Mister wrote:1. believes in courting(almost like dating, but totally different)
2. will wait several minutes just to hold the door for a lady or young girl.
3. waits until everyone else get their food first before getting theirs.
4. never addresses women by their first names.
5. wears suits where ever they go. (unless they are a pastor or businessman)
Nate (post: 1410953) wrote:And by "totally different" we mean "exactly the same except for the name."
Man that is so awkward, because then the girl has to walk faster to get to the door because you're standing there holding it, and they want you to feel like you did something for them because it's not like they're capable of opening the door by themselves or anything.
Opening the door for a person immediately behind you, regardless of gender, now that's totally rad.
I don't see how that's even possible, if I order like a salad and my friend orders a steak I'm not going to be like "No, take that salad back, I refuse to allow you to give it to me until you give me my friend's first."
Oh man, what if EVERYONE at the table thought that they shouldn't get their food until everyone else got theirs first? Then everyone would sit at the table and starve to death because no one would get food!
Man that's like creepy stalker level stuff. Can you imagine calling someone younger than you by their last name?
Naked is technically a suit. The birthday suit!
Wait I don't get this one. Why would a garbageman wear a suit everywhere but not a pastor or businessman? Plus it must be really awkward to wear a suit to the pool, or to the amusement park.
PatrickEklektos wrote:1. Can work Old English into one's day to day vocabulary (yes I do this one too and it works!!! ^_^)
armeck wrote:clearly nate, you are not old fashioned XD neither am i XD
Nate (post: 1410960) wrote:I bet you don't know any Old English. In fact I guarantee you don't. I would bet cold hard cash you don't know a single word of Old English.
PatrickEklektos (post: 1410956) wrote:OOOBER AWESOME COOOOOL!!!! Ok, are you "old fashioned" Invictus? Because I am old fashioned... even according to your standards there! hehehe! Except for the last name thing.... and, yes, I do wear a suit wherever I go and hold the door open for ladies all the time.
One is old fashioned if one (and in no particular order):
1. Can work Old English into one's day to day vocabulary (yes I do this one too and it works!!! ^_^)
2. Finds texting distasteful
3. Has a stringent code of honour
4. Finds modesty becoming and nobly attractive
5. Is probably homeschooled. LOL
As you may be able to tell, I find being called "old fashioned" a badge of honour!
and 6. Expects to have to read the Bible in Church and sit under a hard, convicting sermon for 1+ hours at least once a week. ^_^
SDG
Mister wrote: 4. never addresses women by their first names.
Mister (post: 1410951) wrote:ok! give me 5 reasons each on why someone would be considered old fashioned!
1. believes in courting(almost like dating, but totally different)
2. will wait several minutes just to hold the door for a lady or young girl.
3. waits until everyone else get their food first before getting theirs.
4. never addresses women by their first names.
5. wears suits where ever they go. (unless they are a pastor or businessman)
Radical Dreamer (post: 1410984) wrote:I will not give five reasons but I will say what I think about these things. XD
1: I think not touching somebody until you marry them is ridiculous. XD There's nothing wrong with holding hands, hugging someone, kissing someone, or even cuddling on the couch and watching a movie before you're married. These things are important to a marriage, and you're probably gonna want to make sure you're attracted enough to the person you're with TO marry them. The place where I draw the line is having sex prior to marriage, mostly because of my morals, but also because if things don't work out with that person, then you're pretty much probably going to hate your life for a while. XD
2: Holding the door is always a polite gesture. Waiting several minutes (I read "several" as more than four minutes) for a girl to catch up with you is a more than bit much, and if you do that, the girl will think you're a creeper. XD Also, the people paying for the air conditioning in the building will put you on their black list indefinitely. XD
3: Waiting for everyone to get food on their plates before you start eating is a generally polite thing to do.
4: What is this, the 1800s? No, please, call me by my first name or I will probably think you are weird. XD
5: This doesn't mean you're polite. This means you're Barney Stinson. Suit up. XDD
Nate (post: 1410965) wrote:Yes, of course. I'm very familiar with the fact that what most people call "Old" English is, in fact, Middle English. :p I'm glad to see you knew that too! Otherwise I would've had to school ya. :3
anonymous poet who composed Beowulf wrote: Hwæt! We Gardena in geardagum,
þeodcyninga, þrym gefrunon,
hu ða æþelingas ellen fremedon.
Oft Scyld Scefing sceaþena þreatum,
monegum mægþum, meodosetla ofteah,
egsode eorlas. Syððan ærest wearð
feasceaft funden, he þæs frofre gebad,
weox under wolcnum, weorðmyndum þah,
oðþæt him æghwylc þara ymbsittendra
ofer hronrade hyran scolde,
gomban gyldan. þæt wæs god cyning!
Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales wrote:Whan that Aprill, with his shoures soote
The droghte of March hath perced to the roote
And bathed every veyne in swich licour,
Of which vertu engendred is the flour]
As we can see from these examples, when people say "Old English," they usually do not mean Old English (Anglo-Saxon) or Middle English. They might mean something from the time of the English Renaissance, say, sixteenth century, like this:William Tyndale's translation of the New Testament wrote:But when ye praye, bable not moche, as the gentyls do: for they thincke that they shalbe herde, ffor there moche bablynges sake. Be ye not lyke them therefore. For youre father knoweth whereof ye have neade, before ye axe off him. After thys maner therefore praye ye.
O oure father, which arte in heven, halowed be thy name. Let thy kingdom come. Thy wyll be fulfilled, as well in erth, as hit ys in heven. Geve us this daye oure dayly breade. And forgeve us oure treaspases, even as we forgeve them which treaspas us. Leede us not into temptacion. but delyvre us ffrom yvell, Amen.
. . .but more likely they mean Shakespearean English . . .William Shakespeare, Sonnet 120 wrote:That you were once unkind befriends me now,
And for that sorrow which I then did feel
Needs must I under my transgression bow
. . . or even seventeenth century English, like what we see in the 1611 KJV Bible, which was mostly plagiarized from William Tyndale (compare to the Tyndale translation above).1611 King James Bible wrote:After this manner therefore pray ye: Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil: For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever. Amen.
Or sometimes it just means that they like to inject the words "thee" and "thou" into conversation in an attempt to sound more formal or more flowery or something, never mind that in Shakespearean/Elizabethan England, "you" was a formal term used to address multiple people or one person you weren't particularly close to (c.f. Sonnet 120 above), and "thee"/"thou" were familiar terms used to address someone who was either very close to you or your social inferior.
[/pedant mode] That was probably way more information than anyone wanted to read.Mister wrote:ok! give me 5 reasons each on why someone would be considered old fashioned!
1. believes in courting(almost like dating, but totally different)
2. will wait several minutes just to hold the door for a lady or young girl.
3. waits until everyone else get their food first before getting theirs.
4. never addresses women by their first names.
5. wears suits where ever they go. (unless they are a pastor or businessman)
Nate (post: 1410960) wrote:
"Old-fashioned" is just another word for "can't adapt to the real world." :3 I'm proud to not be old-fashioned. It means that I can accept things for how they are instead of some nonexistent gold standard.
Atria35 (post: 1411045) wrote:Old fashioned? Maybe...
1. I only Just got a cell phone. 2 days ago. I think it's rude to have loud conversations on it outside of my home and while driving (not to mention dangerous to talk on the phone while driving), and don't text too much- though I may start texting more as my minutes run out.
5. I like books. Not eBooks, real, paper-and-ink books. They're fantastic, and when I have my own house, I want a room to be a library for me!
Mister wrote:ignorant, selfish, and disrespectful era we live in.
I'd like them without the rib-breaking and organ-damaging corsets.
Kaori (post: 1410990) wrote:Now, class, here is an example of Old English, also known as Anglo-Saxon:
And this is an example of Middle English:
As we can see from these examples, when people say "Old English," they usually do not mean Old English (Anglo-Saxon) or Middle English. They might mean something from the time of the English Renaissance, say, sixteenth century, like this:
. . .but more likely they mean Shakespearean English . . .
. . . or even seventeenth century English, like what we see in the 1611 KJV Bible, which was mostly plagiarized from William Tyndale (compare to the Tyndale translation above).
Or sometimes it just means that they like to inject the words "thee" and "thou" into conversation in an attempt to sound more formal or more flowery or something, never mind that in Shakespearean/Elizabethan England, "you" was a formal term used to address multiple people or one person you weren't particularly close to (c.f. Sonnet 120 above), and "thee"/"thou" were familiar terms used to address someone who was either very close to you or your social inferior.
[/pedant mode] That was probably way more information than anyone wanted to read.
Three of these seem to be addressed exclusively to men. Did you want women to answer, too? Just curious.
Mister (post: 1411000) wrote:the ignorant, selfish, and disrespectful era we live in.
Mister (post: 1411066) wrote:but the over all ideology of those times was respect, and ethical behavior in public.
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