Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
safaa
what is the modern equivalent of {member for Barkshire} ?
said of one troubled with a cough, vulgarly styled barking.
19 mars 2010 20:48
Réponses · 2
1
The closest term would be a term which only recently fell out of use (about 30 years or so). The word was "lunger" - someone who had a bad lung. More specifically, it refered to someone who was suffering from tuberculosis - a disease that had constant coughing as one of its symptoms.
Sometimes older people with a cough or that are constantly short of breath, are referred to as "wheez kid" - a corruption of "whiz kid" - somebody who is very smart.
19 mars 2010
A witty British pun. :) Berkshire is a county in England's south east, but it's pronounced "bark-shur". So if someone is coughing a lot (sounds like barking), then they should run for local government in "Bark"-shire.
I think the phrase is still alive in the UK, but outside of there perhaps we (non-Brits) don't have such a close equivalent.
We sometimes say "coughing up a lung".
20 mars 2010
Vous n'avez pas encore trouvé vos réponses ?
Écrivez vos questions et profitez de l'aide des locuteurs natifs !
safaa
Compétences linguistiques
Arabe, Anglais
Langue étudiée
Anglais
Articles qui pourraient te plaire

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
21 j'aime · 17 Commentaires

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
16 j'aime · 12 Commentaires

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
13 j'aime · 6 Commentaires
Plus d'articles
