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does that mean quintet, sextet, septet ? or sets of 5, 6 and 7 pieces ? or relating to 1905, 1906, 1907 ? or the number of letters in the names of works?
are hymns involved? is rock and/or jazz involved? are we in the world of "classical" music ?
are those the initial letters of forenames or surnames or neither? composers? performers?
does the 5 link specifically to the F, and the 6 and 7 each and only to the two Ms ?
There in a nutshell, mercia. Another apparently uncrackable conundrum!
Whenever I think certain works of 5 or 6 or 7, I get a G when I link them to F, M and another M.
does that mean quintet, sextet, septet ? or sets of 5, 6 and 7 pieces ? or relating to 1905, 1906, 1907 ? or the number of letters in the names of works?
are hymns involved? is rock and/or jazz involved? are we in the world of "classical" music ?
are those the initial letters of forenames or surnames or neither? composers? performers?
does the 5 link specifically to the F, and the 6 and 7 each and only to the two Ms ?
Initial letters of forenames of composers, not in any specific order.
It's the implied "to" and"from" that define the meaning.
But I agree it is misleading.
Like cloughie's clues...!
Leave me out of this - but I would say that down here the prevailing South-westerly blows from the South-west. I don't agree that blow the wind south necessarily means to the south, however, it could mean from!
... mind you, if their vocabulary is as accurate as their weather forecasts ...
... thanks, ferney. Like you and brother cloughie I would normally take 'southerly', 'south westerly' as meaning 'from' that direction; I was just amused to find that OED defines it as either 'to' or 'from' - where you might have thought the distinction could be critical! - and to my ears 'blow the wind south' certainly feels more southwards than otherwise...
Veering - The changing of the wind direction clockwise, e.g. SW to W
Backing - The changing of the wind in the opposite direction to veering (anticlockwise), e.g. SE to NE
At last I understand what they have been saying on the forecast for all those years! <doh>
... thanks, ferney. Like you and brother cloughie I would normally take 'southerly', 'south westerly' as meaning 'from' that direction; I was just amused to find that OED defines it as either 'to' or 'from' - where you might have thought the distinction could be critical! - and to my ears 'blow the wind south' certainly feels more southwards than otherwise...
I suppose the convention developed because of the wind blowing in the sailor's face - he would be facing the direction it was coming from
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