Sentences with word «aboot»

Then we can go aboot how this is somehow, somewhere, somewho, somewhat, somewhen, somewhy connected to Earth's climate.
Not sure aboot Chambers and Holding Speaking of Holding, we need a holding midfielder too, innit
Be warned: even as it deftly delivers on its outlandish and outrageous concept, the film is also aboot how Americans view Canada — so check your patriotic fervour at the door and prepare for a barrage of Canuck jokes and a steaming - hot double - double of strange.
In Canada, balanced funds are more popular than poutine drizzled with maple syrup all while watching the hockey game and saying aboot.
Remember this discussion in now aboot Jupiter / Saturn and any direct linkage with Earth's climate, such that, for instance, Jupiter / Saturn are the causative agent of Earth's 41kyr and 100kyr ice age cycles.
Football is one of the dirtiest sports from the top (Qatar / FIFA and bribery) to the players who cheat (ie diving, trying to get other players sent off, lying about balls going out of bounds off other players) To obscene salaries and transfer fees, to highest ticket prices for fans of a club that annually reach 4th place and win 1 trophy in a decade (I won't mention the club: you will need to di your own research to find out which club I'm talking aboot)
There are about (or, as they say up north «aboot») 100 coworking spaces in Canada and this conference was about the same size as the first global coworking conference, which was held back in 2009.
Excessive use of «aboot» is probably funny with friends.
Everyone says «aboot» and «eh» every second word, but the joke falls flat almost immediately.
This is the kind of film that considers myriad instances of Canadians saying «aboot» and a knockoff of Lucky Charms called Pucky Charms to be the epitome of wit.
Then again, «jokes» implies something entertainingly humorous, whereas that lone selfie those hikers shot with Justin Trudeau was a better Canadian chuckle than Yoga Hosers «death by a thousand aboots.
Turns out the man's movie, Tusk (Grade: C --RRB-, is itself something of a pandering salute to the Great White North: Many of the gags are just toothless Canuck stereotypes — lots of «aboots» and hockey talk, har har — delivered by a boorish American hero who gets severely punished for his insensitivity.
When they're not buried in their cellphones, jamming out with a tatted - up drummer (Adam Brody) in the backroom of their convenience store or making their parents absolutely miserable, the Colleens are obsessing over boys — especially «aboot» one dreamy high school senior played by Austin Butler («The Shannara Chronicles»).
Well, a film about an American assassin living abroad carries its own connotation - but I don't think any of us are really sure what the life of a Canadian assassin is all aboot.
People who say «eh,» «soory» and «aboot»!
Everythin» aboot the film reeks ah class.
They say «aboot» instead of «about!»
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