Originally posted by LMcD
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Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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Originally posted by un barbu View PostThe main 'shopping mall' in my native dorp labels its lavatories as being for 'Laddies' and 'Lassies'.
Despite the added symbols on the doors (can't remember exactly: helmets and breastplates perhaps) it took me a fair while to 'get' it (I hadn't realised that the words were plurals, for one thing!).
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostA fairly posh restaurant here in York picks up the Viking theme and has labelled its loos Hengists and Horsas.
Despite the added symbols on the doors (can't remember exactly: helmets and breastplates perhaps) it took me a fair while to 'get' it (I hadn't realised that the words were plurals, for one thing!).Barbatus sed non barbarus
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Originally posted by un barbu View Post"Memorable among the Saxon warriors were Hengist and his wife (? or horse), Horsa." To quote the greatest ever book of British history.
I might be misremembering the actual labels/names: I'll check next time I'm in town.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by un barbu View Post"Memorable among the Saxon warriors were Hengist and his wife (? or horse), Horsa." To quote the greatest ever book of British history.
cf Monmouth, the indiscriminate son of Charles II who landed incorrectly in Somerset and was easily defeated....
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostOh! Have I mixed up my Saxons and Vikings?
I might be misremembering the actual labels/names: I'll check next time I'm in town.Barbatus sed non barbarus
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Originally posted by un barbu View PostI wasn't correcting you in any way, just referencing '1066 And All That.' I have almost completely forgotten the Old and Middle English I learned for my degree some fifty years ago so am in no position to pontificate on this period. That said, I don't regret reading 'The Seafarer', 'The Wanderer' and 'The Dream of the Rood' in the original.
My brain is addled (I'm blaming it on all the noise from workmen in the house); I think the Ladies might be Hildas, but still don't recall who the Gents are!
Has history come to a full stop yet?
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While we are on the subject, what’s all this nonsense with the word ‘colleague’ for shop assistant? It’s a bit pretentious iMHO when ‘assistant’ or ‘member of staff’ would surely suffice.Money can't buy you happiness............but it does bring you a more pleasant form of misery - Spike Milligan
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Originally posted by alycidon View PostWhile we are on the subject, what’s all this nonsense with the word ‘colleague’ for shop assistant? It’s a bit pretentious iMHO when ‘assistant’ or ‘member of staff’ would surely suffice.
In some places work colleagues are now referred to as 'workplace associates'.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... if the women are Hildas, might the men be Bedes?
.Barbatus sed non barbarus
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