| Yea, OK,  that's kinda what I thought it meant. (????)
 Now about that " tootie-pip"  : )
Haive a good one there mate,   Healey  On.
Mark
  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Quinn, Patrick
  To: Alan Seigrist ; Mark and Kathy
  Cc: sebring@illawarra.hotkey.net.au ; Tadeusz Malkiewicz ;
healeys@autox.team.net
  Sent: Thursday, December 20, 2007 6:31 PM
  Subject: RE: [Healeys] Patrick Quinn
  G'day Mark
  Stone the Bloody Crows.
  I can imagine myself saying "cheerio". There I am in my Tweed jacket,
jodhpurs, deer stalker hat, cocked shot gun and obligatory hound standing by
my knee. Thatched cottage and BN3 in the background.
  "Cheerio and tootle-pip my good man."
  I'd be a real dag and me mates would give me a right earbashing. Spare me
while I have a technicolour yawn.
  Fair suck of the sav mate. No bloody way would I say that.
  Fair dinkum "Hoo Roo" is an affectionate (careful- can't be too pally with
blokes) way of saying goodbye to kindly thought of mates.
  Hoo Roo
  Patrick Quinn
  Sydney, Australia
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
  From: Alan Seigrist [mailto:healey.nut@gmail.com]
  Sent: Friday, 21 December 2007 1:15 AM
  To: Mark and Kathy
  Cc: Quinn, Patrick; sebring@illawarra.hotkey.net.au; Tadeusz Malkiewicz;
healeys@autox.team.net
  Subject: Re: [Healeys] Patrick Quinn
  for the English it would be "Cheerio!"
  :)
  On Dec 20, 2007 6:53 PM, Mark and Kathy <mgtrcars@galaxyinternet.net>
wrote:
  OK old chap.   I've been reading your helpful  additions to the List for
  years and understand most of what you say in the Ausie language.   But for
  the life of me I can not figure the   "Hoo  Roo"   out.
  Is there an English equivalent to that phrase?
  Mark
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