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This question is Not Answered. Latest post 176 days ago by dokterjokkebrok. 10 replies.

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Anonymous  [More info]
Could you tell me please what the man (servant) is saying after " I was buttering his" in this video

Thank you

+1 dokterjokkebrok  [More info]
Hi



I think lordship's scones below stairs, sir.


Regards

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+1 Toms Mathew  [More info]
HI,

I think it is "Lordship's cones downstairs, sir."

 

Thank you.

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"below stairs"
 
+1 dokterjokkebrok  [More info]
Toms Mathew
“HI,






I think it is "Lordship's cones downstairs, sir."

 

Thank you.


I'm not quite sure if that'll be tasty. Or will it? Perhaps it's a delicacy I've never tasted before. I always try to keep an open mind when it comes to delicious foods.


Still, I'm quite positive the butler meant this:


A buttered scone, as in:


''I was buttering his lordship's scones below stairs, sir.''

buttered scone


I subscribe to the theory that he's saying scones, mainly because a cone would be either:

- a shape, or the thing you put ice cream into
- or the oval-shaped fruit of a conifer


 


 


Kind regards

Dokterjokkebrok 



+1 Mr Wordy  [More info]
dokterjokkebrok
“I subscribe to the theory that he's saying scones, mainly because a cone would be either:

- a shape, or the thing you put ice cream into
- or the oval-shaped fruit of a conifer
 

 

Just as long as it's not "cojones".

Joined on Tue, May 27 2008
Veteran Member 5,473
Native British English speaker
+1 dokterjokkebrok  [More info]
Mr Wordy
“Just as long as it's not "cojones".”


What are 'cojones' Mr Wordy? I've never heard of that before.  

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