201bhoy Posted November 17, 2015 Posted November 17, 2015 Never seen so many smashed glasses last night than in the Hatfield when Walters scored the second, COYBIG!!!! Quote
Noel Posted November 17, 2015 Posted November 17, 2015 Ted - I was seriously confused - Ah! I hadn't a clue what this tread was about til just now. Quote
josefstadt Posted November 17, 2015 Posted November 17, 2015 Allez les verts!!!!! (For Nelson - Go the greens!!!!!) Quote
Broithe Posted November 17, 2015 Posted November 17, 2015 Allez les verts!!!!! (For Nelson - Go the greens!!!!!) I've been waiting for someone to translate Iarnród Éireann.... Quote
Glenderg Posted November 18, 2015 Posted November 18, 2015 (edited) Never seen so many smashed glasses last night than in the Hatfield when Walters scored the second, COYBIG!!!! Is that shop still open? Used to work on a site across the road in the mad times. Dodgy brilliant boozer :-) Broithe, I think it means "Rod of Iron, Air my Washing" but you'd have to ask JB to be sure. Edited November 18, 2015 by Glenderg Quote
WRENNEIRE Posted November 18, 2015 Posted November 18, 2015 Road of Iron methinks,for those among us with no sense of humour, nor Irish Quote
josefstadt Posted November 18, 2015 Posted November 18, 2015 (edited) I've been waiting for someone to translate Iarnród Éireann.... It's a reference to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad being the Iron Rod of Iran And he does look a bit like the Assistant Manager COYBIG Edited November 18, 2015 by josefstadt Quote
Broithe Posted November 18, 2015 Posted November 18, 2015 (edited) Iron Road seems to be the more general description in most languages - chemin de fer, eisenbahn, jarnvag, etc - 'railway' seems to be peculiarly English. I do wonder if they were just Googling "Railway of Iran" for a nice picture and just clicked without looking when "Railways of Ireland" was suggested as they got to typing the "Ir"..? Edited November 18, 2015 by Broithe Quote
201bhoy Posted November 18, 2015 Posted November 18, 2015 Is that shop still open? Used to work on a site across the road in the mad times. Dodgy brilliant boozer :-) Broithe, I think it means "Rod of Iron, Air my Washing" but you'd have to ask JB to be sure. Oh yeah Richie, packed to the rafters! Good old lower Ormeau, it's calmed down a bit now but you'd still wanna watch yourself around it. Rose and Crown also good craic Quote
jhb171achill Posted November 18, 2015 Posted November 18, 2015 Ahh Lower Ormo. The hub of the universe.... COYBIG!!!!!!! Allez allez (That's Ulster Scots for c'mon ya boyzngreen!!!) Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.