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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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![]() Arfa Daily wrote: "David Nebenzahl" wrote in message .com... On 1/21/2011 5:43 PM Arfa Daily spake thus: He was in sunny Caffy-lornia ... Costa Mesa in Orange County, a few miles down the Interstate from LA OK, Arf, a small lesson in regional US dialects, free of charge: Nobody here in "Cal-ee-fonia", as our recently departed Governator/Gropenator called it, calls them "interstates", even though they are, in fact, interstate highways. Some folks back east may call them that, though I'm not sure (I've heard them referred to as "turnpikes" in some places). One wonders whether some LA residents even know what an "interstate" is ... In any case, just in case you actually visit Caleefonia sometime in the near future, you should also be aware of an important difference in usage between SoCal (basically El-Lay and environs) and NoCal (San Francisco and thereabouts). Down there, they don't use *any* noun for a road (highway, interstate, etc.), but they do use articles with the road number, as in "the 405", "the 101", etc. But bewa up here in the Beige Area, where we like to think we're so much superior to our SoCal cousins, we never use the article, saying instead "take 80 to get to Berkeley" or "take 101 to 280 to 17 to get down to Santa Cruz". (One can easily spot newcomers to San Francisco who refer to "the 80" or "the 101". That's just SO wrong!) -- Thank you for that enlightening dissertation ! However, as you say, it's not actually *wrong* to call them Interstates - for that is what they are, as evidenced by their designation "I" xxx - just 'not quite right' in your neck of the woods. It's been a while since I was last in California, but I'm sure I recall the I5 being referred to as 'The Interstate' by the guys in the factory that I used to visit. Maybe in 20 years, or whatever it is now, the usage of the term has changed. I could be wrong, but I thought that the big road running just to the west of the Las Vegas strip was referred to locally as 'The Interstate' or 'The Freeway', likewise the I75 and I95 in Florida, although I have seen this term 'turnpike' over the that side of the country. Perhaps Michael can enlighten us on the usage of the words over there in 'gator country ... ? The 'turnpike' is a toll road. http://www.floridasturnpike.com/ -- You can't fix stupid. You can't even put a band-aid on it, because it's Teflon coated. |
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