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[email protected] July 9th 07 01:56 PM

Electrical Safety Tip (of the day)
 
7-9-07 (A day in someone's life) and a damn Monday !

Never, ever plug a female plug into a male. This is very dangerous
because a female does not have the tools required to plug a male.
However, plugging a male into a female is perfectly safe and normal.
Anyone trying to plug two males together is gay and should get
electricuted doing it. If two female plugs are shoved into each
other, please contact Rosie O'Donnel for further instructions, and you
might end up on her show.


This message brought to you by TOD (Tip Of the Day)
An affilaite of Ebay where we all know the Shipping and Handling will
knock your sox off, thus making your shower more wet and your feet
more sexy.

Bill July 9th 07 04:26 PM

Electrical Safety Tip (of the day)
 
I worked part-time at a hardware store when I was in high school. One day a
lady came in and said she wanted an electrical plug...

I asked her if she wanted a male plug or a female plug.

She asked what was the difference.

I blushed and said I would show her. I held up a male plug and said this is
a male. Then I held up a female plug and said this is a female plug.

She said; Oh I get it! (Then she blushed....)


wrote in message
7-9-07 (A day in someone's life) and a damn Monday !

Never, ever plug a female plug into a male. This is very dangerous
because a female does not have the tools required to plug a male.
However, plugging a male into a female is perfectly safe and normal.
Anyone trying to plug two males together is gay and should get
electricuted doing it. If two female plugs are shoved into each
other, please contact Rosie O'Donnel for further instructions, and you
might end up on her show.


This message brought to you by TOD (Tip Of the Day)
An affilaite of Ebay where we all know the Shipping and Handling will
knock your sox off, thus making your shower more wet and your feet
more sexy.




Toller July 9th 07 04:49 PM

Electrical Safety Tip (of the day)
 

"Bill" wrote in message
...
I worked part-time at a hardware store when I was in high school. One day a
lady came in and said she wanted an electrical plug...

I asked her if she wanted a male plug or a female plug.

She asked what was the difference.

I blushed and said I would show her. I held up a male plug and said this
is a male. Then I held up a female plug and said this is a female plug.

She said; Oh I get it! (Then she blushed....)


Unless otherwise specified...
Plugs (as the word itself suggests) are male.
Receptacles, or outlets, are female.

Yes, there are female plugs and male receptacles, but there was little
chance that your customer wanted those, or that your hardware store carried
them.




mm July 10th 07 01:55 AM

Electrical Safety Tip (of the day)
 

On Mon, 09 Jul 2007 15:49:52 GMT, "Toller" wrote:


"Bill" wrote in message
...
I worked part-time at a hardware store when I was in high school. One day a
lady came in and said she wanted an electrical plug...

I asked her if she wanted a male plug or a female plug.

She asked what was the difference.

I blushed and said I would show her. I held up a male plug and said this
is a male. Then I held up a female plug and said this is a female plug.

She said; Oh I get it! (Then she blushed....)


Unless otherwise specified...
Plugs (as the word itself suggests) are male.
Receptacles, or outlets,


or sockets or jacks

are female.

Yes, there are female plugs and male receptacles,


What are those? It seems downright impossible, or gay.

but there was little
chance that your customer wanted those, or that your hardware store carried
them.




[email protected] July 10th 07 04:45 AM

Electrical Safety Tip (of the day)
 
On Mon, 09 Jul 2007 20:55:23 -0400, mm
wrote:


On Mon, 09 Jul 2007 15:49:52 GMT, "Toller" wrote:


"Bill" wrote in message
...
I worked part-time at a hardware store when I was in high school. One day a
lady came in and said she wanted an electrical plug...

I asked her if she wanted a male plug or a female plug.

She asked what was the difference.

I blushed and said I would show her. I held up a male plug and said this
is a male. Then I held up a female plug and said this is a female plug.

She said; Oh I get it! (Then she blushed....)


Unless otherwise specified...
Plugs (as the word itself suggests) are male.
Receptacles, or outlets,


or sockets or jacks

There's always some JACKoff wanting to SOCKET to me !!!!.

are female.

Yes, there are female plugs and male receptacles,


What are those? It seems downright impossible, or gay.

but there was little
chance that your customer wanted those, or that your hardware store carried
them.




Rod & Betty Jo July 10th 07 07:03 PM

Electrical Safety Tip (of the day)
 
Toller wrote:
Unless otherwise specified...
Plugs (as the word itself suggests) are male.
Receptacles, or outlets, are female.

Yes, there are female plugs and male receptacles, but there was little
chance that your customer wanted those, or that your hardware store
carried them.


How many people would identify a standard extension cord as having or
needing one plug and one outlet? Male and female plugs would be pretty
normal communication. Rod



SAm E July 10th 07 09:17 PM

Electrical Safety Tip (of the day)
 
On Mon, 09 Jul 2007 15:49:52 GMT, "Toller" wrote:


"Bill" wrote in message
...
I worked part-time at a hardware store when I was in high school. One day a
lady came in and said she wanted an electrical plug...

I asked her if she wanted a male plug or a female plug.

She asked what was the difference.

I blushed and said I would show her. I held up a male plug and said this
is a male. Then I held up a female plug and said this is a female plug.

She said; Oh I get it! (Then she blushed....)


Unless otherwise specified...
Plugs (as the word itself suggests) are male.


That reminds me of one day this man kept singing about "prong breath",
and then explained what "prong" means.

Receptacles, or outlets, are female.

Yes, there are female plugs and male receptacles, but there was little
chance that your customer wanted those, or that your hardware store carried
them.



mm July 11th 07 02:13 AM

Electrical Safety Tip (of the day)
 
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 11:03:31 -0700, "Rod & Betty Jo"
wrote:

Toller wrote:
Unless otherwise specified...
Plugs (as the word itself suggests) are male.
Receptacles, or outlets, are female.

Yes, there are female plugs and male receptacles, but there was little
chance that your customer wanted those, or that your hardware store
carried them.


How many people would identify a standard extension cord as having or
needing one plug and one outlet? Male and female plugs would be pretty
normal communication. Rod


I have never heard anyone say "female plug" unless they meant
something that plugs into a female.

Toller hasn't explained yet what he meant by female plug and until he
does, I'll figure there are none.



Smitty Two July 11th 07 02:49 AM

Electrical Safety Tip (of the day)
 
In article ,
mm wrote:

On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 11:03:31 -0700, "Rod & Betty Jo"
wrote:

Toller wrote:
Unless otherwise specified...
Plugs (as the word itself suggests) are male.
Receptacles, or outlets, are female.

Yes, there are female plugs and male receptacles, but there was little
chance that your customer wanted those, or that your hardware store
carried them.


How many people would identify a standard extension cord as having or
needing one plug and one outlet? Male and female plugs would be pretty
normal communication. Rod


I have never heard anyone say "female plug" unless they meant
something that plugs into a female.

Toller hasn't explained yet what he meant by female plug and until he
does, I'll figure there are none.


What say, Toller, were you referring to reverse sex connectors?

Rod & Betty Jo July 11th 07 09:55 AM

Electrical Safety Tip (of the day)
 
wrote:
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 11:03:31 -0700, "Rod & Betty Jo"
wrote:

How many people would identify a standard extension cord as having or
needing one plug and one outlet? Male and female plugs would be
pretty normal communication. Rod



I would say one plug cap and one receptacle.


Interesting.....since I thought male/female plugs were pretty common
terminology, at the listed links they do as well, nor in my brief search did
I find anything contrary except in a radio shack 9 ft extension cord catalog
item they refered to the cord as having one outlet at each end...I found
that really confusingG.....Rod

http://www.doityourself.com/stry/extensioncordinshape

http://www.thinkglink.com/Repairing_...nsion_Cord.htm

http://www.homeenvy.com/db/4/404.html




mm July 11th 07 10:52 PM

Electrical Safety Tip (of the day)
 
On Wed, 11 Jul 2007 01:55:19 -0700, "Rod & Betty Jo"
wrote:

wrote:
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 11:03:31 -0700, "Rod & Betty Jo"
wrote:

How many people would identify a standard extension cord as having or
needing one plug and one outlet? Male and female plugs would be
pretty normal communication. Rod



I would say one plug cap and one receptacle.


Interesting.....since I thought male/female plugs were pretty common
terminology, at the listed links they do as well, nor in my brief search did
I find anything contrary except in a radio shack 9 ft extension cord catalog
item they refered to the cord as having one outlet at each end...I found
that really confusingG.....Rod

http://www.doityourself.com/stry/extensioncordinshape


I cehcked this one and only found two uses of plug* , both proper,
"plugged into"

http://www.thinkglink.com/Repairing_...nsion_Cord.htm

http://www.homeenvy.com/db/4/404.html


I looked ut these two, and I don't think the writers know what they're
talking about, and should be expected to.** They should be talking
about male and female *ends*. That's the word that has been used in
the past to refer to both plugs and outlets on cords.

There are lots of words that people misuse. Currently, "irony" is
often used where there is perhaps a coincidence but no irony.
"Obviously" is used where something is not obvious at al, and where
"famously" or something else is meant.

"Epitome" is almost always misused. It doent's mean apex, zenith,
acme, it means a most typical example, which is something very
different.

A bunch more that I can't think of right now.



**Two users of female plug:
http://www.thinkglink.com/Repairing_...nsion_Cord.htm

Most hardware stores will have a heavy duty male and female
replacement plug you can use for your cord. Follow the instructions on
how to add the new male and female plugs to your cord. While you will
end up with shorter cords, you will have a safer cord for your use.

Samuel J. Tamkin is a Chicago-based real estate attorney. Ilyce R.
Glink’s latest book is 50 Simple Steps You Can Take To Sell Your Home
Faster and For More Money In Any Market.

== See the authors are a real estate attorney and a someone who sells
houses. They don't know anything.


http://www.homeenvy.com/db/4/404.html
By "Tool Girl - Mag Ruffman"

=== She's a girl, for gosh sakes. She doesn't know anything.

Buy a replacement plug (either male or female, depending on which end
of the cord you're repairing) that's rated to match the amperage of
your extension cord. (If in doubt, cut off the plug and take it with
you to the hardware store).


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