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Goedjn December 20th 06 06:26 PM

using polyfilla around a rawlplug
 
On Wed, 20 Dec 2006 16:23:30 +0000, Bruce
wrote:

Goedjn wrote:
On Wed, 20 Dec 2006 09:53:33 +0000, Bruce
wrote:

Keith Willcocks wrote:
A few years ago we took a train trip across Canada and fell in with a group
of Americans. By the end of the trip I had them calling the railroad: the
railway, switches: points and ties: sleepers. Oh and the engineer was the
engine driver.
And Americans drive on the parkway whereas we park on the driveway.



Except on the Garden State Parkway, where you're actually
parked, just wishing you were driving.


Sounds very much like the M25 around London - often referred to as
largest car park in the UK


Is that the one with the interchange described in
the book _good_omens_ as "a prayer wheel to satan"?
(or maybe that was _sympathy_for_the_devil_..)




Andy Hall December 20th 06 06:57 PM

using polyfilla around a rawlplug
 
On 2006-12-20 17:35:04 +0000, The Natural Philosopher said:

Keith Willcocks wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...
Percival P. Cassidy wrote:

The last of these is regional: in some parts of the USA they are all
"coke," in others all "soda," and in yet others all "pop."
Unless you're in Boston (bah-stun), in which case the generic word is
tonic (tah-nik). Don't ask me why. At least that's how it was 30 years
ago when I lived there.



And when I was in Boston this summer, every time I asked for Scotch and
Tonic they gave me Scotch and Soda (which I dislike intensely).


When I returnee from Johannesburg with a Girlfriend in tow..she went
into the pub and asked for a Gin and Tonic "And can you put a little
arse in that?"

Strange looks all round.


Yiss. Nahdays all the pubs are full of people from Jo'burg - usuallee
working behand the bah and asking
which kahnd of stahch yoo want with your lunch. Is it.





Malcolm Hoar December 20th 06 07:09 PM

using polyfilla around a rawlplug
 
In article , wrote:
Goedjn wrote:
On Wed, 20 Dec 2006 09:53:33 +0000, Bruce
wrote:

Keith Willcocks wrote:
A few years ago we took a train trip across Canada and fell in with a group


of Americans. By the end of the trip I had them calling the railroad: the


railway, switches: points and ties: sleepers. Oh and the engineer was the


engine driver.
And Americans drive on the parkway whereas we park on the driveway.



Except on the Garden State Parkway, where you're actually
parked, just wishing you were driving.


Sounds very much like the M25 around London - often referred to as
largest car park in the UK


It wasn't always so. Back in about '86 you could do 125mph on
the stretch between the M3 and the M4. And I have a ticket
and 6-week disqualification to prove it :-(

--
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
| Malcolm Hoar "The more I practice, the luckier I get". |
|
Gary Player. |
|
http://www.malch.com/ Shpx gur PQN. |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Another Dave December 21st 06 04:40 PM

using polyfilla around a rawlplug
 
Doug Miller wrote:

What is a rawlplug?

Originally a fibre plug, inserted into a drilled hole in brickwork to allow
a screw to be screwed in. Rawlplug is/was a trade name
- but is now used generically for any such plug. Modern plugs are made of
plastic.


Gotcha. We use the same things here, but I have no idea what they're called.

Anchors


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