(16 Mar 2015, 7:44 pm)Tommy_1581 Some enthusiast (no names mentioned) is starting to piss me off. I'm going to murder said person the next time I see [insert gender here (her/him)].
Bloody annoying
(16 Mar 2015, 7:45 pm)Dan Polite (and friendly) reminder about the language...... Twice today on this thread alone.
(16 Mar 2015, 7:45 pm)Dan Polite (and friendly) reminder about the language...... Twice today on this thread alone.
I'll go further than Dan. I can't be bothered to read all this nonsense, which is becoming almost every night now. If you both want to continue, by all means ignore this warning, but you'll both be taking an enforced break from the forum. For the sanity of other members.
Annywaayy...my annoyance of today: Geography teacher.
One minute he's yelling at the disruptive kids in the class...then laughing on having a joke with them!
(16 Mar 2015, 9:21 pm)leestransportphotos Reminds me of my Geography teacher! Is he Scottish and called Mr Rodger?
(16 Mar 2015, 9:25 pm)MarcTheA4 Nope. Speaks with a strong southern accent, and starts every sentence with the word ''fundamentally''.
Quote: ''Fundamentally, I am bored now, Year 9. Fundamentally bored.''
(16 Mar 2015, 9:25 pm)MarcTheA4 Nope. Speaks with a strong southern accent, and starts every sentence with the word ''fundamentally''.
Quote: ''Fundamentally, I am bored now, Year 9. Fundamentally bored.''
(16 Mar 2015, 9:48 pm)Dan I used to love teachers like that. Our history teacher used to screech "erm" in between saying things, so on a number of occasions, we took it upon ourselves to count the amount of times she did it. Similar story with our Geography teacher in Year 7 and possibly Year 8 (can't remember the exact date when she retired), except she used to make a tutting noise. We counted in excess of 300 in a 60-minute lesson once - you can do the maths to realise the torture!
(16 Mar 2015, 9:48 pm)Dan I used to love teachers like that. Our history teacher used to screech "erm" in between saying things, so on a number of occasions, we took it upon ourselves to count the amount of times she did it. Similar story with our Geography teacher in Year 7 and possibly Year 8 (can't remember the exact date when she retired), except she used to make a tutting noise. We counted in excess of 300 in a 60-minute lesson once - you can do the maths to realise the torture!
"And so on and so forth" was a favourite with one of my teachers, too. Another one used to be "Obviously" coming before ot after every sentence, which was really quite belittling if you hadn't realised what had been said prior.
My Biology teacher at GCSE used to have an example for everything when he was explaining things. Some of the examples were really funny and I couldn't help but laugh every time they were said. Some of the other students in that class hated him and his examples, but I remembered about the rabbits I allegedly acquired during GCSE Biology when doing the exam, amongst other things! When someone would ask to borrow some stationary, he'd always say, "Haven't you got any friends to borrow a pencil from?", "We're all friends in this room, I am sure you can ask one of them..." etc.
(16 Mar 2015, 10:12 pm)Dan "And so on and so forth" was a favourite with one of my teachers, too. Another one used to be "Obviously" coming before ot after every sentence, which was really quite belittling if you hadn't realised what had been said prior.
My Biology teacher at GCSE used to have an example for everything when he was explaining things. Some of the examples were really funny and I couldn't help but laugh every time they were said. Some of the other students in that class hated him and his examples, but I remembered about the rabbits I allegedly acquired during GCSE Biology when doing the exam, amongst other things! When someone would ask to borrow some stationary, he'd always say, "Haven't you got any friends to borrow a pencil from?", "We're all friends in this room, I am sure you can ask one of them..." etc.
(16 Mar 2015, 10:12 pm)Dan "And so on and so forth" was a favourite with one of my teachers, too. Another one used to be "Obviously" coming before ot after every sentence, which was really quite belittling if you hadn't realised what had been said prior.
My Biology teacher at GCSE used to have an example for everything when he was explaining things. Some of the examples were really funny and I couldn't help but laugh every time they were said. Some of the other students in that class hated him and his examples, but I remembered about the rabbits I allegedly acquired during GCSE Biology when doing the exam, amongst other things! When someone would ask to borrow some stationary, he'd always say, "Haven't you got any friends to borrow a pencil from?", "We're all friends in this room, I am sure you can ask one of them..." etc.
(16 Mar 2015, 10:24 pm)MarcTheA4 They're really anal about stationary at my school - ''Sir, do you have pencil I can borrow?'' BAM - instant bad comment.That was another one... Business teacher always used to say "anal", and very few people in the class realised there was more than one meaning...
(16 Mar 2015, 10:24 pm)MarcTheA4 They're really anal about stationary at my school - ''Sir, do you have pencil I can borrow?'' BAM - instant bad comment.That was another one... Business teacher always used to say "anal", and very few people in the class realised there was more than one meaning...
(16 Mar 2015, 10:26 pm)Dan That was another one... Business teacher always used to say "anal", and very few people in the class realised there was more than one meaning...
For the first few weeks, it was a mixture of giggles and comments like, "F me, he's obsessed with anal!"
(16 Mar 2015, 10:26 pm)Dan That was another one... Business teacher always used to say "anal", and very few people in the class realised there was more than one meaning...
For the first few weeks, it was a mixture of giggles and comments like, "F me, he's obsessed with anal!"