This is northern-English slang.
It means 'anyway'.
Example: 'It was a good game! Any road I better go, the ol'wife is making a spiffing tea!'
He sounds so much sexier when he says sweet things 8)
It means that she doesn't want to have a relationship like that right now, but down the road, or in the future, it could be possible that you could have a boyfriend/girlfriend relationship.
I've wondered that. Jill says it in 'Nighty Night'. A friend of mine says it's a sort of northern word meaning dirty and / or stiff. Can't find any evidence to supprt this though/
"Fee-fi-fo-fum! I smell the blood of an Englishman? Be he 'live, or be he dead, I'll grind his bones to make my bread."
"down the road" = in the future. That could mean you both can try again in a few months, a year, five years or at some future unknown time. it also means hit the road and don't come back it will never work (you and me) but I ain't got the guts to say it to your face
it is northern slang for when someone says "you haven't" or "have not" local mostly to south Yorkshire
when she says what?
· road
It means your tires are losing traction and they are sliding. It has happened to me when the road is wet or icy. It even has happened crossing rail road tracks. It happens whenever the sensors senses the tires are spinning and not gripping the road.
Swiss = pertaining to Switzerland. Swiss region= Switzerland, Southern Bavaria, Liechtenstein, Western Austria, Northern Italy , Northeast France.
You mean that Hodge person, right? I really don't know. If you search Waterloo road on wiki and click on the one that says about the episodes, then it tells you whats gonna have in the next few weeks.
when she says what?