Katie Price needs help

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Bonefish Blues

Banging donk
Location
52 Festive Road
Clearly not, @Accy cyclist would have been mistaken and burned years ago for his outfits!

Accy's the Witchfinder General, shirley?
 

Mad Doug Biker

Mediocrity Extraordinaire
Location
Craggy Island
Never heard the word before, I made it up and hoped someone would 'get' the joke.

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Wollock is an ancient Anglo-Saxon surname derived from "William" or "Wilhelm," originating from Germanic elements will(resolve) and helm (protection), combined with the suffix -cock or -cox, denoting "little William" or "son of William". It is often listed among similar surnames like Pollock, Willock, or Bullock.
Ancestry
Ancestry +1
Usage Examples & Context
  • Genealogy & History: Primarily used as a last name in historical records.
  • Surname Origin: Researchers looking into British/Irish family history often encounter it as a variant related to early patronage or parentage naming conventions.
    Ancestry
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Synonyms & Related Surnames
Based on surname studies, related or similar names include:
 

DRM

Guru
Location
West Yorks
What about the toxic fumes from the melting plastic though?

Only when the wind is blowing into the west to keep the fumes in Lancashire! :whistle:
 

nogoodnamesleft

Well-Known Member
Thinking about Ms Price's latest offence, doing 80 is a choice. On most trips is makes virtually no difference to arrival time.

I used to commute, majority on clear dual carriageway, 25 miles back when I had a LR Defender. I'd drive st 50 mph (in a 70 limit) and sometimes I'd do mental arithmetic about speeding up to 60, cost as my mpg plummets and to get me home eg 1½ mins earlier and is that 1½ minutes worth that vost.
 

katiewlx

Senior Member
Well the ban is not because they are unsafe to drive for six months then magically become safe again. The main intent of the ban is to make them think about it and make them very relucatnt to risk being banned again.

only if the ban is enforced...you think lots of the drivers, especially the repeat offender ones who get banned repeatedly, actually stop driving during the ban ?

its that classic one you often read in local papers, a driver who has usually only ended up in court because they crashed into something and couldnt run away before the cops turned up, and it turns out they were banned from driving already, and the sentence they get just extends the ban
 

katiewlx

Senior Member
The example I often think about with avoidance of bans is Steve Coogan

When his repeated "excuse" and avoidance of a ban seems "would have prevented filming of a new series" and "his next TV series depended on his ability to drive. But a VSP would have made those excuses void and the ban could have gone ahead.

and yet for years, decades infact, it was common practice to film driving scenes in films/tv series, with the stars car simply on a low trailer being pulled along by another vehicle, and they just pretended to drive, and no-one ever complained or noticed the difference.
 

nogoodnamesleft

Well-Known Member
and yet for years, decades infact, it was common practice to film driving scenes in films/tv series, with the stars car simply on a low trailer being pulled along by another vehicle, and they just pretended to drive, and no-one ever complained or noticed the difference.
Probably far safer as well as driver is not distracted from driving from doing a performance to camera.
 
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