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Пікірлер: 288
"I feel like a turkey who's just caught Bernard Matthews grinning at him" fucking priceless 😂 probably my favourite Del Boy quote ever.
This show is loved by literarly everyone in Serbia!
@vanjalazarevic6326
9 жыл бұрын
Well i dont know how zo explain it but people simply love it. Maybe because they bring smiles to our faces even in toughest times.
@vanjalazarevic6326
9 жыл бұрын
Sorry for grammar mistakes
@kizapo012
9 жыл бұрын
callum93guerrilla We in Serbia love this series because in Serbia, 90% of the population virtually the same or similar devises how to survive each month, just like Del Boy and Rodni.And all that with a healthy sense of humor and optimism.
@kizapo012
9 жыл бұрын
callum93guerrilla No,bro."Independent Traders" are 10% of our all population (politicians,singers,entertaiment industry and high prostitution,drug dillers...).Rest of population is "normal",live from today to tomorrow,litterally surviving with 30 penny a day.Crisis in economy in Serbia is up to 30 year.Not to mention wars in 1990's and all that nationality bullshit...Sorry,bad english. ;)
@slothfromthegoonies8201
9 жыл бұрын
callum93guerrilla Copies of the show were smuggled into Yugoslavia in the 80's and it gained popularity because people there could relate to the Trotter's situation. Yugoslavia was very poor, so many people were forced to trade on the black market like Del Boy.
This show has become a national treasure, sadly Roger Lloyd pack who played trigger died yesterday 16/01/2014.
@beetrootbertha
9 жыл бұрын
sad loss he was so funny. all right then Dave
@themankybastard1765
7 жыл бұрын
Mike: To Cassandra and Rodney. Everyone else: Cassandra and Rodney. Trig: Dave.
@michaelacoulthard3851
7 жыл бұрын
I loved Trig, apart from Uncle Albert, Del and Rodders he was one of my favourites
It's only when I watch this that I realise how many expressions I picked up from watching Fools and Horses as a kid.
@beetrootbertha
9 жыл бұрын
yes it does seem to get into your head
@skeeterprimate
7 жыл бұрын
Szaam same! I got so much expression when I watched this show. In fact, I have the only fools and horses boxset with every season and every episode!
"Some old tart's given 'im the sack" Epic
@user-ob4ip8wb2g
4 жыл бұрын
Ruairí Ó Sé some old tarts given ‘him the sack,
@ruairiose7335
4 жыл бұрын
Sam Smith Does Del Boy pronounce the h? No. Hence its removal.
@user-ob4ip8wb2g
4 жыл бұрын
Ruairí Ó Sé ahh fair enough, I read it like 'I'm' shoulda write em instead
@ruairiose7335
4 жыл бұрын
Sam Smith Well to be fair you’re probably right 😂 I just wrote it exactly how I heard Del Boy say it
"Got a touch of Gandhi's revenge"
David Jason - Along with Ronnie Barker, the best comedy actors this country has ever produced. Amazing
@sleepydank8330
Жыл бұрын
Jhon clease Rowen Atkinson Rick mayall all are in the top
@abd4175
Жыл бұрын
What about steptoe and son...that was great too. Love only fools too though!
@drcman1
9 ай бұрын
What about Chris Pucker and Packie Jhan
some people are born short of a few shillings but in triggs case, god added V.A.T! ha ha what a line
@leonardhpls6
7 жыл бұрын
love it
@sammyinengland
Жыл бұрын
“An ha’penny short of a shilling”
@jessiejames7492
Жыл бұрын
@@sammyinengland 😀😀😀😀😀
I love this so much. Brings back memories of Saturday nights, watching this and eating a Chinese takeaway or fish and chips. Those were the days!
This show is beyond amazing. It's legendary. :')
Drinking game - take a drink every time Del says Gordon Bennett.
@jimbehr2291
7 жыл бұрын
mauS or cushty.
Del Boy is a legend. Thank you, for the laughs, Sir David Jason. 😂
I never realised how much he said 'GORDON BENNETT!' hahah
Gordon Bennett!!!! :) It is commonly thought that this expression refers to James Gordon Bennett. JGB was a real person - in fact, with the expansiveness that is appropriate for this story, two real people. The elder James Gordon Bennett was born in Banffshire, Scotland in 1795 and emigrated to the USA, eventually becoming a journalist and founding the New York Herald in 1835. Bennett had a natural talent for journalism and the paper flourished. An editorial in Harper's at the time expressed the opinion that "It is impossible any longer to deny that the [city's] chief newspaper is the New York Herald". Other rivals, while accepting Bennett's nose for a story, weren't impressed with what they saw as his 'gutter press' methods. In 1836, in a pre-cursor to the chequebook/kiss-and-tell journalism now so popular with tabloid newspapers, he published a notice offering to reward any woman who "will set a trap for a Presbyterian parson, and catch one of them flagrante delicito [sic]". He was unblushing in what was then seen as improper descriptions of his relationship with his wife - describing her 'most magnificent' figure and publishing details of their wedding and the birth of James Gordon Bennett junior in 1841. gordon bennettJames Gordon Bennett Jr. inherited his father's talents for journalism and controversy, not to mention his multi-million dollar estate - and he's the Gordon Bennett that the phrase refers to. He took over control of the New York Herald in 1866, by which time he was well into an enthusiastic and hedonist playboy lifestyle, indulging in spending the family fortune on air and road racing in the USA, England and France. He was a significant promoter and patron of sports, especially those requiring impressive and expensive equipment, for example international motor racing, ballooning and air racing. He gave several sponsorships in these fields, notably the Isle of Man Bennett Trophy races of 1900 to 1905 (subsequently a trials course on the island was named after him). A long-distance hot-air balloon race (The International Gordon Bennett balloon race), which still continues, was inaugurated by him in 1906. Bennett was also a chip off the old block, not unlike many wealthy people of his era, in that he wasn't especially concerned by people's opinion of his behaviour. He has the unenviable record, as bestowed by the Guinness Book of World Records, of the 'Greatest Engagement Faux Pas', for the manner in which his engagement to the socialite Caroline May was broken off in 1877. The engagement was big news in New York society circles. The Edwardsville Intelligencer, reported it in November 1876: "The trousseau of Miss May, who is to marry James Gordon Bennett, has arrived from Europe, where it was collected at an expense of $20,000, according to gossips. It is said to be the most elaborate and beautiful ever prepared for an American lady." It is reported that at the 1877 New Year's party held by his fiancee's father, he became so drunk that he mistook the fireplace for a toilet and urinated in it in front of his hosts and their guests. Whether or not that story is true is now difficult to verify. It is certainly the case that the marriage didn't go ahead and that the Mays weren't best pleased with Bennett - as this piece from The Perry Chief, January 1877, indicates: "James Gordon Bennett was publicly horse-whipped this morning, by Frederick May, brother of the girl to whom Bennett was engaged to be married." He took to his heels and travelled to England, ending up in Melton Mowbray. Perhaps he had heard of the town's paint the town red story and thought he would be at home there? Even the thick-skinned Bennett had the wind taken out of his sails by these events and he remained single until he was 73, when he married the Baroness de Reuter. There are many other stories listing his excessive and occasionally boorish exploits. These didn't stop him being an successful and innovative journalist though. He invested heavily in developing on his father's news empire. In 1868, with the simple brief of 'find Livingstone' he sent the travelling correspondent of the New York Herald - Henry Morton Stanley, to track down and interview David Livingstone in Africa. After a long search Stanley was ready to give up but was encouraged by Bennett which, when he eventually located his prey on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, resulted in what has become one of the most famous of all journalistic lines - "Dr. Livingstone, I presume?" From 1877 Bennett lived in Europe and continued to run the New York Herald from his $600,000 314-foot yacht, the Lysistrata. He died in 1918. The expletive Gordon Bennett appears to be a minced oath. It is a version of Gor blimey, which is itself a euphemistic version of God blind me. That, combined with Bennett's famously outrageous lifestyle and newsworthy stunts, is sufficient to explain why his name was picked out. That's why; so what about when? The name Gordon Bennett appears in print many times in the 19th century, as we might expect of such a newsworthy figure. The earliest example that I've found of the expression being used as an expletive is in a novel by James Curtis from 1937 - You're in the Racket Too: "He stretched and yawned. Gordon Bennett, he wasn't half tired."
@jessiejames7492
Жыл бұрын
very englightening. thanks.
@ElvarMasson
4 күн бұрын
Sorry... I fell asleep whilst scrolling down 😴 💤 Is there something else you'd like to add to this?
I love this show so very funny!
he ain't got a few grasses Rodney he's got an entire lawn!
As a Millwall fan I gotta love Del. “And you needed ink to work that out? Stone me Rodney, a Millwall fan could’ve worked that out!”
@jessiejames7492
Жыл бұрын
i am not british. i dont know whats a Millwall fan. could someone explain. thanks
@Aidenkong523
Жыл бұрын
@jessie james it's a football team in England
@jessiejames7492
Жыл бұрын
@@Aidenkong523 thank you
@lyngreen2217
Жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣
@owencoe4181
10 ай бұрын
Millwall are a rather average football team in England who somehow made the FA Cup final in 2004. Good fans, support their club. Just don’t anger their ultras
Del Boy:(chatting up a bird) How do you spell Harrods? Bird:(sarcastically) Capital "A".
Del is a proper legend.
Round the track more times than a lurcher, We miss you John Sullivan you made T.V worth watching.
I actually went to school with a Gordon Bennett
@DefinitiveMedia22
8 жыл бұрын
loool
@angstBali
8 жыл бұрын
There's an HSBC Bank Manager called that as well
@java4656
6 жыл бұрын
A plonker was he?
@StargazerNorth1
5 жыл бұрын
My sister had a dentist called Gordon Bennett!
@swarthyjake4433
5 жыл бұрын
you never !
Best programme ever! Even my 7 year old son loves it!
My favourite delboy quote is calling the vacuum cleaner a 'J Edgar'
THE best comedy show to ever hit the screens! I'm only 21 and can appreciate how much Only Fools and Horses shows up every pathetic, politically correct comedy show on TV right now. I wish they made programs like this these days :(
I love the Only fools and horses! :)
Vas Blackwood at 4:55. One of my favourite episodes where they're trapped in the supermarket.
Love the progression through the years. Jason gets better and better at his accent as time goes by
@sleepydank8330
Жыл бұрын
The thing is Jason was communicating in working class slang English in real life when he was amongst jhon sullivan, ray butt ect. He dropped his posh accent and spoke like them when amongst them or other cockney characters
Love Del Boy
His one of da greatest actors...
only fools is my fav sitcom of all time. love you del boy and rodney♡♡♡
Just started watching fools nd horses nd Del Boy is just hilarious
Quality! Absolute quality!
god bless ya I really wanna go watch Only Fools now
GORDON BENNET RODNEY!
Genius writing.......genius acting...........legendary Series
I just love him
Love Del's Quotes one of the best comedy's ever created it was a Awesome program Rodney/Dave Trotter is my favourite I love his character
"At this Pacific moment in time, we are a bit knackered for space"
Forget Shakespeare, Del Boy has taught the nation more words and sayings to last several lifetimes ahahaha
I love the Lovely Jubbly
I once worked with a couple of Cockneys in Hatton Garden for a while. Honestly, half the time it seemed like they were speaking another language! XD
Mum said on her death bed
@mrraoulandtheking11
7 жыл бұрын
Julie Acaster she half said alot on her deathbed
@clairewilson6365
7 жыл бұрын
martyn bardwell she said the alphabet a few times then how bloody long was she on the deathbed for
@mrraoulandtheking11
7 жыл бұрын
Claire Wilson mum said on her deathbed send Rodney for the fish
You know it makes sense!
I've watched all the standard episodes (non - Specials) so much I reckon I know the words to most of them. Then again, half the time I was in my red dragon night suit. Watching this at 4:50 AM.
Run the old J Edgar over it lol
Any working class londoner can be a cockney. from the wiki page for cockney : "Originally a pejorative applied to all city-dwellers, it was eventually restricted to Londoners and particularly to the "Bow-bell Cockneys":[1] those born within earshot of Bow Bells, the bells of St Mary-le-Bow in the eastern Cheapside district of the City of London. More recently, it is variously used to refer to those in London's East End, or to all working-class Londoners generally."
@andyp5899
2 жыл бұрын
Wikipedia fount of all truths. Cultural appropriation at its finest
You run the J. Edgar over it
Brilliant cockney acsent fabulous... No one but Sir Jason can do ... Coshty all lovely gubbly 😀😘 Aug 31st
2:50 along with the Palace scarf hanging up in one the episodes, the other smoking gun that Del was a Palace fan ;)
Love it ....
You done good job thanks for upload
" Y' almost got your 'ead caved in *then* ya soppy ol' sod!'
Love delboy
With those Randolph Scott's on your face! 😂
The Best Thing Ever Made
I think i can say my inviation to the hunt ball has gone for a burton lol 😂😂
Cushdey! Luvvly Jubbly! Proper British word slang if ever I heard it!
At times I can never understand what he means but it's still funny.
BEST COMEDY SITCOM TO GRACE BRITAIN
this is what you call comedy not some arse faces you see nowadays
I like the part where Del calls Boycie a noofter.
"Gordon Bennett"
Lovely jubbly!
Is this type of speaking confusing to anyone other than British? Anyone British who's between 30 and 50 older grew up on this, so it's second nature. Bonjour!
@erinmeehan6277
4 жыл бұрын
Funky Seedz I’m 16 and I know what he’s on about lmao
@ELLIOT1311
3 жыл бұрын
I’m 20 and I understand all of it. I guess I’m just an old soul.
Gordon Bennett! I say that ALL the time!
Lovely jubbly
'Me old April' - April in Paris - 'Arris- Aristotle- Bottle - Bottle & Glass - Arse - simple ain't it !!
“He’s not the brightest thing in Christendom” love that line😂
is that a moped or are you just pleased to see me ! ha ha ha .
ok i didnt know that.im a big fan of those two.
he was!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Riktigt kul :) Gamla goda east end
We are a bit knackered for space-briiliant
Gordon Bennett Del!!!
awwww no, No Way Pedro.
Gordon Bennett Rodney pmsl 😂🤣🤣🤣
My nan says all these sayings 🤣🤣
Del & Dave
Gordon Bennet 😂
Just kidding he is cushty awesome 😂
I always thought David Jason was a direct italian descent :D :D
Gordon Bennett
In fact, i call my self lord cockney
I'm only here to find out what it would be like to have Del Boy as a manager
"get it in the ol new Delhi don't i" "new delhi?" "yeah the belly, you're not from around these parts are ya" then she says after "no I'm from new Delhi" ha
the old humpty Dumpty means sex!😂😂😂
"Stone me" is my favourite
@neptunestardust
8 жыл бұрын
Gordon Bennett my fav
@themankybastard1765
7 жыл бұрын
"Whats your game?" Another one of my favorites.
He's trying to show off when he's in the wine bar. He says he just bought some shares in a company and asks the woman "How do you spell Harrods" and she says capital A because of his accent.
@robertnettleship5467
3 жыл бұрын
'Oh I get it. Beam me up snotty' one of my favourite lines
I have it in the new Delhi 😅😅😅😅
Gordon bennet! i forgot which episode the first scene is from, can someone refresh my suya filled memory. Appreciate it
we havent got time we got levavs to catch
GORDON BENNETT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 HAHAHAH FUNNY STUFF THAT
The word CUSHTY is from the gypsy language. it means GOOD, as in , ( CUSHTY BROCK,= good luck ). Also a gypsy word is MUSH, as in :a Mush from shepherds bush, MUSH means MAN. So a cushty mush, mean,s a GOOD BLOKE. There are many others that are used in o/f/a/h that are from the gypsy language.
@beetrootbertha
9 жыл бұрын
interesting bit of info
@clairewilson6365
7 жыл бұрын
ROBERT LEE-MELLOR yeah but we ain't gyppos so mush means mouth tot some people depending on the situation
@MrRobmellor
7 жыл бұрын
Yes !!! you are right. It also means FACE, as in ;WHAT AN UGLY MUSH: or a SMACK IN THE MUSH.. But if you listen to the words in the Only fools and horses intro song, you will hear the line, A MUSH FROM SHEPARD'S BUSH. I don't think that refares to a mouth, it,s more likely to be a man. MUSHSY is also another similar word that has a completely different meaning from MUSH ( I wont say what it is as it might affend). Also Del-boy is not portraid as a GYPO, but he says CUSHTY many times in the series, he also speaks French and he aint from France neever. Cushty brock to you in the new year Claire, and many thanks for showing an interest in my comment.
@hughwark5291
Жыл бұрын
@@MrRobmellor Kushti
dispy what you doing laa laa
An e bio o ics 😂
that's about every episode covered there init?
I Wonder If You'd Upload The "Del Boy's Gordon Bennett! Compilation" 4 Me?
5 police had there wheels stolen!
God den Bennett Rodney!y!!!! :-D
one and only