i mean, i guess it doesn't particularly irritate me like when people used to say ish or hella, but it does seem like an awkward grammatical construction that's more trouble than it's worth
9/21/2012 10:53:36 PM
Yes, when did this become a thing?
9/21/2012 10:55:24 PM
Never, I have never heard that before.
9/21/2012 10:55:33 PM
when did your moderators actually do their job and ban mulvaoh they didn't
9/21/2012 10:56:02 PM
about the same time they started saying Warshington
9/21/2012 10:57:32 PM
My grandad says this shit. It's been around forever
9/21/2012 11:22:23 PM
In my mind, people didn't start saying this till about 2 months agoI'm Krallum and I approved this message./]
9/21/2012 11:23:10 PM
Aussie slang
9/21/2012 11:31:57 PM
Heard it since I was a kid.
9/21/2012 11:46:01 PM
Same time as everyone started saying "no worries", also Aussie
9/21/2012 11:46:52 PM
All of the Aussies I've worked with say "good on ya."
9/22/2012 12:08:12 AM
About mid 15th century.
9/22/2012 12:33:02 AM
lol kiwi gettin smartI'm Krallum and I approved this message.
9/22/2012 12:36:54 AM
yeah I'm sure she didn't google it or anything
9/22/2012 12:42:15 AM
You're dumb.
9/22/2012 12:43:38 AM
You are both retarded. How's that?I'm Krallum and I approved this message.
9/22/2012 12:48:46 AM
^so tuffneckbeardi'm mistergreen and i approved this message.
9/22/2012 12:56:58 AM
The origin of the phrase is interesting.But why have people started saying it recently? Was it in a commercial?http://weknowmemes.com/2012/06/train-etiquette-super-simple-stuff/[Edited on September 22, 2012 at 1:24 AM. Reason : That Queensland train thing could have been it!]
9/22/2012 1:02:18 AM
I know it's been used a few times in the current Doctor Who.
9/22/2012 8:22:10 AM
9/22/2012 9:03:13 AM
they say good on ya in australia all the time - part of regular speech
9/22/2012 9:14:51 AM
heard it in "finding nemo"
9/22/2012 9:45:06 AM
Yeah no one says that in the American dialect. But there is a lot of things in American slang that doesn't quite add up either, like "What's up?" "How goes it?" would be more conceptually accurate, although the grammar behind that is scary haha
9/22/2012 10:45:14 AM
My LA agent's assistant said that in an Email last week. Threw me off, too.
9/22/2012 11:57:42 AM