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Originally Posted by laepelba
Does "familiar" then mean "informal"? I'm not really clear on the "familiar" part....
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Yes.
Quote:
Originally Posted by laepelba
I've never heard that phrase used in English before. Maybe it's Nevada-English?
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Quote:
Originally Posted by poli
Your a brick sounds truly strange to me, however if you say you are thick as a brick, you are accusing someone of being stupid.
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Either will mean "stupid".
"What, Am I talking to a brick?"
Quote:
Originally Posted by laepelba
That doesn't sound as odd to me....
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Well, it must be because "your a brick" is totally different from "you're a brick"