Unless, of course, the house is on a stage. Then it gets a whole lot trickier.As As you are facing the house, the window on your left is the house right window & the window on your right is the house's left window, the windows never move, you can
Unless, of course, the house is on a stage. Then it gets a whole lot trickier.As As you are facing the house, the window on your left is the house right window & the window on your right is the house's left window, the windows never move, you can
OK, the house's LH window has a red curtain. You want to point this out to a friend looking from your house, what do you say? 'Look at the red curtain in the house's Left window', or 'Look at the red curtain in the Right hand window'?As As you are facing the house, the window on your left is the house right window & the window on your right is the house's left window, the windows never move, you can
Either they are both the same answer, they are being talked about from a different perspectiveOK, the house's LH window has a red curtain. You want to point this out to a friend looking from your house, what do you say? 'Look at the red curtain in the house's Left window', or 'Look at the red curtain in the Right hand window'?
I know the answer - do you?
Either they are both the same answer, they are being talked about from a different perspective
When referring to your own anatomy, I believe the correct term is heart-side and non-heart side. HS and NHS. That clears up all confusion other than what Tim Hall will now come up with to prove me wrong. He's scouring medical journals as we speak, looking for someone who was born with his heart predominantly on his/her right*Of course not. I say I have injured my drive-side wrist.
If she doesn't understand I say offside wrist (unless I happen to be on the continent in which case I say nearside).
Some people actually have their heart on the other side, its rare but does occur.When referring to your own anatomy, I believe the correct term is heart-side and non-heart side. HS and NHS. That clears up all confusion other than what Tim Hall will now come up with to prove me wrong. He's scouring medical journals as we speak, looking for someone who was born with his heart predominantly on his/her right*
* When said individual is looking out his/her own eyes towards the predominant direction of perambulating.
Easy. Doctor No, by great good fortune, had his heart on the right, so when the baddies found him and tried to kill him buy shooting him in the ticker they were out of luck. They cut off his hands though. I'm not sure if a book by Ian Fleming counts as a medical journal, but I didn't have to scour anything.When referring to your own anatomy, I believe the correct term is heart-side and non-heart side. HS and NHS. That clears up all confusion other than what Tim Hall will now come up with to prove me wrong. He's scouring medical journals as we speak, looking for someone who was born with his heart predominantly on his/her right*
* When said individual is looking out his/her own eyes towards the predominant direction of perambulating.
IMO it is less confusing to use the second. The house doesn't actually have a Left or Right hand window, it does depend on your perspective.OK, the house's LH window has a red curtain. You want to point this out to a friend looking from your house, what do you say? 'Look at the red curtain in the house's Left window', or 'Look at the red curtain in the Right hand window'?
Does a duck on a treadmill care which wing is left or right?
Same goes for most of their reviews, any bike under £3000 feels heavy and is hard on hills with those "cheap" wheels they have on.Just reading a review from roadcc -"There's nothing wrong with the Fizik Ardea saddle or the own-brand stem and bars but they feel a bit pedestrian" How the hell can a saddle and bars feel pedestrian ? Especially if there's nothing wrong with them ?
If I am looking at the house across the street and it has a central door, with a window either side, which is the Left hand window and which is the Right?