No, she's no chav. She's very sophisticated and well spoken. But if I were to write formally like I do on forums, my blog or college essays, where I'm trying to make myself understood by as many people as possible, instead of how I actually talk, I would come accross as padantic and stuck-up, which I'm not. I think the whole point of this thread is that I'm not trying hard at all - yet.
Believe it or not, I live in London, speak like a cockney and use slang words frequently. She lives in London, speaks like a girl (most girls speak more delicately than men do no matter what dialect is naturally spoken in the area) and understands what I'm saying.
She's told me her favourate types of music are Dub-Step and Grime by the way. She wants to be a music promoter yet has a degree in radiology. Try not to be so judgemental. We're talking about game, not personal taste.
By the way, for anyone who doesn't know:
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Bare adj. Large, great; possessing lots of a particular quality. Can be combined with other words to emphasise them eg. bare-long, bare-good, bare-funny.
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Blagged verb. Obtain (something) by clever talk or lying: they blagged two free tickets to France.
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Rave noun. or verb. (Raving, Raver) A very large party or similar event with dancing to loud, fast electronic music.
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Jam verb. 1 To sit, relax or hang about in one place.
2 To leave (somewhere) on foot.
3 Informal, usually improvised playing of music in a group.
I used the first meaning. I said, "Man jam," meaning chilling out with the boys, or my male friends.
In fact, we had actually been chilling out, getting stoned and drunk with some girls who had left earlier. But I felt it would have been off-hand and agenda-driven to say that.