might pop to newport in nov for a pint as i've got a meeting in Bristol on the friday.
:icon28:
2 bedrooms for 130000 pounds...??? :icon27:
Man, my father spend 75000€ on brand new house with 6 bedrooms and 1 big living room.... :icon30:
Houses over here are expensive. I just did a check on the average house price in this area, and they look to be over £400,000. It's because it's a small village though. My parents house is only 3 bedrooms, with a good amount of land on each side of the house and enough room for several cars to park and that no doubt would be worth around that.
Which is nice to know as that house will be mine one-day, and with no mortgage either. Bonus.
Last edited by PhoeniX on Tue Oct 25, 2005 10:59 pm, edited 1 time in total.
the fuck does 'innit' mean? it seems some people can use it at the beginning, middle, or end of any sentence. is it slang, kind of like 'yo'? why is the sky blue?
Houses are cheaper over here....but land is expensive....plus we have low standard over here, so when someone says that you have house which costs over 100000€ people look you very strangley. I am still under 100000€, but who cares, it's most important thing that I feel comfortable.
seza wrote:now that i know what innit means i must comment on how stupid it looks and must sound, thanks.
"innit" is one of the most useful terms in the chav language.
depending on how it's uttered (there's no written form of chav, you don't need a written language to be able to tick boxes on forms), it can signify agreement, confirmation or assertion - making it considerably more versatile than "a'ite".
"a'ite" can easily be misinterpreted as a threat, and as such is becoming more and more popular as a common greeting.