l'humour caché de certaines immat, un bizjet de l' Est....

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keskildi
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l'humour caché de certaines immat, un bizjet de l' Est....

Message par keskildi »

pour ce bizjet de bonne taille, je ne sais si le propriétaire novoritchi russe (ou assimilé) a bien perçu le jeu de mots en anglais ''very british'' sur l'immat de son avion en X X- WOG (wise oriental gentleman = foutu métèque....) mais ses amis vont surement se charger de lui expliquer !

d'ailleurs, si l'on en croit les anglais, le royaume des WOG' S commence à Calais....

notons qu'il s'agit d'un DO328 jet ENVOY type peu courant d'avion privé

Image

définition wikipedia de WOG pour parfaire notre culture anglo saxone...

[edit] As a racial epithet in British English
British racial term originating in the colonial period of the British Empire. It was used as a label for the natives of India, North Africa, the Mediterranean, and the Middle East. By the 1950s it had become a pejorative term used in order to offend. In modern British parlance it has become less prevalent and has been applied to any type of dark skinned person.

The origin of the term is uncertain. Many dictionaries say "wog" possibly derives from the Golliwogg, a blackface minstrel doll character from a children's book published in 1895. An alternative is that "wog" originates from Pollywog, a maritime term for someone who has not crossed the equator. Attempts to derive "wog" from such phrases as "Western Oriental Gentleman" are however considered backronyms.

The use of the word is discouraged in Britain, and most dictionaries refer to the word with the caution that it is derogatory and offensive slang.

The saying "The wogs begin at Calais" was originated by George Wigg, Labour MP for Dudley, in 1945. In a parliamentary debate concerning the Burmese, Wigg shouted at the Tory benches, "The Honourable Gentleman and his friends think they are all 'wogs'. Indeed, the Right Honourable Member for Woodford [i.e. Winston Churchill] thinks that the 'wogs' begin at Calais." Wigg's coinage, sometimes paraphrased as "Wogs start at the Channel" or "Wogs start at Dover", is used to characterise a stodgy Europhobic viewpoint, and more generally the view that Britain (more so England) is inherently separate from (and superior to) the Continent. In this case, "wog" is used to compare any foreign, non-English person to those more traditionally labeled "wogs".
captain Keskildi and hisse (burp) crue welcommme yu aboard this flight to Bordeaux, hic.... free drinks will be served JUST after takeoff, purser, I'll have a scotch please
Moimaim
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Message par Moimaim »

C'est surtout le UR-xxx qui donne toute sa saveur à la chose...
When everything else failed............read the manual
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opslady
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Message par opslady »

Je pensais la meme chose hier...
un peu comme la planete Uranus.. :oops:
L'humour n'est pas incompatible avec la competence.
(Old Irish Proverb, circa 1999)
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