Amanda P
Legendary Member
- Location
- York. Well, York-ish...
Godo monrig, evreynoe.
Green agricultural trousers here.
Did I hare smoenoe yas aTe?
Green agricultural trousers here.
Did I hare smoenoe yas aTe?
Arch said:Now, you chaps always kick up a fuss about having to do a job like that, but you love it really....![]()
Arch said:OH, and do your agricultural trousers have string round the ankles to keep rats out? Or ferrets in....
Arch said:c) you have swine 'flu....
Uncle Phil said:No. Those are a quite different kind of agricultural trousers. Those can only be worn with wellies and a torn nylon mac. An extinguished cigarette glued to the lower lip is de rigeur, and you have to be carrying a bit of plastic pipe with which to encourage your cows towards the milking shed. You have to have cows, too.
Uncle Phil said:Is that one of the symptoms, then?
When learning to touch-type, one types pages of repititious gobbledegook. There are certain words that you invariably get wrong, usually by transposing pairs of letters. As in shrit, brid, toady (for today), godo for good, and so on.
Some of these typisms have become standing jokes here.
I just thought I'd throw some in, after the frist one happened at rondam.
Arch said:Ah! Ok, I see...
Speaking of 'flu, should it really be 'flu', or 'flu.? I guess the latter, the full stop indicating an abbreviation...
Angelfishsolo said:Then again as it is short for influenza, 'flu' seems more grammatically correct.
Arch said:I know, but... An apostrophe technically replaces letters missing from the middle of a word (it's, for example, or didn't) or skimmed off the front (the "in" bit). The "enza" bit is the whole end of the word.
I didn't think of this myself, I should add, I seem to remember it being discussed before, here, or elsewhere. A full stop is correct for when a word is abbreviated by taking the end off completely.
Not that it matters really, but...
Uncle Phil said:No. Those are a quite different kind of agricultural trousers. Those can only be worn with wellies and a torn nylon mac. An extinguished cigarette glued to the lower lip is de rigeur, and you have to be carrying a bit of plastic pipe with which to encourage your cows towards the milking shed. You have to have cows, too.
And it's not just string. It'sMarks and Spencers stringbinder twine (preferably orange).
These are the altogether smarter and more easily come by tractor-driver's type trousers. Green and almost indestructible. Red diesel just runs off (not sure about road diesel...) You can tow vehicles out of ditches with them (remember that jeans advert?)