‘Customer’, fellow, lad.
Example | Meaning |
Well, it was- it- well ah, actually it was because of a chap in Haliburton Dale-Jeremy who was president of the legion at the time. And he really wanted to play band in the legion. |
Man or boy |
Now the- the- they didn't get their land from the Canadian-Land-and-Immigration-Company. There was a chap named Regis-Brockman actually owned it and he- they bought from him but ah- but there's like there was four boys and I-think five girls. |
Man or boy |
Example | Meaning |
About two days after I made that decision, I got a phone call from Toronto and chap that li-- grew up here and- and still has property here, he said, "So-and-so just sent me ah um ah program for a Calithumpian-Parade." He said, "I'm going to bring it up to you this weekend." |
Man or boy |
ss it's (inc)? <028> Ah I'm thinking of two chaps in particular that know it- it almost seems as th |
Man or boy |
They're retiring back here now. The chap across the road worked at G-M. And chap down the raod worked at G-M and- you-know? But they- they left and- but this is still home to them. |
Man or boy |
Example | Meaning |
There was one little chap. I think he was the grade-five. Ah, literally didn't say a word to me all year long. I couldn't get him to communicate. There were two or three in grade-one. The grade-six, sevens and eights were pretty bright. |
Man or boy |
Example | Meaning |
Ah, Jackie and I ah- she fell downstairs. She lived over at garage and she fell down outside on the stairs. So we- she called ah (inc) chap called from the- when he found out what happened. |
Man or boy |
And they were all at- out at the Cedar's. We'd been at carp fair, this other chap and him and I wasn't getting along, we were fighting like cats and dogs. |
Man or boy |
So anyway, he come up about- oh I-guess about one-o'clock, I'm just doing the dishes and ah this other chap that was chasing me around, that I told him buzz off the night before, he drove up to the front door. |
Man or boy |
So this chap in and he said, "Lady," he said, "You're not standing up," Well I said, "I'm only- I'd-" little wee glass of this- looked like eggnog but it was brown. |
Man or boy |
So we come back up in there (laughs). We come to this little pub and I don't drink, like I-mean a-- they- they (inc) this chap said, they- we went in and they were sitting there the- the three of them and I was sitting, standing up because I- there was no place to sit, this little pub. |
Man or boy |
Example | Meaning |
So she- she got the best mark (laughs) in school for interviewing Reg-Burton. But he was a teacher prior to being ah- ah painter but he was good friends with um another chap, Lester-Gordan and that's how we became friends with Reg-Burton. |
Man or boy |
You know what, I don't take a very good picture for the- do you realize that that county-echo in the Minden-Times that um it was started by Wesley-Nuse from Minden that the originally county-echo started actually in- was from a le-- chap from Minden that started that. |
Man or boy |
Example | Meaning |
And in nineteen-thirty-six, Dad was working for a chap in Canton. And ah, he had a big orchard. |
Man or boy |
Example | Meaning |
And new things were happening and one-thing-another, so I ah, just decided that Sammy and I wanted to do a bit of travelling you-know? But anyway, I-guess I was home a year and um, the bank manager and his wife ah, bought- and another chap bought the bakeshop where the Chinese foods place is now... |
Man or boy |
Example | Meaning |
But litt-- little details, little fine tunings like that. I remem-- I remember a chap named Mark-McCramer, was working at the Cedarhurst-Farm, put an addition on. And I asked him where he wanted the load. He said, "Well, I wanted sitting here, close to the house as you can." |
Man or boy |
Example | Meaning |
...when I was one year old and I was the youngest of five, four girls and one boy, ah, w-- they- the chap who lived next door came back from the First-World-War and he came to visit my dad and mother. |
Man or boy |
And he said, "At church yesterday, the chap said 'well, the war is over, I don't need to keep this farm, I put up the business.'" And you-know they used to keep a farm so that they've- their own sons didn't have to go to... |
Man or boy |
So they were walking on the platform at- at the- at the station and when dad told this friend of his, and why he was- why he was looking for a farm and what he- the- the main thing was to have a high-school there. Well, the chap said, this is maybe a little- a little- what did he say? (inc) but he said, "Don't move, Don," |
Man or boy |
Speaker: Yeah, the Five-Span-Bridge. Right on that bridge, they met a- a chap that lived in Pakenham, he was just walking but dad has shantied with him. Interviewer: He did what? Speaker: He had- he had shantied with him in- in- in their young days. |
Man or boy |