The Cheese, The Whole Cheese and Nothing but the Cheese

jigfresh

Well-Known Member
were they like big buttons for tiddlywinks?
Depends what tiddlywinks is lol. Yeah they were like big buttons kids would 'gamble' with. I guess like marbles or something (only I never played marbles so not sure). I wonder if I still got my pogs somewhere... Attic boxes of junk FTW.
 

AMCHEESIER

Active Member
pogs were a big thing when i was in my last yrs at school and marbles was the in thing when i was a kid. and yeah pogs were like tiddlywinks in a sense just a bit bigger and the game was played different. ahh nostelgia takes u back...
 

mr west

Well-Known Member
we used to play penny up the wall at school and scabby queen with rapps. My knuckles used to be so swollen
 

mr west

Well-Known Member
its a bit tense here tonight as thehatster is refusing to stop crying and go to sleep lol. Kids eh who'd have em?
 

DST

Well-Known Member
I think penny up the wall was fairly universal in the UK. And we called rapps, Snips. Quite a strange concept just smashing someones knuckles with a pack of cards. Oh to be a kid again.

I hope little H is a bit happier, poor ting.

we used to play penny up the wall at school and scabby queen with rapps. My knuckles used to be so swollen
 

Don Gin and Ton

Well-Known Member
it was a bit odd thinking back. skinning someones knuckles as they picked a higher or lower card than you. hard or soft fo red or black. kids man, vicious buggers :lol:
 

DST

Well-Known Member
If "Hen" can be a term of affection in Scotland, I reckon "cow" can also be. Another one I can think of from around the counties is Duck(y).
 

DST

Well-Known Member
I am reading "A 100 Years of Annoying the French" just now. Quite interesting to read about the Normans, Anglo Saxons, the language, and dialect through the UK.
 
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