"Bloody hell" is a British expression used to express surprise, frustration, or annoyance. The word "bloody" is considered a mild swear word in British English, and when combined with "hell," it intensifies the emotion being conveyed.
Well if you say it in a correct English accent they are not homophones, hail sounds more like "hale" and hell has more of a "e". Or, to be more accurate, "hail" has a long "a" and "hell" has a short "e".
"גיי צו גײַנום" (gay tsu gaynum) is how you say "go to hell" in Yiddish.
You can say "Ouais, t'as raison !" in French to express "hell yeah, you're right!".
You can say "Do you speak English?" in English. In French, you would say "Parlez-vous anglais?" In Spanish, you would say "¿Hablas inglés?"
I know a few people who constantly use the word and to me the word bloody is used like a replacement curse word so-to-speak. Its like when you get real angry at something but you don't want to use real curse words.
No, he says "Bloody Hell"
Yes
Enfer sanglant.
It is an exclamation of surprise or frustration, predominately British - the closest English (American) translation to this is, "Aww S**t"! It is vulgar, but not horrible.An English (UK) term, usually a swear word, exclamation, or just as a substitute word.It can mean things like aww s*** or c*** mainly it is called a swear but some people otherwise.It's an expression primarily used in England that resembles our "What in the world?" "What in the bloody hell?"
Yes, English people still say 'bloody', and it is also common in Australia.
It means:What the "hell" (hell=carajos in this case) did you say?
Bloody hell.
Bloody Hell
bloody hell yes
Helfer is a German word, it means "helper" in English. You pronounce it like "hell-fer" (the first syllable like the English word "hell").
Bloody hell they were
bloody hell there is!