Originally posted by Roger Webb
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Phrases/words that set your teeth on edge.
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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.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
There was a building just about there from 1958 (says Wikipedia) but it was redeveloped as the present bus terminus which opened in 2006. As I remember from schooldays, most of the bus services started at or passed through the "Tramways Centre", now just "The Centre" (though what it's the centre of, I dont know).
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
I don't remember that there was such a thing as a 'bus station' in the sense it has now: somewhere where passengers go to start their journey. The depot was where the buses were parked overnight. Bristol's 'bus station' in the sense of the general terminus for buses, with waiting room, cafés, information, ticket office, opened in 2006. Before that "the station" meant the railway station.
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View PostI trust no one has dared to knock down Brunel's masterpiece (the old engine shed) make a good Wetherspoon's though.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.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
No, it briefly housed an Empire & Commonwealth Museum. It now seems to be owned by the university and acts as an ....... innovations hub.
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I think 'train station' and 'train track' are simply pseudo-child-speak, like 'gee-gee' . Not for intelligent adults
Going back to 'somethink' , I am hearing 'apsolutely' (sic) instead of 'absolutely' quite often these days, usually from politicians. On Radio 4 they tend to say 'apsutly'.
I remember when Cliff Michelmore used to say 'the Fith of Febyouary' (sic).
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Originally posted by smittims View PostI think 'train station' and 'train track' are simply pseudo-child-speak, like 'gee-gee' . Not for intelligent adults
Going back to 'somethink' , I am hearing 'apsolutely' (sic) instead of 'absolutely' quite often these days, usually from politicians. On Radio 4 they tend to say 'apsutly'.
I remember when Cliff Michelmore used to say 'the Fith of Febyouary' (sic).
I've just looked at an Ordnance Survey map to see how they describe their symbols, but they call it simply a station (though admittedly the section itself is Railways).
I shall try to remember on Sunday then, when I take my partner to catch his train, that I'm heading to the (railway) station.
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Perhaps the most irritating habit now becoming ubiquitous among those under the age of , say, forty (fifty?) is more the delivery rather than specific words. I'm talking about the rising inflection at the end of a rhetorical statement, as if the speaker is looking for confirmation that the interlocutor has understood. I believe this is called the antipodean interrogative.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostI shall try to remember on Sunday then, when I take my partner to catch his train, that I'm heading to the (railway) station.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.
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
Language will evolve no matter who that irritates. One can objectively notice these changes; one may find explanations for them; but at some point during our (long) lives we have all unconsciously adopted neologisms. Interesting or irritating? .
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Originally posted by french frank View Post
If it doesn't irritate you and doesn't irritate him, why bother? Language will evolve no matter who that irritates. One can objectively notice these changes; one may find explanations for them; but at some point during our (long) lives we have all unconsciously adopted neologisms. Interesting or irritating? We can refuse to adopt the coinages that we don't like, but - King Canute and all that.
Language is infectious - that is how we acquire it in the first place and how languages evolve. As a language teacher, I paid a lot of attention to our children during this process (especially since they were growing up bilingually). Aged about three, our daughter addressed me with "Oi, you!", to which I commented something like: "That's not a nice way to talk. "She replied: "You say that." If you had asked me if I said that I would probably have said that I didn't.
I had a similar case when working at university in Germany. The professor asked me one day about a particular piece of English: "Can you say this?". I replied that you couldn't. A short time later I was talking to him and he pointed out that I had just said that thing which you couldn't say.Last edited by gurnemanz; 23-02-24, 11:43.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostYou're right, Roger. It's the result of a whole generation learning to speak by watching Australian soaps. I find many younger people are saying 'bik, kik, and lik' instead of '.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.
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My mother, who was from what was then North-east Cheshire (Tameside since 1974) did pronounce the 'oo' in those words as it is in 'boot'. And older TV viewers will remember Sergeant Twentyman in Z-cars, whose catch -phrase was pronounced in that way: 'Put it in the book ,Sweet' (i.e Police Constable Sweet, often the butt of his humour).
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Originally posted by smittims View PostMy mother, who was from what was then North-east Cheshire (Tameside since 1974) did pronounce the 'oo' in those words as it is in 'boot'. And older TV viewers will remember Sergeant Twentyman in Z-cars, whose catch -phrase was pronounced in that way: 'Put it in the book ,Sweet' (i.e Police Constable Sweet, often the butt of his humour).
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