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Avast ye Swashbucklers! Ye be swashbuckling for Booty! If ye be being no piratey Me Matey Turtlelover will be keelhauling ya on the Furner! YARRRRR!!! Where's me rum, ye little Sprogs! We all be buccaneers on this ship, ye Scurvy Dog Landlubbers!
If ye be needin' help: http://www.yarr.org.uk/talk/
Ye will be talking like a Swashbuckler in jus' three years!
ARRRRRR Me Hearties!!
If ye be needin' help: http://www.yarr.org.uk/talk/
Ye will be talking like a Swashbuckler in jus' three years!
ARRRRRR Me Hearties!!
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ARHARHARHAR (Pirate laugh, but really, what is the reason of this?)
The reason of this is being that t'is Talk Like A Pirate day!! Arr ye Squiffy!
It be being a Pirating day!
It be being a Pirating day!
How ye be favoriting this Forum? Arrrr I be needing me grog! Yo ho ho and a bottle of Rum!!
Avast ye mateys!
Prepare for that chat being chaotic..Prepare D:
YYYAAARRRRR!!!! cap'n turtlelover ready for action on this fine day we be setin' sail to the cove yarrr!!!
Arrrr! I be leaving ye swashbucklers now!
I hate to spoil the fun, but pirates never said YARR or any of that. They weren't from some exclusive "pirate country" where everyone talked like a sea dog, they were rebel sailors from European countries or American colonies who spoke in their respective languages. The reason people think pirates talk like that is because of the way characters spoke in RL Stevenson's book Treasure Island, which was published more than a hundred years after the golden age of piracy.
As far as the list you linked to, most of those are plain nautical terms that were used by all seamen around that time, be they buccaneers, fishermen, slave traders, or the navy.
As far as the list you linked to, most of those are plain nautical terms that were used by all seamen around that time, be they buccaneers, fishermen, slave traders, or the navy.
Arr ye blasted strewn son of a buscuit eater! Arrrrr! Ye be ruining the fun! Agghrr me hearties, aye.
Arrg, me mateys have stolen me ship, I needs me rum,