Any Oz here who'll help a Pom

Want to contact Sharpbuilt in TOOWOOMBA QUEENSLAND, but there's no email address on his website.

Anyone willing to ring him and get an email addy from him or get him to post one to his site?

It will cost a fortune to phone from the UK

TIA

Tony

Reply to
Tony Bennett
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Nah they speak english, we speak stryne ;)

As for others......... well................merkan, canuck, its all same to me :)

But at least we can all speak VW... No????

Reply to
penguin

Try snipped-for-privacy@sharpbuilt.com.au

Grahame from Aus

T> Want to contact Sharpbuilt in TOOWOOMBA QUEENSLAND, but there's no email

Reply to
Grahame Rumballe

What the $^*& is an oz & a pom???

Reply to
ThaDriver

Its a British/Australian thing. If you were one you'd know........

Tony

Reply to
Tony Bennett

We're Oz and hes a Pom. make sense???

Oz = Aust = Australia - as in ' you theiving Ozzie mongrel!!'

and

POM = Pommie = English - as in 'you whiney pommie bastard'

All said in a very friendly way :D (we do actually get on with each other)

Reply to
penguin

Shows how the terms are used, got the Oz part but not sure what POM means or it's origin.

Reply to
Not Me

POM: possibly from "Prisoner of Mother England"

Reply to
Ted

According to

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Claim: "Pommy" (or "pom"), a slang term for a British person, comes from the acronym POHM, which was used to designate a "Prisoner of His Majesty."

Status: False.

Origins: "Pommy" (or "pom" or "pommie") is a primarily Australian (and largely derisive) slang term used to indicate a recent immigrant from Great Britain, or a Brit in general. The origins of "pommy" having been lost in the mists of time, someone needed to cook up an etymology for it, preferably one equal to the pejorative sense of the word. Accordingly, we now have the story that criminals transported to Australia were designated "Prisoners of His Majesty" or "Prisoners of Mother England" (some versions claim the convicts bore one of these legends printed on the backs of their shirts), and thus the acronym "POHM" or "POME" eventually evolved into the slang term "pom" or "pommy."

This amusing anecdote is doubtful as anything more than a fanciful invention, as acronymic origins antedating the mid-twentieth century are automatically suspect, and the use of "pommy" has been recorded at least as far back as 1915. Moreover, nobody has yet turned up corroborating evidence that "Prisoner of His Majesty" or "Prisoners of Mother England" were actually common designations for criminals transported to Australia. The best guess at this time is that "pommy" was based on the word "pomegranate"

-- either because the redness of the fruit supposedly matched the typically florid British complexion, or because (like "Johnny Grant") it was used as rhyming slang for "immigrant."

Ted wrote:

Reply to
Tony Bennett

And yet you all *seem* to speak english! LOL! ~ Paul aka "Tha Driver"

Giggle Cream - it makes dessert *funny*!

Reply to
ThaDriver

POHM originally i believe, Prisoners of Her Majesty.

JAmes

Reply to
Juper Wort

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