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"Scenes of graphic surgery"
I'm not convinced that cut and paste in a design studio needs a trigger warning. The cut and stitch in the operating theatre on the other hand might warrant it...
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
I'll give that a miss. I don't relish listening to recordings of her (or anyone else) eating her dinner and going to the toilet, which is presumably what that would involve.
I'll give that a miss. I don't relish listening to recordings of her (or anyone else) eating her dinner and going to the toilet, which is presumably what that would involve.
Poor Roy Plomley would turn in his grave. .
To which one of these two life-sharers do you refer?
Cardinal Angelo De Donatis puts ashes on another cardinals heads during the Ash Wednesday mass at Basilica of Santa Sabina in Rome, Italy.
Even with an apostrophe (another cardinal's) this conjures up a strange image.
I think they intend
Cardinal Angelo De Donatis puts ashes on another cardinal's head during the Ash Wednesday mass at Basilica of Santa Sabina in Rome, Italy.
...I think they intend
Cardinal Angelo De Donatis puts ashes on another cardinal's head during the Ash Wednesday mass at Basilica of Santa Sabina in Rome, Italy.
(And this thread is now stuck, so needs a reset; I'll alert Andrew/ff.)
Setting has been re'd.
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
(Man to woman lighting cigarette in 'No Smoking' coach) : Excuse me , madam, smoking is prohibited here.
W. But I'm one of the directors' wives!
M. Were you the director's only wife, I still object.
(attributed, as are many apocryphal anecdotes, , to Sir Thomas Beecham).
Does anyone here object to the expression "no brainer"? I have managed to avoid using it, as it seems logical to me that a no brainer would have to have come from some being possessing no brain - as in fact I first read it when the expression first came into usage, and it was immiedately apparent it stood for the complete opposite of what I had assumed.
Does anyone here object to the expression "no brainer"? I have managed to avoid using it, as it seems logical to me that a no brainer would have to have come from some being possessing no brain - as in fact I first read it when the expression first came into usage, and it was immiedately apparent it stood for the complete opposite of what I had assumed.
... Serial - it's worth holding in mind that 'logical' isn't usually a useful approach when it comes to grammar : language often works by analogy, but 'logic' (in our formal sense and use of the word) doesn't seem to be a primary underlying organising factor.
In this instance : "no brainer" = "you don't need a brain to work out that... "
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