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Michael Cohen: Key takeaways from testimony (today's Guardian)
The British media read the American papers in order to know what's going on over there, though the term did begin to creep in in the 1990s. We shall soon be calling takeaway food 'takeouts'.
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.
The British media read the American papers in order to know what's going on over there, though the term did begin to creep in in the 1990s. We shall soon be calling takeaway food 'takeouts'.
Just found a small notebook where I had noted down words and (then current) phrases which I might have labelled, 'Phrases/words that set my teeth on edge' had I thought of it:
Retail therapy
Must-have
'Shop till you drop' (supermarket slogan?)
'Take the waiting out of wanting' (slogan of Access credit card, later Mastercard)
Consumerism gone mad!
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.
A gift from Cartier ~ Assouline published “les must de Cartier” and describe it: “1968—the year all certainties were shattered, it was in good taste to burn what one loved and to trample underfoot the values of yesterday. If, in this new world of
Just found a small notebook where I had noted down words and (then current) phrases which I might have labelled, 'Phrases/words that set my teeth on edge' had I thought of it:
Retail therapy
Must-have
'Shop till you drop' (supermarket slogan?)
'Take the waiting out of wanting' (slogan of Access credit card, later Mastercard)
Consumerism gone mad!
And "LIFESTYLE" - hanging over a supermarket aisle"!
The word 'variations' seems to have disappeared from the vocab any commentator uses when describing the way bowlers can affect delivery of the different balls they bowl.
EVERY commentator now seems to be using the Robert Key neologism 'Change-ups'.
Why?? Oh, WHY?
A few years ago "bowling into good areas" became common which was then reduced to "bowling into areas" It was often heard on TV commentaries but I can only find one example in written journalism, thankfully.
Durham Dynamos set up tomorrow night's sell-out home opener in the Twenty20 Cup against Lancashire when they routed Leicestershire Foxes by 41 runs at Grace Road last night.
...though I must say the sign on (Tesco?) home delivery vans is mildly clever. 'You shop, we drop'.
More than 'mildly clever' - it's actually brilliant; uncomplicated, short, witty, instantly understandable, has perfect rhythm, easy to remember (subliminally)
More than 'mildly clever' - it's actually brilliant; uncomplicated, short, witty, instantly understandable, has perfect rhythm, easy to remember (subliminally)
Yes - it's what "See it, Say it, Sort it" wants to be when it grows up.
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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