When the Prodigy brought out Poison, a guy in my school wrote, in very large letters, Poisson on his schoolbag.
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LOL, legend jerry. class :DQuote:
as if someone is getting ice cream or chocolate mousse or something but the 'correct' phrase is
i knew it was deserts, but i never actually thought about it being de-serts as oppossed ( that doesnt look right on screen?! ) to des-erts a lá sahara et al - thats french btw ;)
you can see, not just from the arguments here, but there aren't that many well educated or versed people ( on english phrases at least )on this forum. :D
All the "swingin cats" hang out at Renards according to Eamon Dunphy.
Never heard of "play it by year":eek:
http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/284550.html
It's play it by ear.
Most annoying one for me was when I was working in a Gaeltacht when I was 17 as an assistant. All the other assistants were a year or two older and we were putting together a quiz for the pupils.
We wanted to include some easy questions so we decided to include "How many states are in the United States of America?"
Then all of these eejits started saying there were 52 because of Alaska and Hawaii. I pointed out that they were wrong and that the correct answer is 50.
We kept this up and I even said I'd get an atlas that was only a few rooms away and they said no.
Thankfully we had to cancel the quiz for an unrelated reason.
Why aren't Alaska and Hawaii considered states, just out of interest?
I suppose you could throw Puerto Rico into that question too.
They are. There are 50 including Hawaii and Alaska.Quote:
Why aren't Alaska and Hawaii considered states, just out of interest?
Wow - how to remove any shred of your credibility in two successive posts!
It's "play by ear", end of story. And "proof" in that context means to test - i.e. the test of how good the pudding is comes when you eat it and find out (and by extension, the test of how good anything is comes when you try it). Just as "the exception that proves the rule" means the exception that tests the rule - if a rule stands up to even strange anomolies, it's probably accurate.
:D
There's no way that's a serious post!!
It's "Play it by ear" without any shred of doubt.
"Play it by year" - that's just para-phrasing a Johnny Logan Eurovision song isn't it?
I know of an alternative version that I hear from time to time - "Play it by Beer".
As in Q "What boozers are we headin to later?"
A: "Lets just Play it by Beer". :)
no you didn't there was no way to read that wrong, you just didnt know.Quote:
i read you wrong, sorry. it was a long bus ride
Speaking of Americans, a lot will say 'pacific' instead of 'specific'.:rolleyes: Must be the accent.
strangeone, i remember that before was this on a thread here sometime ago? someone has definately mentioned that before.
my own favourites..............."literally"
I was literally starving.
She literally cried her eyes out.
and of course...........very unique.
this is a very unique opportunity.
oh dear!
People who say "pacific" instead of "specific" or people who say "patren" instead of "pattern" bug me no end. Learn the language properly.
I have a friend who calls a bannister a balister and insists that he is right.
'one of the only' is another good one. "He's one of the only people who could do that." :rolleyes:
Often heard on the train in the mornings - "We are now arriving at Dublin Connolly. This is the LAST and FINAL stop"!