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Yeahello!
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Sin Jeong-hun
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Posted: Sat Nov 05, 2005 8:57 pm    Post subject: Yeahello! Reply with quote

Homer always answers with something sounds like _yeahello!_ when he
gets the phone. Sometimes Mr.Burns also uses the word. It seems like
yeah + hello but sounds like a one word. Do many Americans use this
word when they get a phone?

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baldycotton
Guest





Posted: Sun Nov 06, 2005 12:21 am    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

On 5 Nov 2005 05:57:15 -0800, "Sin Jeong-hun" <typingcat@gmail.com>
wrote:

Quote:
Homer always answers with something sounds like _yeahello!_ when he
gets the phone. Sometimes Mr.Burns also uses the word. It seems like
yeah + hello but sounds like a one word.

I sometimes use it. I say something more like "Yellow"..

Quote:
Do many Americans use this word when they get a phone?

I wasn't the first, and probably not the last, but somewhere between
those extremes is a number...
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Pat Durkin
Guest





Posted: Sun Nov 06, 2005 12:41 am    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

"Sin Jeong-hun" <typingcat@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1131199035.253892.266170@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
Quote:
Homer always answers with something sounds like _yeahello!_ when he
gets the phone. Sometimes Mr.Burns also uses the word. It seems like
yeah + hello but sounds like a one word. Do many Americans use this
word when they get a phone?


I've heard it used. Another such mumbled reply, mainly on the
telephone, is "m'yeah". When I hear it, I always want to apologize for
interrupting someone's meal. But I don't.

It's difficult to spell a sound that isn't quite a word. I am fairly
certain that I haven't spelled it the way others have spelled it when
this term was discussed some time back.

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Weatherlawyer
Guest





Posted: Sun Nov 06, 2005 7:15 am    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

Sin Jeong-hun wrote:
Quote:

Homer always answers with something sounds like _yeahello!_ when he
gets the phone. Sometimes Mr.Burns also uses the word. It seems like
yeah + hello but sounds like a one word. Do many Americans use this
word when they get a phone?

I think you are missing the point of The Simpsons.
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dimestore
Guest





Posted: Sun Nov 06, 2005 8:00 am    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

Quote:
Sin Jeong-hun wrote:

Homer always answers with something sounds like _yeahello!_ when he
gets the phone. Sometimes Mr.Burns also uses the word. It seems like
yeah + hello but sounds like a one word. Do many Americans use this
word when they get a phone?



The best phone salutation on the Simpsons is Burns' "ahoy-ahoy". The
original greeting Bell suggested be
used with his invention.
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ray o'hara
Guest





Posted: Sun Nov 06, 2005 8:01 am    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

"Weatherlawyer" <Weatherlawyer@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1131236157.769767.14340@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com...
Quote:

Sin Jeong-hun wrote:

Homer always answers with something sounds like _yeahello!_ when he
gets the phone. Sometimes Mr.Burns also uses the word. It seems like
yeah + hello but sounds like a one word. Do many Americans use this
word when they get a phone?

I think you are missing the point of The Simpsons.



I thought the point of the Simpsons was to show a true example of Joe
Donut America.

"OOhhhh donuts! Is there anything they can't do?"
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Iain
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Posted: Sun Nov 06, 2005 4:55 pm    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

Sin Jeong-hun wrote:
Quote:
Homer always answers with something sounds like _yeahello!_ when he
gets the phone. Sometimes Mr.Burns also uses the word. It seems like
yeah + hello but sounds like a one word. Do many Americans use this
word when they get a phone?

Mr. Burn seems like a "British American" or whatever. Anyone else feel
that?

~Iain
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Django Cat
Guest





Posted: Sun Nov 06, 2005 5:16 pm    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

Iain wrote:

Quote:

Sin Jeong-hun wrote:
Homer always answers with something sounds like _yeahello!_ when he
gets the phone. Sometimes Mr.Burns also uses the word. It seems like
yeah + hello but sounds like a one word. Do many Americans use this
word when they get a phone?

Mr. Burn seems like a "British American" or whatever. Anyone else feel
that?

~Iain

No. But see AUE/AEU passim...
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Alan OBrien
Guest





Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 2:57 am    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

"Iain" <iain_inkster@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1131270941.198756.204110@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
Quote:

Sin Jeong-hun wrote:
Homer always answers with something sounds like _yeahello!_ when he
gets the phone. Sometimes Mr.Burns also uses the word. It seems like
yeah + hello but sounds like a one word. Do many Americans use this
word when they get a phone?

Mr. Burn seems like a "British American" or whatever. Anyone else feel
that?

Nah. He's a Yank.

But I have noticed that whenever a film is being made on the Simpsons the
director of that film is always a definte Englishman. I wouldn't mind, but
there aren't that many famous English directors nowadays.
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Iain
Guest





Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 4:10 am    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

Alan OBrien wrote:
Quote:
"Iain" <iain_inkster@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1131270941.198756.204110@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...

Sin Jeong-hun wrote:
Homer always answers with something sounds like _yeahello!_ when he
gets the phone. Sometimes Mr.Burns also uses the word. It seems like
yeah + hello but sounds like a one word. Do many Americans use this
word when they get a phone?

Mr. Burn seems like a "British American" or whatever. Anyone else feel
that?

Nah. He's a Yank.

But I have noticed that whenever a film is being made on the Simpsons the
director of that film is always a definte Englishman. I wouldn't mind, but
there aren't that many famous English directors nowadays.

He says "bloody", though -- "get to the bloody point!"

I ken he's a Yank, but maybe of British parentage, etc.

~Iain
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the Omrud
Guest





Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 6:06 am    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

Iain <iain_inkster@hotmail.com> spake thusly:

Quote:

Alan OBrien wrote:
"Iain" <iain_inkster@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1131270941.198756.204110@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...

Sin Jeong-hun wrote:
Homer always answers with something sounds like _yeahello!_ when he
gets the phone. Sometimes Mr.Burns also uses the word. It seems like
yeah + hello but sounds like a one word. Do many Americans use this
word when they get a phone?

Mr. Burn seems like a "British American" or whatever. Anyone else feel
that?

Nah. He's a Yank.

But I have noticed that whenever a film is being made on the Simpsons the
director of that film is always a definte Englishman. I wouldn't mind, but
there aren't that many famous English directors nowadays.

He says "bloody", though -- "get to the bloody point!"

I ken he's a Yank, but maybe of British parentage, etc.

I think he's an upper crust American of old money. I can't quite
remember his back story - isn't he an orphan?

So here's one for the US contingent - why does the baby in Family Guy
sound English?

--
David
=====
replace usenet with the
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Weatherlawyer
Guest





Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 8:01 am    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

Raymond S. Wise wrote:
Quote:
the Omrud wrote:

So here's one for the US contingent - why does the baby in Family Guy sound English?

Because he's a villian and villians often have a British accent (in the movies, at least)?

Strange; you would think that with the move to more politically correct

attitudes -having robbed original Americans of what little work they
ever had a chance at, the job of the villains should be given to the
French.
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Raymond S. Wise
Guest





Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 8:01 am    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

Pat Durkin wrote:
Quote:
"Raymond S. Wise" <mplsray@my-deja.com> wrote in message
news:1131331530.534725.167250@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
the Omrud wrote:

So here's one for the US contingent - why does the baby in Family Guy
sound English?


Because he's a villian and villians often have a British accent (in
the
movies, at least)?

OyBoy! You should engage your spellchecker.


I post via Google Groups: No spellchecker.


--
Raymond S. Wise
Minneapolis, Minnesota USA

E-mail: mplsray @ yahoo . com
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Raymond S. Wise
Guest





Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 8:01 am    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

the Omrud wrote:
Quote:
Iain <iain_inkster@hotmail.com> spake thusly:


Alan OBrien wrote:
"Iain" <iain_inkster@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1131270941.198756.204110@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...

Sin Jeong-hun wrote:
Homer always answers with something sounds like _yeahello!_ when he
gets the phone. Sometimes Mr.Burns also uses the word. It seems like
yeah + hello but sounds like a one word. Do many Americans use this
word when they get a phone?

Mr. Burn seems like a "British American" or whatever. Anyone else feel
that?

Nah. He's a Yank.

But I have noticed that whenever a film is being made on the Simpsons the
director of that film is always a definte Englishman. I wouldn't mind, but
there aren't that many famous English directors nowadays.

He says "bloody", though -- "get to the bloody point!"

I ken he's a Yank, but maybe of British parentage, etc.

I think he's an upper crust American of old money. I can't quite
remember his back story - isn't he an orphan?


No, his back story parallels that of Charles Foster Kane in *Citizen
Kane,* except that Burns was quite happy to leave his parents. His
"Rosebud" was a teddy bear named Bobo.


Quote:

So here's one for the US contingent - why does the baby in Family Guy
sound English?


Because he's a villian and villians often have a British accent (in the
movies, at least)?


--
Raymond S. Wise
Minneapolis, Minnesota USA

E-mail: mplsray @ yahoo . com
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Pat Durkin
Guest





Posted: Mon Nov 07, 2005 8:01 am    Post subject: Re: Yeahello! Reply with quote

"Raymond S. Wise" <mplsray@my-deja.com> wrote in message
news:1131331530.534725.167250@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
Quote:
the Omrud wrote:

So here's one for the US contingent - why does the baby in Family Guy
sound English?


Because he's a villian and villians often have a British accent (in
the
movies, at least)?

OyBoy! You should engage your spellchecker.
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