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View Full Version : Aussies - What are you playing with?


Mr. Underhill
May 29th, 2006, 04:33 AM
What game sets are Aussies playing with?

Anyone using more than one MS? How about fire and ice? Customs?

So far, my squids and I have just got 1 x MS and the Mallinddon's Prophecy set. Can't wait to see the Tundra, Lava, RTTFF!!! Oh lordy.


Where are you and what are you playing with?


Ciao!

Mr. Underhill

dickflea
May 29th, 2006, 06:10 AM
So far i have 2 MS and all the expansions except the latest ones.....sadly have shipped it to my nephew to have a go with.... :cry:

Xargon
May 30th, 2006, 12:55 AM
I own 3 master sets

wave 1
wave 2
wave 4
rtff

The shops suck. milsims.com is the way to go.

Can wait for the next wave

POP mARTy
May 30th, 2006, 01:28 AM
2 x Master Sets (1st Ed. & 2nd Ed.)
1 x Waves 1, 2 & 3. (Wave 4 on it's way.)
1 x RTFF
1 x VW
1 x OR

Will eventually purchase another RTFF and VW when I have spare cash. Same with a few of the common squads, if I can find 'em.....

Mr. Underhill
May 30th, 2006, 02:45 AM
You guys ROCK!

Aussie, Aussie, Aussie ...


:P

Mr. Underhill

Jason
May 30th, 2006, 03:07 AM
I love British and Australian words. To an American a squid is an octopus type creature that lives undersea

Mr. Underhill
May 30th, 2006, 03:19 AM
Hehehe. :D We have octopi... ? ... octopuses ... ? ... also.

Kids = squids.

I don't think that squids as a term of endearment for one's children has actually taken off yet here in Oz. It's still limited to our family.

However, our children do appear small, slimy, mostly aquatic, and seem to be equipped with more limbs than other children :wink:


I'm also a fan of cross-cultural vernacular. :) I still can't get used to the North American use of the word "fanny" for one's backside. :lol:


Ciao!


Mr. Underhill

Jason
May 30th, 2006, 03:37 AM
I love how Non Americans say "Holiday" when they mean vacation. For us a Holiday means like Christmas, Thanksgiving, 4th of July, Valentines Day, etc whereas taking time off from work or school is a vacation.

Mr. Underhill
May 30th, 2006, 04:01 AM
So, you can take a vacation during a holiday? :D

Like the U.S. in Oz our sayings and phrases vary from state to state or city to city.


Aussie Slang Dictionaries here (http://www.koalanet.com.au/australian-slang.html), here (http://members.ozemail.com.au/~enigman/australia/slang.html) and here too. (http://www.aussieslang.com/slang/australian-slang-a.asp) I can't endorse these, I just Googled for them. :)

I was actually surprised how many phrases that claim to be Aussie slang which are used elsewhere. Aussies are renowned for our ability to adopt stuff from other cultures or countries (actors, musicians, food, sports-people, etc).


Mr. Underhill

cbs42
May 30th, 2006, 04:31 AM
A couple of those aussie terms are a bit strange for sure. That first link you pointed toward had these entries under the letter F:

Fair suck of the sav! : exclamation of wonder, awe, disbelief (see also "sav")
Fairy floss : candy floss, cotton candy

Those aren't common phrases are they? That first one is particularly disturbing.
:lol:

EDIT: I was trying to think of some uniquely American slang to post here for you, but it's very difficult to know which ones might seem unusual to you, since they all seem perfectly normal to me. That's the nature of regional slang I guess.

Mr. Underhill
May 30th, 2006, 05:42 AM
This is great! I love trans-cultural studies. This needs its own thread, what say ye?

"Fair suck of the sav" is one I've never used. It's probably quite quaint and used when you want to add colour to your slang. Additionally, it's pretty "ocker"*.

Fairy floss is pretty much the only term used by Aussies to describe what you call candy floss.

Aussies also have a tendency to add "o" at the end of many words or names in an effort to shorten them or create nick-names:

David -> Davo
Afternoon -> Arvo
John -> Johnno

One of my favourites is the term "budgie smugglers" for a man's swimming constume or Speedos. :lol:


Mr. Underhill


* Ocker:
adjective:- pronounced ocka, a stereotyped uncultivated or uncultured Aussie male who exhibits excessive drinking of alcohol, womanising, chauvinism, and worships the God called Footy! To call a female ocker is to suggest that she is somewhat butch. Similar to the US redneck. See also yobbo.

cbs42
May 30th, 2006, 10:37 PM
One of my favourites is the term "budgie smugglers" for a man's swimming constume or Speedos. :lol:

Hmm, now see I think that would be a more appropriate use of the term "fairy floss."
:lol:

POP mARTy
May 31st, 2006, 09:44 PM
Best thread this side of the Black Stump.

Fair dinkum, it's a bloody bonzer!

Mr. Underhill
June 2nd, 2006, 07:51 AM
The shops suck. milsims.com is the way to go.

http://www.milsims.com.au/ :D milsims.com is something else :)

milsims seems better than the local stores (here in WA) because they've got the range, but the price of a master set is no different than retail PLUS there would be shipping costs.

Also, on the milsims site, they've got a HS large expansion for $150. It looks (from the graphic) to be Orm's Return and RTTFF. But when I emailed them they said it included more, but what they didn't say. Has anyone bought this set?


Xargon, what happened to your Wave 3?


Mr. Underhill

Mr. Underhill
June 2nd, 2006, 07:54 AM
milsims seems better than the local stores (here in WA) because they've got the range, but the price of a master set is no different than retail PLUS there would be shipping costs.

Oh, and milsims Wave 1 is the same price as my local Toys 'R' Us store just around the corner. :?


Mr. Underhill

RichardD
June 2nd, 2006, 01:51 PM
Here in the UK, a couple of squids might buy you a pint. And a fornight spent in a damp caravan in Devon is definately a holiday.

Look out for the Tundra - I haven't used it yet, but visually I think I prefer it to RttFF. Similar basic idea - some terrain tiles that affect movement, that look a bit special compared to the standard hexes, and some big stuff in plastic that blocks line of sight. I've got two of each, so that the melee guys get a bit of love.

Mr. Underhill
June 2nd, 2006, 07:42 PM
Here in the UK, a couple of squids might buy you a pint. And a fornight spent in a damp caravan in Devon is definately a holiday.That is funny.

When we were kids, my dad took our family on an adventurous holiday from Glasgow to Cornwall one year.

It was great. We slept in the mail van on the train, lying on bags of letters and stuff.

For a little boy from Glasgow, that visit to Cornwall was such an experience. I recall saying to my dad, "Dad, why is the big ceiling that funny blue colour?" And he replied, "Son, that's because it's the sky, and there are no clouds." Then I asked, "Dad, what's that big bright thing in the sky?" And he sagely answered, "That, my boy, is the sun. When we get back to Scotland, you can tell all your little friends that you saw the sun."

Brings a tear to my eye just thinking about it. :wink:


Mr. Underhill

POP mARTy
June 5th, 2006, 10:41 PM
Also, on the milsims site, they've got a HS large expansion for $150. It looks (from the graphic) to be Orm's Return and RTTFF. But when I emailed them they said it included more, but what they didn't say. Has anyone bought this set?


Don't buy it. It apparently has 2 O.R.s in it, for some stupid reason. Buy the 3 seperately if that's what you're after.

Mr. Underhill
June 6th, 2006, 02:11 AM
Don't buy it. It apparently has 2 O.R.s in it, for some stupid reason. Buy the 3 seperately if that's what you're after.

That's what I need to know.

Apparently, my local Toys 'R' Us can order stuff in. Might be cheaper in the end.

Cheers, Marty!


Mr. Underhill
Guilty McCreech guilty of ... (http://heroscapers.com/community/showthread.php?t=689&highlight=)

caravaggio
June 6th, 2006, 04:05 AM
I'm also a fan of cross-cultural vernacular. :) I still can't get used to the North American use of the word "fanny" for one's backside. :lol:



yeah, that one could really get us americans in trouble overseas. slang that is totally different from one area to the next is interesting and all, but when the same exact term can have such different meanings (or different enough) it should really be taught in school or something.

Mr. Underhill
June 6th, 2006, 05:23 AM
I still can't get used to the North American use of the word "fanny" for one's backside. :lol:

yeah, that one could really get us americans in trouble overseas. ...

American tourist: "Wow! We've been down at the horse stud all day riding the horses, my fanny is killing me!"
Aussie: "What the..."


Mr. Underhill

caravaggio
June 6th, 2006, 05:32 AM
I still can't get used to the North American use of the word "fanny" for one's backside. :lol:

yeah, that one could really get us americans in trouble overseas. ...

American tourist: "Wow! We've been down at the horse stud all day riding the horses, my fanny is killing me!"
Aussie: "What the..."


Mr. Underhill

we also have a tendency to slap a cute girl on the fanny.

POP mARTy
June 13th, 2006, 07:21 AM
we also have a tendency to slap a cute girl on the fanny.

You're going home in the back of a divvy van!