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anyone working in Dublin...

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
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  • C Corporal Agarn

    Went to Switzerland between Christmas and New Years many years ago and there was no snow. Had to go to the mountain tops to see any.

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    TheMelEntity
    wrote on last edited by
    #11

    Well it's not Narnia mate, it doesn't snow ALL the time in Winter. My point is that when it does, the Swiss simply shrug their shoulders and break out the snow tyres. Trains run effortlessly on time unless some absolute calamity befalls them. It's actually a little eerie.

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    • T TheMelEntity

      Well it's not Narnia mate, it doesn't snow ALL the time in Winter. My point is that when it does, the Swiss simply shrug their shoulders and break out the snow tyres. Trains run effortlessly on time unless some absolute calamity befalls them. It's actually a little eerie.

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      Corporal Agarn
      wrote on last edited by
      #12

      Sorry, not saying they do not get snow just making a comment.

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      • C Corporal Agarn

        Sorry, not saying they do not get snow just making a comment.

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        TheMelEntity
        wrote on last edited by
        #13

        Ah. Yes. Quite. (backs away sheepishly)

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        • T TheMelEntity

          Dalek Dave wrote:

          Mel, (I don't know if you are male of female - a genderless name)

          That question I shall leave open, the better to lend full impetus to the thrust of your febrile imaginings. I am disquieted by your seeming association of honey with wine, and sweetness with flowers. Surely the converse association applies, when you think about it. Furthermore, it has hitherto been my experience that one drinks wine with one's mouth, excepting of course the sad occasion of a bizarre disfigurement arising from a disagreement with an irate sawfish, or some other fanged fauna of a feisty disposition. You, sir, are mixing metaphors. Maliciously, I suspect.

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          Slacker007
          wrote on last edited by
          #14

          I had to look up the following words: impetus - the energy or motivation to accomplish or undertake something. febrile - relating to, involving, or typical of fever hitherto - up to the present time or the time in question Do you really write/speak like this or is this a show? Quite impressive none the less. :thumbsup:

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          • T TheMelEntity

            .... had best make tracks if you're relying on a bus to get home... http://www.transport.ie/feature.aspx?id=46

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            Single Step Debugger
            wrote on last edited by
            #15

            Ashley Judd is not working there which is nice since if she stuck in the snow this is going to make me worry.

            The narrow specialist in the broad sense of the word is a complete idiot in the narrow sense of the word. Advertise here – minimum three posts per day are guaranteed.

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            • S Slacker007

              I had to look up the following words: impetus - the energy or motivation to accomplish or undertake something. febrile - relating to, involving, or typical of fever hitherto - up to the present time or the time in question Do you really write/speak like this or is this a show? Quite impressive none the less. :thumbsup:

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              TheMelEntity
              wrote on last edited by
              #16

              You could call it a hobby of mine. I do speak well. I consider it no more than good manners to do so, given that I regularly interact with people who speak several languages with varying degrees of facility, (when many of my compatriots can't not talk the one lingo too goodly) and who have learned what I would consider to be decent "School English" in order to interact with the likes of little old monolingual me. Dublin slang is met with blank stares and besides, it is my opportunity to open the taps, as it were, on the fecund faucet of filigree verbiage I hold within (although, Alliteration I save for CodeProject). Utterances of this sort visited upon Irish people generally elicit perplexed frowns and exhortations to "talk proper, wouldya". Have you ever read P.G. Wodehouse? Some of his prose made me actually put the book down and take a deep breath of joy that I was lucky enough to read it. That man was a demigod of deft dialogue.

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              • S Slacker007

                I had to look up the following words: impetus - the energy or motivation to accomplish or undertake something. febrile - relating to, involving, or typical of fever hitherto - up to the present time or the time in question Do you really write/speak like this or is this a show? Quite impressive none the less. :thumbsup:

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                Lost User
                wrote on last edited by
                #17

                Impetus I would say is quite a common word, hitherto less so but still not uncommon. Febrile many would probably not know, but I certainly do as my daughter has had a number of febrile convulsions which are fits caused by fever.

                Every man can tell how many goats or sheep he possesses, but not how many friends.

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                • L Lost User

                  Impetus I would say is quite a common word, hitherto less so but still not uncommon. Febrile many would probably not know, but I certainly do as my daughter has had a number of febrile convulsions which are fits caused by fever.

                  Every man can tell how many goats or sheep he possesses, but not how many friends.

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                  TheMelEntity
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #18

                  Agreed. I love the sound of the word "febrile" though. It sounds... bouncy, as opposed to "feverish" which sounds diseased. Of course, it's all aesthetics.

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                  • T TheMelEntity

                    Dalek Dave wrote:

                    Mel, (I don't know if you are male of female - a genderless name)

                    That question I shall leave open, the better to lend full impetus to the thrust of your febrile imaginings. I am disquieted by your seeming association of honey with wine, and sweetness with flowers. Surely the converse association applies, when you think about it. Furthermore, it has hitherto been my experience that one drinks wine with one's mouth, excepting of course the sad occasion of a bizarre disfigurement arising from a disagreement with an irate sawfish, or some other fanged fauna of a feisty disposition. You, sir, are mixing metaphors. Maliciously, I suspect.

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                    Joe Simes
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #19

                    mel_padden wrote:

                    to lend full impetus to the thrust of your febrile imaginings.

                    Is that KSS? I can't even tell 'cause I'm a frikkin Philistine! :-D

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                    • D Doctor Nick

                      Dalek Dave wrote:

                      'Tis as flowery and sweetened as my own oft gets.

                      Surely this is BEFORE the pub :-D

                      ------------------------------------- Do not do what has already been done. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.. but it ROCKS absolutely, too.

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                      Rob Graham
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #20

                      His language remains sweet and flowery after the Pub, it's just a really badly spelled and erratically typed and occasionally vulgar kind of sweet and flowery... :)

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