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yes, yes i know
but she said she was going to get a VP IN august.
and I'M august.
and i certainly don't have any VP's in me.
i'm sorry to break the bad news, frecks.
OH

yes, yes i know
but she said she was going to get a VP IN august.
and I'M august.
and i certainly don't have any VP's in me.
i'm sorry to break the bad news, frecks.

it's an expression that indicates surprise at discovering something you thought was false.
it consists of two parts: a command, telling someone to do something strange to you, and another, telling someone to call you some random name.
e.g.
"well blow me down and call me Groucho"
"well suck my balls and call me Sunday"
"well pinch my tits and call me Slappy"
etc etc.
Who's charlie?
"my" and "me" have distinct meanings, no matter if it's American English, Aussie English or British English.
the only time these two are obscured is when "me" is used as a possessive, as in, "OI! BLOODY WANKER STOLE ME HAT!" but this is a colloquialism and not grammatically acceptable.


not really.
you said, "my and me mean the same"
which they do not.
norcal: am I typical guy?
- well if you think I'm fun person then you know the answer.![]()