I'll have to stop calling it Holland because it really annoys me when Americans refer to Britain as England!
I'm surprised Seagullsovergrimsby hasn't stated that Holland used to be part of his beloved county of Lincolnshire. :lol:
There must be thousands of pounds worth of oil and meat in that beast; I'll bet every Japanese restaurant within 100 miles is sending a van to Teeside!
Why don't you try reading Bozza's post again? If you still can't understand it, then you certainly won't be able to cope with the teething problems associated with setting up this project.
I think Liz and the hubby are abroad ATM.
It was called 'Teville Gate' when I lived down that way; why do they have to keep changing things? :wink:
BTW, is that bowling centre pictured not the one that was on the seafront in the 1970s?
This now edits correctly but only when using the button at the top. The individual ones on 'origins' and 'history' still don't work. I've noticed that options such as 'parse links' and 'remove smileys' are checked by default. As we can't rely on every editor to uncheck the options that we don't...
That's quite amusing.:)
What is less amusing is that Ray Parlour's divorced wife got him to support her for the rest of her life. Or have I got that wrong?
I don't have a problem beginning sentences with such an adverb, even for formal English. On a board such as NSC I type informally, more or less as I would speak. This means that I sometimes even start sentences with a preposition, something I would never allow when proof reading a manuscript...
Wasn't the capital Lahore? Whichever it was, I thought it changed far more recently than 1972.
Another country you could use is the one which changed its capital to Sucre (either Paraguay or Bolivia). Or if yo wanted a trick question, try Holland; apparently, their capital is not the seat of...
Q. Which band did Gordon Brown mention when PM in a sad attempt to appear 'hip' and 'down with the kids'?
A. The Arctic Monkeys.
BTW Gwylan, the term 'modern beat combos' sounds so 1960s!
That's quite interesting, actually. I've been using bored of and bored with all my life without even an inkling that one might be incorrect. Time for a rethink, methinks!
I must disagree, after all it's perfectly acceptable to say or write an hotel.
You can only pronounce (or mispronounce) 'haitch', you can't really spell with it! But it is epidemic in my area.
Err....possibly this was because I agreed with the rest of your post?
:wozza:
What a moronic comment this was! If you thought my post was doing Krispies a disservice, then I should tell you that he would never have caught that train without my help. And no, as I remember it, I didn't do a search; I already knew of that username.