I used to pronounce it Expresso until someone put me right.
Same here.
I used to pronounce it Expresso until someone put me right.
The internet is the saviour of the short bloke.How to you reach the magazines on the top shelf at the newsagents?![]()
The internet is the saviour of the short bloke.![]()
Yes, CycleChat is very edumacational.![]()
I've learned a lot here!Like, never to spoke a badger with a spoon.
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There's gentlemen's literature on the internet?? No way, who'd have thought it.The internet is the saviour of the short bloke.![]()
A variation I used to get a lot was 'Borrow me your.....' or 'Can I have a lend of.....'.https://www.cyclechat.net/search/6531406/?q=Recommend+me&o=relevance&c[title_only]=1&c[node]=16
Recommend me?
To whom do folk want recommending?
Shouldn't it be; Recommend a/an (name of article) to me.
That's nothing, my forks are so big that a moose could fit between them.
Same here.
Reminds me of the experience a friend, ordering a drink in Rome asked for a latte. They stared at him, then took his money and gave him a glass of milk.Actually, and I'm sure @Pat "5mph" will confirm, it was originally an adjective, being the second half of the phrase caffe espresso, meaning expressed, or pressed,
Glad you are keeping things formal at home.My son aged 15, and also with AS, will often ask me "Can I use the computer?"
To which I reply, "I don't know, can you?".
The light bulb comes on and he replies "May I use the computer?"
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http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/words/can-or-mayBut the 'permission' use of can is not in fact incorrect in standard English. The only difference between the two verbs is that one is more polite than the other. In informal contexts it's perfectly acceptable to usecan; in formal situations it would be better to use may.
Reminds me of the experience a friend, ordering a drink in Rome asked for a latte. They stared at him, then took his money and gave him a glass of milk.
Who said that?I bet its ruined your eyesight...