Was SS actually the answer?
Alphabet associations - I
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
This is a sticky topic.
X
X
-
Norfolk Born
-
Anna
If it was Six Sisters - then going back to Margaret Drabble - she wrote a book The Seven Sisters Edit: Did Star Trek have a Sister Ship?
Comment
-
Norfolk Born
Which 'T' links the following: Paris (1737), Vienna (1786) and London (1889)?
All elements are musical!
Comment
-
Don Petter
Originally posted by Norfolk Born View PostThere's a character called Pavel Chekov in Star Trek. Anton Chekhov's father was Pavel Chekhov. Does this mean that I've misunderstood the Star Trek reference?
But no matter, it was good fun. I felt we were all stamping around the area until eventually we had to have killed the thing whatever it was and whereever it was.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Don Petter View PostI think you've seen a fundamental flaw in the whole integrity of the question, which no-one has chosen to notice.
But no matter, it was good fun. I felt we were all stamping around the area until eventually we had to have killed the thing whatever it was and whereever it was.
(That's my story and I'm sticking to it!
Best Wises.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
Comment
-
-
Don Petter
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostMany thanks, DP, but in defence of the spelling of Chekhov (as opposed to Chekov), I have an early 20th C edition of his plays translated into English which gives his name as "Tschekow". Just as "Tschjaikowski" has gradually settled into "Tchaikovsky", I presume that, in future in which Star Trek is set, "Chekhov" will have lost the second "h".
(That's my story and I'm sticking to it!)
Best Wishes.
This useful device could henceforth become know as 'Ferney's Gambit' or 'The Star Trek Escape', in which anything could have transmuted into anything else.
Comment
-
Norfolk Born
Comment