How common are these words/phrases in their countries?

>Britain: Oy, mate, guv, blimey
>Ireland: Top of the morning to you
>France: Jacques Rebur, c'est la vie, mon ami
>Germany: Jawohl, fuhrer, achtung!
>Italy: Mamma mia
>Russia: Comrade
>Mexico: Ay yay yay
>Australia: Crikey

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>oy.
Common but rude, saying it may start a fight
>Mate
Very common
>Guv
Rare outside prisons.
>Blimey
Rare as rocking horse shit

>ay yay yay

Literally nobody uses them except maybe those people who do traditional music.

>Rare as rocking horse shit
speak for yourself lad.
Common in my area.

>>Guv
>Rare outside prisons.
Plenty of Londoners say it.

Where the fuck do you live where blimey is common?

Thats what i said.

suffolk.

bit late fella, you from manchester?

>bankers, hipsters, immigrants and grimeniggers say "guv"
doubt.webm

>Oy
Very common. Usually said to grab people's attention.

>mate
More common among "lad" types. I never say it.

>guv
Very rare. More of a meme than something people actually say.

>blimey
Moderately common, usually only among older people. Said when somebody is surprised or shocked.

Also
>US: Dude
>Canada: ey
>Germany: Alter
>French: Oui Oui
>Poland: O' Kurwa

Everyone uses "mate". My mum's called me mate a few times.
I've seen plenty of dashcam videos from Poland to know that kurwa is very common.

Am east mexico can confirms we yell ay yay ay every 3 words

>me mum's called me mate a few times.
Truly british post mate.

Ah fuck did Veracruz get colonized again?
About fucking time.

In my friendship group at school, we never called each other "mate". It was mainly the laddish, popular kids who said it.

Born in stafford, moved around when I was in the navy but now live in Portsmouth.

What exactly is a "lad?"

A chad.

It usually means a young adult male.

An extroverted, confident male who's usually interested in things like football and mass culture. Not necessarily a chad.

>Jacques Rebur
???
>c'est la vie
Quite common
>mon ami
We usualy say "pote" instead of "ami"

Is lass as common as lad?

Only up north and scotland.

Kurwa is the equivalent of fuck or fucking so obviously it's pretty kurwa common

>Top of the morning to you
I've literally never heard somebody say this seriously

Yes we're coming for you.

I hear this alot in boston i guess we really are more irish than you

>Top of the morning to you
No one says that outside of America

>Ay yay yay
literally no one says it

>ey

sometimes though you only hear it if someone's making a banter or joke or is being passively sarcastic

>Mamma mia
Probably the most accurate stereotype about us, we say it all the time

I thought the accurate Italian stereotype is hand talking.

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