burntcopper: (Default)
burntcopper ([personal profile] burntcopper) wrote2010-01-06 12:23 pm
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when ringtones attack

snow falling outside in tiny flakes and there was pavement ice in Shepherd's Bush/Kensington. But not settling. Bah. Apparently it's deep, deep snow back home. Hoping like hell I can get back tonight since I want to mess around in the snow. 'Specially considering tomorrow is birthday. (snow is normally only a february or Easter thing in Berkshire, so I'm used to it being bitter or frost-laden on my birthday, but no snow.) But still going to stop at River Island and New Look at lunch to grab another emergency change of clothing.

Question for the Colonialists : Does anyone ever use 'Ta' to say thanks? (thought they didn't use eejit either, but since I just heard Bobby use it on Supernatural, am guessing it's a matter of location.)

Changed ringtone post-christmas. have learnt my lesson - don't use a popular christmas song since you'll just think it's on the radio if it's not in your pocket. Subjected Meg to the first 20 secs of a bunch of stuff in a quest to find something that walked that fine borderline between irritating and penetrating. Which includes the final test of stuffing it in my bag on the other side of the room while something else is playing on the stereo and getting someone to ring me. Surprising how many songs that you'd think had really distinctive intros fail this. So now, I have the Theme from St Trinians by Girls Aloud.

Forcing self to listen to mp3 player on shuffle in effort to cull the mediocre stuff as I have a habit of shoving albums/concerts on there, as well as stuff you think you'll listen to and never do. One day I really need to go through every single version of Barrowman doing 'I am What I am' and cull them.

[identity profile] silly-swordsman.livejournal.com 2010-01-06 12:46 pm (UTC)(link)
I can recommend "Engel" by Rammstein as a ringtone. Intro is whistling, so penetrating and non-grating. And if you miss that, the guitars kick in after a little bit.

[identity profile] cangetmad.livejournal.com 2010-01-06 01:31 pm (UTC)(link)
I have Sir Duke by Stevie Wonder as a ringtone, and I recommend it. Noticeable right from the intro and awesome. Has the advantage of completely earworming one of my colleague, who ends up singing it almost all the time at work.

[identity profile] sbp.livejournal.com 2010-01-06 01:54 pm (UTC)(link)
For a long time I used the theme from Buffy - starts off quiet and gets more urgent and loud.

[identity profile] peterjevans.livejournal.com 2010-01-06 02:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Mine just rings. Like a phone.

Because it’s, you know, a phone.

[identity profile] cidercupcakes.livejournal.com 2010-01-06 02:41 pm (UTC)(link)
We don't use "ta" where I am, or at least not in my circles -- lower-middle-class mid-Atlantic -- and I don't think I've heard it much if at all amongst people from other regions/sets. "Eejit" is more dependent on the accent, so that's a regional thing.

[identity profile] delle.livejournal.com 2010-01-06 03:23 pm (UTC)(link)
I've never heard an American say 'Ta' and I've lived in the Midwest (Chicago), Pacific Northwest and South.

'Eejit'.... is that a variation of 'idiot'? Various regional accents might sound similar, as [livejournal.com profile] cidercupcakes says. I can't recall ever hearing it with a long 'e', but closer to 'ijit' with a softer 'i'.
genarti: Small girl marching across a field with bundle over her shoulder, text "the road goes ever on and on." ([misc] never know where you'll end up)

[personal profile] genarti 2010-01-06 05:02 pm (UTC)(link)
I've never heard an American say "ta," except as an acquired Britishism. It's not an American regionalism anywhere I've heard of. (For reference: from Ohio originally, the Northeast thereafter, but with friends from a bunch of different areas around the country.)

"Eejit," though, yeah. "Idjit" also, and various other spellings that amount to the same thing. (Edit: idjit, with a shorter i like in "did," is more common I thiiiiink, but really it just depends on the region and how your vowels come out.) It's definitely a regionalism, and something of a "hick accent" thing -- I hate that term, but I'm not sure how else to say it. One of those things you'd edit out of your vocabulary and pronunciation in a formal register, or if you were trying to lose or minimize a regional accent.
Edited 2010-01-06 17:03 (UTC)

[identity profile] xenaclone.livejournal.com 2010-01-06 09:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Happy Birthday to you
Happy Birthday to you
Happy Birthday dear Heather
Happy Birthday to you
littlerhymes: (Default)

[personal profile] littlerhymes 2010-01-06 10:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Happy birthday! :)

Some Australians use ta, mostly older. Mostly ex-pat British, probably.