âPokaâ(Ðока, pronounced pa-ka) in this case is a analogue of âbyeâ in Russian. Literally that means âtillâ. It is obviously a short form of some full form of telling âfarewellâ, but itâs unknown nowadays, what was the full form. As you can guess, full form can be something like âtill next meetingâ, but we donât know exactly.
âPoka-pokaâ(Ðока-пока) or âpoka pokaâ(пока пока) is just a repetitive conversational form of âpokaâ, just like âbye-byeâ. Itâs usually used in friendly conversation.
'May the forces of evil become confused on the way to your house.' â poka poka
âPokaâ(Ðока, pronounced pa-ka) in this case is a analogue of âbyeâ in Russian. Literally that means âtillâ. It is obviously a short form of some full form of telling âfarewellâ, but itâs unknown nowadays, what was the full form. As you can guess, full form can be something like âtill next meetingâ, but we donât know exactly.
âPoka-pokaâ(Ðока-пока) or âpoka pokaâ(пока пока) is just a repetitive conversational form of âpokaâ, just like âbye-byeâ. Itâs usually used in friendly conversation.
'May the forces of evil become confused on the way to your house.' â poka poka
A street slang way of describing one's home, meeting place, or kick it spot. Was taken from The old-school 1960's Batman TV series which habitually tilted the camera 45 degrees so you'd have a visual cue that you were in a Bad Guy's Lair.
Let's get a couple of 40's and post up at the tilt.
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A villain's hideout, Home, Crib, Lair, etc. Dutch angles were used extensively in the original TV series and 1966 film of Batman, where each villain had his own angle. Scenes filmed in any villain's hideout, when only the chief villain and his henchmen were present, were invariably shot at an angle departing extremely from the horizontal. Such was the influence of this series in Britain that the colloquial term "Batman Angle" is still in common use today in that country.
It's been a long day serving these rocks, I'm gonna post up at the tilt.
7👍 19👎