Kid's slang is the least likely to be harmonious country-wide, right?
I'd have thought so, but given the failure of Durham and Yorkshire respondents to know what I was talking about, the success of a Dorset boy sort of knocks a hole in that theory.
I believe "croggy" is an abbreviation of crossbar, but the most common mechanism when I was a kid was to let someone sit on the saddle (with their legs flapping free) while the bike's rider stood on the pedals.
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Date: 2010-04-27 12:18 pm (UTC)Kid's slang is the least likely to be harmonious country-wide, right?
I'd have thought so, but given the failure of Durham and Yorkshire respondents to know what I was talking about, the success of a Dorset boy sort of knocks a hole in that theory.
I believe "croggy" is an abbreviation of crossbar, but the most common mechanism when I was a kid was to let someone sit on the saddle (with their legs flapping free) while the bike's rider stood on the pedals.