By taternuts - 26/11/2011 12:18 - Canada

Today, one of my classmates pointed out that our professor has a habit of sucking his teeth at the end of each sentence. I'd never noticed before. I can't concentrate anymore, all I can focus on is his weird teeth noise thing. FML
I agree, your life sucks 27 309
You deserved it 3 510

Same thing different taste

Top comments

SinfulTragedy 19

Answer questions and suck on your teeth too. Maybe he'll get the hint.

illabye 0

It's fine. Soon you'll adapt to the sound again and it won't be suck a big deal. Lmao

Comments

I had a lecturer that used to say "uhh..." all the time. In an hour, we counted over 200. Was really distracting listening to him, when he kept pausing so much.

tankadin37 0

Most people do things like this. If you listen, a lot of teachers say 'ok' or 'um'. One of mine said 'ok' over 100 times in a 45 minute period...

yellowzinnias 20

Sorry if this comment was made already, I don't read them. Odds are that he has ill-fitting dentures. My grandfather has the same problem. Years ago he had an accident that knocked out the vast majority of his teeth, so he had the few remaining ones (which were all broken or otherwise damaged) pulled and got dentures. He has to stop several times if he talks for too long to suck them back into place since speaking loosens them. We've tried and tried to convince him to get new ones, but he says that those are the dentures that went with him to Korea, and those are the ones he's keeping. *Eye roll*

needsagf14 12
KaiBooWoo 0

My Spanish teacher has an annoying way of saying things. He says things slow like Ryan Seacrest, and when he says any word that ends in -ing , he doesn't say the -g. It's very annoying >.

haha funny stuff...i used to have a teacher who peed himself when he got angry haha

That's like my 7th grade English teacher. She had a habit of saying ok under her breath after every sentence and when I heard it the first time I couldn't help but hear every time she talked. So annoying!!

smezi111 8

*the sound of glass shattering in m head*