to Because it's based in the 80s, so it's going to be all good cool 80s music. It wasn't like that at all. No, that's what I was expecting. It was hilarious. So if you haven't seen it, Fucking bizarre it was. Yeah, it was absolutely bizarre, wasn't it? Oh, my God, it was so bizarre, but it was hilarious it was. It was brilliant, it was absolutely brilliant. I can't even explain. So it was basically, it was almost like a piss-take of Stranger Things. Yeah, it was.

Lynne:

Yeah.

Tracey:

It was just a piss-take of Stranger Things, but it was brilliant.

Lynne:

But it was really funny.

Tracey:

Yeah, it was cheesy, it was funny it was cheesy.

Lynne:

It was funny, it was their own song, but yeah, yeah.

Tracey:

Just taking the mickey out of Stranger Things. It was really funny, it was brilliant. Yeah, yeah, so they're on a tour at the minute, aren't they? Yeah, so if you fancy it, I would go, and I would go and say it was funny.

Lynne:

I totally recommend it.

Tracey:

It was good. Yeah, it was really good. So, yeah, that's the only jolly I would do, isn't it? Yeah, it'd been a bit quite lately, wouldn't it? Yeah, probably it's that winter thing, isn't it? Yeah, it's that I would go down the Albinau Hybernation Route again and Christmas come in. Oh my God, she's so miserable. She's just so miserable when it comes to Christmas. You need some Christmas pants, I wonder what you could see, everybody needs Christmas pants. Have you got Christmas pants?

Tracey:

No way but like you were saying about things that rhyme right, don't? We have pants for everything, so we have big pants. But yes, see, we should talk about language, because the five Cs the big pants is you put your big pants on, or you wear your big pants when you've got to suck it all in. Yeah, it's just two meanings there, isn't it? Yeah, isn't it funny how we give things two different meanings? Yes, is that just a British thing? Well, I don't know, because I'm only British.

Lynne:

I've got it. Okay, can't answer that question. Fail for that one, fuck.

Tracey:

But yes, we do, Don't we? Yes, I love it. See, I love language. Our language is amazing. It's just that's somewhat what we say, but it gets me that we say it.

Tracey:

We're not even thinking about it. No, we don't. It doesn't even compute to think about what's about, just to come out of your mouth. No, I have that problem. Yeah, you should. It's a bloody story she's been telling me this week about her work. To be honest, I'm not sure if she's not flipping sections or the BZ Regret of what I've got. But what she said this week but yeah, like you said, you don't even think about it. That thing's terminology we're brought up with as children. Yeah, yeah, the old saying you think before you speak. Really, we should all bring that into play. Yes, big time yes, but we don't. No, we don't. I don't think our brain has the capacity to do that.

Tracey:

See then that has a double whammy for me now. Now, I think about it Because, yes, if you think before you speak, but then if you don't think before you speak, then that's your truth, yes, see, so that has a double whammy, doesn't it? It does, because I thought exactly the same in the fact that if you're thinking before you're speaking, you're not speaking your truth, you're not speaking what you want to say. No, because you're thinking about it. And if you have to think about it which you shouldn't have to think about it you should just say it. But there's also that bit is that you should say things with kindness, yeah, but, but then you should always speak with kindness. So you shouldn't have to think about thinking about speaking with kindness, because you should automatically, yeah, speak with kindness. So if your true self is kind, even though you're speaking your truth, you're not going to say it in a nasty way, no, you're just going to say it in a truthful way, and that's the difference.

Tracey:

Okay, so that's a good point. Yeah, see, we have lots of double stuff, don't we? Oh, yeah, but it is, isn't it? But do you just like you say it? But I think of the things that were said to me as a child, which is complete nonsense. But people say it all the time oh, I love the kids stuff. It's hilarious. It's the wind changes. Your face will stay like that.

Lynne:

What the actual?

Tracey:

My face has never stayed like in one position because I was making a resting bitch face at somebody. I wonder where that came from. I don't know. Where did that come from? Do you think that almost came from? What was the woman who you said like, if you looked at her, turned to stone? Oh, medusa, yeah, do you think it came from? Sort of that sort of I love those, like Greek, like the, what they had used to say yeah, that's the word.

Tracey:

I couldn't think of that word. That's a typical word for me, linda's posh words. I wonder if it did. I don't know, though. Did she have anything to do with the wind? No, we had snakes. Nerd, yeah, she did, did she? I don't know if Stoice got f***** to do with her. I don't know, but it is. It's things like that. Oh, think of another word. I can't think of any now. Billy Collin did an amazing sketch on it. It's just fantastic, but it is things like that. I'll make you laugh on the other side or make you cry on the other side of your face. What the f***** is that? If you're crying, I'll give you something to cry about.

Lynne:

I'm already crying, why would you give me something else to cry about you?

Tracey:

don't hear those so much now no, thankfully, because it was usually a terrible thing. We would just be the living daylight to that, be to be honest. So, thankfully not. But just random stuff like that. It is weird. I love it, but, like you say, it just comes out automatically. Well, and the problem is we say a lot of things automatically and we say a lot of things out of love that actually can get interpreted completely differently than what it's put out there to be. Yes, can't I? I've done that with my own children, me too. Big story, like you say. You're saying things, but it is not.

Tracey:

Yeah, and my biggest one I always think of is with my son, who was 8 when I got divorced. I'm so sorry. No, you own that fucking divorce girl. Yes, I'll own both of them, that's the two she's owning up to. So, yeah, so when he was 8, and I always remember my dad saying come on, you're the man of the house, nice, you've got to look after your mum, and I'm like no, no, no, no, no, you do not put that responsibility on an 8 year old, no way on this earth. And I was very proud to say that to him. And then I've spent the next 40, 50 years telling him that he's my absolute rock. Same thing God it is, isn't it? It works. So I've still put that responsibility on him because I've always told him he's my rock, because he is my absolute rock Seeing. It's strange how we do that, but that's still a responsibility I gave him.

Tracey:

But, like you see, it's just a different terminology. Yeah, different language, yeah, different words From me and my dad. Both those came out of love, yes, but I think probably a little bit from my dad. Is that old fashioned sort of? Or you've got to be a man of that house now, like you know, but it's the same thing, yes, so I've given him a responsibility that they then carry forward. Yeah, yeah, so it's very easy to say things with a heartfelt meaning behind it, but we can't ever anticipate, really, what that other person then interprets that as and then takes on board and pins to their own identity. See, that's the thing. It's the whole good girl, good boy thing, isn't it?

Lynne:

Yeah.

Tracey:

Because you can tell somebody forever that they're good, but then that gives them an expectation that they feel they have to live up to, which is a pressure in itself for always being good, always getting it right, always getting good marks, all those things that then get wrapped up with that and you don't realise how easily you do it. So actually I was really mindful of something the past couple of weeks. So we had my grandson and obviously he's only a few weeks old and he was crying and my brother was like, oh, don't cry.

Lynne:

And I was like what the fuck am I saying yeah?

Tracey:

Because it was that instinctual thing to calm him. And don't cry, it's OK. Do you know what I mean? I was just like whoa. No, because it's OK to cry.

Tracey:

This is it, isn't it. But, like you say, without thinking, those words don't cry, came out of my mouth. How many of your times have we said to kids don't be afraid. Yeah, but when you break that down, it's OK to be afraid. It's just we've got to start brooding. This like really differently. Yeah, and it's like you're saying it.

Tracey:

Those words that come out, that language that you use in an instinctual, automatically way, you say that's it For the life of me. I don't want him not to have emotions. That would be the last thing I want. Yeah, but like you say, that's something you say without thinking about it, and we've all done that, and you say that as a baby. But you keep saying when there are a tonkli over there and they fall over, oh, don't cry. And you say I love, oh, don't cry. And you don't mean to say don't cry, don't cry. But that gets interpreted as oh, we're crying is wrong. Yeah, don't be afraid. Oh, that's wrong. Don't be angry, yeah, oh, that's a biggie. Yeah, actually, anger is an emotion that we all need, but we think it's a really bad emotion to have.

Lynne:

That's it, ken. It's that language, isn't it?

Tracey:

It's just yeah, it's hard, yeah, but just how it just comes out, without being like you say, and not with any misintention, but with lovely intention and with love. But we just yeah, yeah, because if you weren't afraid, the next time a boss came down the road, you'd just be in the fight, wouldn't you? Well, that wouldn't be very good for that, you know. So we need fear, which is why I know somebody that got hit by a bus, but that's just the go-to Random.

Lynne:

You don't need to know that, but that just literally popped in my head. I'm thinking, oh, I know somebody that got hit by a bus.

Tracey:

They survived, by the way. That's another way.

Lynne:

Why do we say that?

Tracey:

Well, why is it you stand when we're trying to placate people and say they should live their lives or you never know, you get hit by a bus tomorrow. Why do you say that?

Lynne:

It's a bus, yeah, you never go. Oh yeah, you're going to get hit by a tank. No, yeah, oh no, you're going to get hit by a llama. Why is it always a?

Tracey:

bus? Who decided the bus was the ultimate way to die if you stepped out in front of it? Do you think more people get hit by buses than they do anything else? Surely not. I don't know. And let's be perfectly honest, right, buses go really slow. They're big, though.

Lynne:

They are big.

Tracey:

But if you put a stepped out in front of a bus when it was pulling away. It's not likely to kill you, is it? No, hopefully, Unless he stops and reverses back.

Lynne:

It's just a thing's, you didn't drop it off. No wonder where that came from. But, that's again, isn't it?

Tracey:

Why do we always say it doesn't matter, you get hit by a bus tomorrow? See, we have all these little program sayings, don't we Like? You say, where did that come from that saying? It's been there for years and years and years that people have like kept saying over and over. And then everybody says it over and over. But I wonder what that initial thing was, where that came from. Who initially said it's okay, it doesn't matter, you get hit by a bus tomorrow. And then everybody in the entire United Kingdom now said don't worry, you need to live your life. You get hit by a bus tomorrow, right, Funny enough. Four still on the bus thing. Why do we say, oh, it's like buses, things come in. Three.

Lynne:

So when something's?

Tracey:

happening. Well, I don't know where the bloody of that came from, because they don't even come in ones, do they Not? When you're stood at the bloody bus stop? They don't Right. Not even one bugger comes, let alone three.

Lynne:

Why do we have so many bus things? I don't know.

Tracey:

They were obviously, I don't know. There was obviously a lot of buses in some stage in the world, not like now when you can't get one, but when you're on one. Yes, weird, isn't it? Like I said, where does this shit come from? I think it's all sent down to us, like you say. I'm sure our mum's have said that to us.

Lynne:

it's all right it's by a bus door.

Tracey:

Absolutely, absolutely, yes. Funny isn't it? It is funny. I love language. I just find it fascinating what we say, like you said, that we just do not think about at all. No, absolutely don't. It doesn't even cross our minds to think about what it is that we're saying no, and I'm sure that must be really confusing for some people. Yeah, because I've obviously had quite a few neurodiverse conversations in my house and some of the things I just get looked at and I always remember in the car like I went that's a peach.

Lynne:

Like that's another one, isn't it Like?

Tracey:

and I get asked what do you mean? That's a peach, that's great, isn't it? So why is that a peach? Why do we ever connect a peach to something good? Yeah, that's great, that's a peach. That's epic, that's a peach.

Lynne:

Why.

Tracey:

I don't know A raining cat's and dog. Well, when's that ever happened Exactly? When has it actually rained? Cats and dogs? Now there is a reason to that. I've read that, but I can't remember what it is, so that's pretty useless. But Really, yes, I've read that somewhere where that came from, but I can't remember. I will get on to Google later Now. How's the bedding? Who's listening to this? It's now Googling.

Lynne:

Yeah, raining cats and dogs. They've only spent half the time on Google, not listening to the podcast going. What do I like? King Frost, If I capacity to talk and look at something at the same time, I'd be pretty good, really good. Look at this. She's in the bathroom, but isn't it?

Tracey:

Yeah, Round of stuff that just falls out of your mouth without you being aware of it, or actually, and how people around not everybody, like you say, especially on the Eurodover, I think for me, because I'm in that household, it's made me very aware that actually what I say and what I mean, or what I mean to say, is completely different. Yes, and the times when I've said things and then I see an expression and think, right, what I just said, and then you think back in your head what you've just said and gone, that actually doesn't matter, doesn't make any sense, and I've also had that conversation. Well, you know what I mean. Yeah, and I looked at that with no.

Tracey:

Because actually I haven't said what I mean. I think I have in my head, but I haven't. When you actually say it out loud, it's like okay. So I think that being in that household has made me very aware of my language, because a lot of it doesn't make any bloody sense. But that's what I really do, does it? No? So I'm sure and I know that's definitely a difference between other cultures and others yes, so if you were speaking to generally to another British person, they would understand what you were talking about, but actually that's not always true, is it? If I think you know, colloquially there are different bits all the time. So I remember having a conversation with friends of ours who you live up north, and the word clarty come out.

Lynne:

I was like clarty. What the hell does clarty mean? I've never heard of that.

Tracey:

So clarty for them is how you know when you have like a pudding or a cake where it's like that sticky, like gooey. That's clarty.

Lynne:

Well, how did that come?

Tracey:

from.

Lynne:

And Brent looked at me and went, you know what I was like.

Tracey:

no, I was like that's definitely not a sound.

Lynne:

That's funny, isn't it.

Tracey:

So, even, like you say, within regions, you have that different dialogue, those different words. Like us with us, gir, yeah, this is it, and it for us is gir. We all understand what gir means, don't we, you know? But it's funny, isn't it?

Lynne:

Yeah.

Tracey:

So you talk like that and you're not aware of what you're saying, because the people around you understand what you're saying.

Lynne:

Yeah.

Tracey:

Most of the time. Most of the time, and that's like you say, you live in a neurodivergent household and you just get weird looks, which is perfectly understandable, because what you're saying really doesn't make any sense. No, it doesn't, but we think we're making sense, but we do. We don't even think about it Because we've been brought up with those sayings. So we've been brought up in an environment where saying that saying makes that sense and you understand the connotation of that saying yeah, even if it actually makes no sense whatsoever.

Tracey:

No, it's funny in there and I've never aware of that before, but now it's really made me think, and I think that that's one of the reasons why I've started to love sort of like language, because it really does make you think about what you say and what you mean. Yeah, yeah, and it's just, and I love the interpretation of what you say and the reasons why you say it, but how then somebody else interprets that?

Tracey:

can be like totally different, totally different. And then they wonder why kids are like confused, but they grow up with adults. But, I just think I had that room in this conversation Like I only liked last week and the whole like Christmas thing and stuff, and I'm like that makes me laugh. We lie to our kids till they're about 11. 12 probably tops, usually like 10 or 11. Yeah, but if they were to lie to us we'd turn them off for lying, yeah.

Lynne:

Yeah.

Tracey:

It's no wonder kids grow up from dark. And we don't just lie, we lie and manipulate with the whole Christmas thing. Oh don't we? Oh God, are you telling me there is not a parrot in this living world, that is not m-?

Lynne:

You need to be a good child, or else, or else Somebody's not coming. That's what I mean.

Tracey:

Yeah, it's no wonder we all grow up confused Because our parents lied to us on a regular basis. They taught complete and utter rubbish to us and also never explain things. You know when you're a kid, don't you? And it's almost like you're tagging at Ters. When, what do you mean? What do you mean? And it's like, oh, later, or yeah, you don't need to know why. Yeah, oh, why, and we all just get annoyed at that. Why? But we should be embracing that, why shouldn't we? And explaining it is hard, though. Yes, it's draining.

Lynne:

Yes.

Tracey:

I will vouch for that one, because I get about a thousand a day. It is. My little one was a very white one. Why, why? Why? Just because it is, yes, I have a, just because now. So now I get, what's that? Or is that a just because?

Lynne:

Do you want me to laugh? Don't just completely run them. But you went into questioning Nemo but I nearly wrote just fucking cause. I'm sorry, it's fine. It just made me laugh. I couldn't remember the exact words. You said it, but it was just like I'm going to tell her, I'm just laughing cause.

Tracey:

It lends on the end of my questions I like asking questions.

Lynne:

I know, but it's great that you do and I love it when you do, but it was just a skit.

Tracey:

And. I was like oh, they're very annoying. I don't even understand if I ever get a JC back.

Lynne:

I'll go okay. Oh, shut up. Not a good time Not going to deal with it now.

Tracey:

But that's another thing. You say I get asked all these questions and I go I don't know the answer, but then I get. But you're a mum, you're supposed to know all the answers, because that's another saying we use. Well, mum's always know, don't they? Yeah, mum's are always right. No, we're not.

Lynne:

We're wrong a lot of the fucking time.

Tracey:

We make shit up a lot of the time just to shut kids up. But you see, we shouldn't.

Lynne:

No, you're right, we shouldn't, but we do.

Tracey:

We do, Unfortunately we do. We do A because we're tired. We do B because we haven't got a lot of time.

Tracey:

C, I think there's also a lack of not wanting to be seen. That's what I was just going to say. Do you think a lot of that really is the fact that we think we're programmed to think we should know. So then we don't want to go because we're not very good at that. We don't want to go. Do you know what? I don't know the answer to that, yeah. That is yeah, yeah. So we don't want to be seen like a failure in our child's eyes by not having the answer to the question that they're asking, which. It would be so much nicer, wouldn't it, if we just went. Do you know what? I don't know the answer to that, but I will help you find that. Let's find out. Yeah, but we don't do we. Can we give it a negative spin back, don't we? Yeah, but we don't ever think of that. No, we just go just because that's it. No, yeah, we have to mind our language. Mind our language, Timothy.

Lynne:

Yeah.

Tracey:

But then again that brings the connotation mind your language, mind your language, mind your language, mind your language. Yeah, and we always say, because you think we were brought up with that TV program and said mind you that language, timothy. Yeah, and it's bad language. It is bad language, but we don't look at it as bad language, it's just no, clearly not, because I've swarmed several times in this podcast.

Tracey:

But you see language language has so many different meanings, doesn't it? The word language? I mean, we did a thing the other day, didn't we right? The word shit? Yeah, I love that. The shit covers everything. Yeah, there's so many different meanings to it, so it doesn't have to be. It shouldn't be seen always as bad language. There is a way you can say it that then it does become bad language If you say it like we were saying about, if you always say it in a kind way. So if you're saying things in a kind way, it's not bad language. Maybe it's like a strong language, isn't it? But there are times when you're talking would definitely change. Yeah, your tone will change your inter, and if you were telling somebody to piss off and you meant it, then yeah, that's bad language, but yeah, but we can also go yeah, piss off, yeah, this is it, and nobody thinks events about it no no, but then when you say that word, shit on it.

Lynne:

Yeah.

Tracey:

But you say you can have a shit day, which it seems that it's bad, but then something can be shit off.

Lynne:

Yeah, which is? Like a really good thing Like shit, that's really shit off.

Tracey:

I just love that pose because shit covers literally everything you want it to. Yeah, and literally it covers a lot, yeah, but that's going to hold. I'll rabbit hold then. Like we talked about tone, so when you talk to somebody verbally, you can put a whole different tone on it, whereas when you write it to somebody they put their own tone on it. Yes, so then that gets misinterpreted. That's why messages get misinterpreted Text messages, facebook messages, whatever, whatever a written book can be, the written word can because, like you say, you're putting your own interpretation on those words Depends how the reader reads it, isn't it?

Tracey:

Whereas face to face, you can pick up that body language and the tone that that's given in, amazing in it, how our body also has a language. But that's the thing, isn't it? Oh God, I can't remember the down percentage, but it's ridiculously high. As to how much we pick up from somebody's body language, not from just the words, that say it's like a really high percentage. Yeah, can imagine that Interesting. Yeah, it is, it is.

Tracey:

So it's not just about what comes out your mouth, no, but you see, there are so many angles to language per se. There's just, yeah, it's fascinating. It is fascinating. I love that. It's great, it is, it's just really good.

Tracey:

But, like you say, it's not something we're taught to think about, it's not something we're, you know so, but it is really interesting if you start thinking about it. Yeah, you can overthink it, trust me. Honestly, you can think about nothing else. To be honest, you'd probably believe the answer. Say a word again. But yeah, but it is. Yeah, just sometimes, just think, sit a little bit and think about what you've just said, because you just laugh at yourself, because it can be hilarious, what you think you've said, yeah, and what you've actually said. Yeah, exactly, you know, and, like you say, the whole tone thing, a lot of Asian languages, the way you tone, it means something completely different. Yeah, yeah, and I think that's where we get misinterpretations through different cultures, isn't it? Because we don't necessarily understand their language and their tones, because they do, like you said, down south, up north, totally different tones and we think, up north they're all a bit, oh, they're a bit RFI but that's it, isn't it, but it's not.

Tracey:

It's just that they've talked with different tones. Yes, and yeah, maybe they are a bit more straight and honest, I don't know. No, maybe we're, but that's it. But, like you say, it's yeah, yeah, but it's the way it is the way it is. Yeah, in a way, yeah, it's funny, isn't it? Yeah, funny old things, aren't it here we are yeah, funny old things. Well, we're near Bristol and everybody goes to Bristol. I think they just think everybody's sitting there. I know all of us down south we're just because we live on farms, don't?

Lynne:

we, we are everybody.

Tracey:

Oh my god, you're drawing to a tractor.

Lynne:

Yeah, was it worth all that poem.

Tracey:

Oh, I can't remember. Oh, I'm going to ask are you flipping, anointing now? What is that? I can't remember what it goes. Something about? Oh, I don't know, I can't bloody remember. There's a thing in the set about I can drive a tractor on, I can't read a wreath or something like that. But I think, yeah, sometimes I do shit like that.

Lynne:

But yeah, I get a drawing to drive a tractor, but why do?

Tracey:

they think that. I suppose, because it's the way we talk, like you're saying that whole thing, that people think you're thick, can't they? Because it will sound like pirates and we'll Provoke it to that Relate, I don't know. Oh, what are you saying? That we all much on carrots, drink cider and got wheat coming out of off, flipping mouths without straw out on going?

Lynne:

or in my liver.

Tracey:

Yeah, because we all talk like that. Oh yeah, all the time. I used to work for a courier company years and years ago and they would take the pisser. I would, because we had depots all over the country. So I'd been ringing depots, different depots, all the time. They'd take the piss out of me all the time. It's funny All the time.

Tracey:

Yeah, you don't think you're on exit yourself, do you? No, because you don't, because you might hear that, because everybody else talks the same around you. You just think everybody else is born here. Yeah, but, yeah, but yeah. They used to take the piss out of me all the time. They knew exactly who it was when I ran up.

Lynne:

You go, I live.

Tracey:

Yes, that, and I used to when I used to get like my laryngitis, because in those days I used to get laryngitis every year and I'd go into me like sexy dungeon voice and stuff. This is like really random and there used to be. So we used to have a massive company that we used to collect from for my depot. We used to collect big company that we go in and collect from every day and they used to be a lad that I would phone up on the street. At the time he had a bit of a thing for me when all my voice went all like larynjoy, you see.

Lynne:

And then somebody else would pick up and go see you.

Tracey:

Yeah, no, bless his little arm.

Lynne:

Right, shall we leave that there? Now we've given him enough to think about. Yeah, then we'll spend the next hour on Google.

Tracey:

Yeah, let's know about the cats and dogs. Yeah, and the other stuff we've randomly talked about. Just a little hint. Just think, yep, just don't think before you speak.

Lynne:

No.

Tracey:

I've done, but think about it afterwards. Yeah, think about the saying that you've just come out with, because it'll give you a bit of a give off. What does that actually mean? Yeah, have the most fabulous day, you gorgeous lot. Yeah, we will speak to you soon. Bye.

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