Hi, thanks for reading. Not being British I would appreciate British opinions on a question I have regarding a scene from "Blackadder Goes forth", the 4th series last (6th) episode, 02:08 to about 03:17 in its beginning.
Blackadder asks George what happens to all his friends from Cambridge who enlisted to fight World War I. George's reply is a torrent of some kind of "argo" - Cambridgespeak? just a small portion of it (it can be read more fully at https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Blackadder)
George: "[..] We'd hammered Oxford's tiddlywinkers only the week before [..] I remember Bumfluff's housemaster wrote and told me that Sticky had been out for a duck, and the gubber had snitched a parcel sausage end and gone goose over stumps frog side. "
and then Blackadder responds, "Meaning?"
Funny.
My rather embarrassing question is, do Oxbridge students talk anything like that, these days, (or late 1980's even) and in that case, is it a clear case of direct self referential humour, poking fun at the writers (and actors of course) past at Oxbridge? or, would people talk like that only in 1917, more likely?
Thanks again for reading..