Membership is FREE, giving all registered users unlimited access to every Acorn Domains feature, resource, and tool! Optional membership upgrades unlock exclusive benefits like profile signatures with links, banner placements, appearances in the weekly newsletter, and much more - customized to your membership level!

Pravs.co.uk

Trader history (0)

Status
Not open for further replies.
Joined
Dec 27, 2007
Posts
11
Reaction score
0
Pravs.co.uk - The Ultimate Pravs Forum

BIN £1000

Whether you're a prav lover or a prav hater, Pravs.co.uk is a good domain to build a website to talk about pravs!

the chavs now has a Ultimate Chav Discussion Site--Chavs.co.uk
so the pravs need the domain Pravs.co.uk
 
Chav just means ankle biter, but was coined by a stereotype, a bit like gay was coined by people who like same sex. But what the hell is a prav?
 
I'm not too clear on this. Are you selling chavs.co.uk as well as pravs.co.uk?
 
no , just Pravs.co.uk

pravs



‘Pravs’ in – ‘Chavs’ out

There is a new addiction sweeping Britain’s high streets. The number of enthusiasts is in the thousands and growing.

Symptoms include:
•a compulsion to tell friends (and enemies) how little money they have spent on their latest bargains – a condition psychologists term as ‘compulsive prices disclosure’
•feeling triumphant that an item cost less than a similar item bought by a friend
•a realisation that expensive is not necessarily better
•snubbing of designer labels

‘Pravs’
The enthusiasts themselves are known as ‘pravs’. The ‘proud realisers of added value’ are thought to be a backlash against the popular ‘bling bling’ or ‘chav’ culture. The ‘chav’ phenomenon has turned many people off buying designer clothes and instead they are opting for the opposite end of the market.


High street shops
It is no longer cool to be a label snob but it is cool to spend as little as possible. Popular places to do this are the high street shops, Primark, Matalan and TK Maxx. These shops have always been popular with those on lower incomes but now they are filled with high earners and owners of platinum credit cards. They can be seen stuffing as many garments as possible into their shopping bags and gloating over the prices.

Supermarket own brands are also popular. Comparisons made on how much a T-shirt from ASDA costs compared to a T-shirt from Matalan are common place. Snippets of overheard conversations are likely to include, ‘don’t buy it from there, you can save 75 pence buying it from there instead’.


Cheap clothing
Chioma, an artist from Bristol, shops in Primark. ‘I go there when I am fed up and I know that I am able to buy something to cheer me up. I could get a new top for £3 and an entire new outfit for £15.’

The ‘prav’ expects to buy a pair of jeans for less than a takeaway meal. Concerns about the longevity of the items are pushed aside. They are so cheap that another one can always be purchased and anyway, fashion may have changed by next month!
 
You probably shouldn't post domains in the title of your thread unless you're actually selling them.
 
Being 22 and down when it comes to street lingo and latest crazes I have also not heard of Pravs. Sorry :cool:
 
It was a made up name in a scottish newspaper when I first regged the domain a couple of years ago. Never caught on....

S
 
I just bought a DVD combi, was going to get it from Argos but found it for a pound chaper in Tesco, WELL MADE UP...

Me prav...I like it...hell no i bloody love it :) But its Jan so im broke :(
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

The Rule #1

Do not insult any other member. Be polite and do business. Thank you!

Members online

Premium Members

New Threads

Domain Forum Friends

Our Mods' Businesses

*the exceptional businesses of our esteemed moderators
General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
      There are no messages in the current room.
      Top Bottom