Originally posted by Ofcachap
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Alphabet associations - I
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Anna
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Norfolk Born
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Norfolk Born
Originally posted by Anna View Postwell, suivez la piste!
As I can't understand a word of Welsh, other than snwcer, I feel I need to keep the flag flying for those languages with which I can cope. (I tried watching Rugby from Wales on the red button with a commentary in Welsh. Other than the names of the players, I couldn't relate a single word to what was happening on the pitch. However, thanks to Julia Bradbury, I now know that there are two ways of pronouncing 'Dolgellau'.)
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amateur51
Hello m'dearios!
Thanks for putting me right about the Alhambra, Caliban - a much better answer [swot]
Righty-ho!
What 'B' -
a) developed classes for musical tunings used mapping pitches in a coordinate arrangement The keyboard was demonstrated in two instruments loaned permanently to the South Kensington Museum in 1876: a 4 1/2-octave harmonium tuned in 53 equal temperament with 84 keys per octave built by T. A. Jennings in 1872-3, and a 3-octave generalized keyboard organ built in 1875 with 48 notes per octave tuned to Hermann von Helmholtz' approximate just intonation (schismatic temperament) or 36 notes per octave tuned in quarter-comma meantone selected by means of draw stops. In 1877, speculating on papers about Indian śrutis, he relaxed the arrangement to permit mapping 22 equal temperament. (how utterly marvellous!!)
b) developed a delivery designed to deceive the batsman. When bowled, it appears to be a leg break, but after pitching the ball turns in the opposite direction to that which is expected, behaving as an off break instead.
c) developed a laconic somewhat slurred delivery, was held mostly in high affection by the public and his name may be found in the anagram 'ITN SQUARE GONE BALD'
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amateur51
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rubbernecker
Originally posted by mercia View PostI was a bit keen to get B because I researched a C the other day
if I may
C
- a set of 18 songs
- Camille's "organ concerto"
- the Belgian detective nails Nurse Hopkins
- Ferenc's 3rd year
- a subsidiary of A&M
Dvorak Song Cycle
Cyprès et Lauriers, Op. 156, for Organ and Orchestra
Agatha Christie Sad Cypress
Annees de Pelerinage Vol 3
Cypress Records
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Originally posted by Anna View Postwell, suivez la piste!
Originally posted by amateur51 View PostHello m'dearios!
Thanks for putting me right about the Alhambra, Caliban - a much better answer [swot]
Righty-ho!
What 'B' -
a) developed classes for musical tunings used mapping pitches in a coordinate arrangement The keyboard was demonstrated in two instruments loaned permanently to the South Kensington Museum in 1876: a 4 1/2-octave harmonium tuned in 53 equal temperament with 84 keys per octave built by T. A. Jennings in 1872-3, and a 3-octave generalized keyboard organ built in 1875 with 48 notes per octave tuned to Hermann von Helmholtz' approximate just intonation (schismatic temperament) or 36 notes per octave tuned in quarter-comma meantone selected by means of draw stops. In 1877, speculating on papers about Indian śrutis, he relaxed the arrangement to permit mapping 22 equal temperament. (how utterly marvellous!!)
b) developed a delivery designed to deceive the batsman. When bowled, it appears to be a leg break, but after pitching the ball turns in the opposite direction to that which is expected, behaving as an off break instead.
c) developed a laconic somewhat slurred delivery, was held mostly in high affection by the public and his name may be found in the anagram 'ITN SQUARE GONE BALD'
A leviathan of a question, elegantly hooked and sliced up by mercia.... to whose question we now turn EDIT: or would do if Rubbernecker Minor, the ArchSwot of the Remove, hadn't stuck his virtual hand in the air with a "me sir, me sir, me sir!!!"....
Seriously, great fun you've pitched in, Monsieur l'Amateur :cool2:"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Norfolk Born
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rubbernecker
Originally posted by Caliban View Postor would do if Rubbernecker Minor, the ArchSwot of the Remove, hadn't stuck his virtual hand in the air with a "me sir, me sir, me sir!!!"...
What D links the hawk, a sour note and a 1962 hit?
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Originally posted by rubbernecker View Post...is in the detail, of which there seems to be none in your post, o comely one
well certainly Marty Robbins "Devil Woman" [1962]
and I was thinking of the tritone diabolus in musica - tho' that's perhaps a chord rather than a note -
and there must be some Devil Hawks out there if I rootle about a bit...
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