Sorry, being dim, what was the answer to T. Tarquin or Tozzi? You know, some of us at the back can't keep up without an explanation!
Alphabet associations - I
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Anna
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Originally posted by Angle View PostI think it must have been Tozzi.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostRe the pasta which may have put Anna off, did anyone else hear that item on R4 around 5:30pm which revealed that the mythical "average family" has pasta on Mondays at 5:53pm?
all sounds rather improbable. was that Eddie Mair being funny on the PM programme?
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Well done, Mercia. I thought I had made it just a little more abstract than has proved to be the case. U is ukelele.
Now for your T.
There is nothing at all special about Crosby but it receives a lot of casual visitors seeking out the 100 naked men on the beach. I think they are known collectively as "Another Place".
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Originally posted by mercia View Poster, no I didn't hear that, now I understand your previous post
all sounds rather improbable. was that Eddie Mair being funny on the PM programme?
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http://funtechstuff.blogspot.com/200...-mistress.html. A few like that, all variations on the same theme.
Not getting very far with the clues yet, but don't spoil it with hints for a while yet.
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VLTAVA
Israeli National Anthem This melody was used by the Czech composer Bedřich Smetana in his symphonic poem celebrating Bohemia, “Má vlast,” as “Vltava” (Die Moldau)
St John’s Rapids Smetana Vltava
My mistress is prettie The same melody, later also known as "Ballo di Mantova" or "Aria di Mantova" gained wide currency in Renaissance Europe, being recorded variously as the Scottish “My mistress is prettie,” the Polish “Pod Krakowem,” Spanish "Virgen de la Cueva" and the Ukrainian “Kateryna Kucheryava.”
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