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Things that make you :)


Andy Y
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There is a precise purpose for this. Taking Monday until Friday or Monday to Friday literally can imply only Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.  Monday through Friday means through the end of the day on Friday and is, I think, clearer in that respect.

Ah, but it doesn't mean that it ends on Friday. It's just means it's happening all day Friday too, and could be continuing on Saturday, Sunday....... It doesn't actually specify when it ends, so is no more precise.

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Ah, but it doesn't mean that it ends on Friday. It's just means it's happening all day Friday too, and could be continuing on Saturday, Sunday....... It doesn't actually specify when it ends, so is no more precise.

I understand what you mean. Through the end of Friday is the colloquial intent. Personally I find it much more meaningful than until, which in the British colloquial context means "until and including" but doesn't explicitly say so.

 

Until works very well with a precise time. "We danced until dawn".

Edited by Ozexpatriate
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On the subject of pointless and inaccurate Americanisms,

a race track has curves and straights (esp. an oval),

whereas 'straightaway' purely means now!

Which imbecile thought it would be a good grammatical

exercise to add 2 more syllables?

Mind you, the Irish are just as bad, using 'whenever',

instead of just 'when'!

 

(Rant over, and, yes, I do feel better!)

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On the subject of pointless and inaccurate Americanisms,

a race track has curves and straights (esp. an oval),

whereas 'straightaway' purely means now!

Which imbecile thought it would be a good grammatical

exercise to add 2 more syllables?

It goes the other way too. The late Larry Hagman said he (as J.R. Ewing) influenced a generation of real life Texans by making "foreign" have only one syllable.

 

Cheers

David

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On the subject of pointless and inaccurate Americanisms,

a race track has curves and straights (esp. an oval),

whereas 'straightaway' purely means now!

Which imbecile thought it would be a good grammatical

exercise to add 2 more syllables?

Mind you, the Irish are just as bad, using 'whenever',

instead of just 'when'!

 

(Rant over, and, yes, I do feel better!)

I’ve often wondered that too. The only thing that comes to mind is that once you are lapping over 130mph “straights” seems to disappear in that you feel every lateral moment intensely. I only watch NASCAR over here when there is absolutely nothing else on and I’m feeling lazy...

 

Best, Pete.

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Hope this doesn't offend anyone but I couldn't resist this.

post-27337-0-86427900-1445950054_thumb.jpg

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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-34648339?ocid=socialflow_facebook&ns_mchannel=social&ns_campaign=bbcnews&ns_source=Facebook

 

Reminded me of a story where a local artist hung one of their pieces in the Guggenheim in Bilbao complete with fake sign. It took over twelve months for them to notice!

Neil

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Once upon a time, a pilot asked a beautiful princess: "Will you marry me?  "The princess said, "No!!!”

 

And the pilot lived happily ever after and flew jets all over the world and drove hot cars and chased skinny long-legged big-breasted flight attendants and hunted and fished and went to topless bars and dated women half his age and drank Weihenstephaner German beer and Captain Morgan and never heard bitching and never paid child support or alimony and kept his house and guns and ate cold leftover meals, potato chips and beans and blew enormous farts and never got cheated on while he was at work and all his friends and family thought he was frickin' cool as hell and he had tons of money in the bank and left the toilet seat up.

 

The End

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Hope this doesn't offend anyone but I couldn't resist this.

Actually it was linked to and  discussed on p.119.

 

I thought I was getting deja vu all over again (yes, I know it was Peter “Yogi” Berra who said that).

 

Best, Pete.

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