NZDoug
Cook
"Bogans, hoons and louts" down under for the "bad boy boogie" crowd.
Actually, it is here too. "Two four" is a sort of declasse way of saying it, made famous by Bob & Doug Mackenzie.24 beers (of the same vintage ) is a "case" here.
Actually, it is here too. "Two four" is a sort of declasse way of saying it, made famous by Bob & Doug Mackenzie.
And it is implied that it is one kind of beer if you just say "case". It is possible to have a mixed case of beer.
I'll bite. What's a two six and a Texas mickey? Where are those terms used?I know what a two six is, and a texas mickey...but I don't drink beer. The last time I bought beer it was Alexander Keith's and it came in a box of 15. Weird.
I do not think this is the place, for me to get started with slang Spanish, South American, Latin American or Italian colloquial phrases or words !
These days a package of beer, whether it's a 12-pack, 24-pack or 30-pack, is completely enclosed in cardboard so it's all one type unless it's a sampler of different brews sold by a brewer.
In the "old days" a case was just a cardboard tray with four six-packs in it. You could mix and match but then you aren't buying a case, you're buying four six packs.
According to Google Translate, she was being polite about what it means.Margi,
Jackass? Jerk? Those are mild compared to what you would hear in Boston.
Sir Leon,
Which San Fernando ? There is one, in each and every Spanish province and then, one in California and every country south of the USA border too ...
In Canada you have a chesterfield on your stoop. In America we have a couch on our front porch. (Okay only in lower class neighborhoods. Middle and upper classers would never be seen sitting on their front porches. Not unless they had 10-20 acres and high walls around their property, and maybe armed guard dogs.)