Beachy Head: the sixth most popular suicide spot in the world.
http://www.listal.com/list/10-most-popular-suicide-spots
http://www.listal.com/list/10-most-popular-suicide-spots
Where does this come from? Television had many inventors but only one of them (a minor one) was British, John Logie Baird. He was from Helensburgh in Scotland and demonstrated his version of a television in London.
Are you thinking of cinema? William Friese-Green worked in Brighton - although his claim to be inventor of cinematography is almost as spurious as Baird's claim to be TV's progenitor
Donald Campbell's 'Bluebird' was built at Bolney.
That we were once an independent kingdom with our own monarchy, army and (I presume) currency.
I guess the king had a capital "city", anyone know where it was?
Our cows have the smoothest......damn, beaten to it by Bruntburger.
If this is serious, Brilliant!Stoolball, Trugs and Twittens
And if the Inuit think they have a lot of words for Snow, here are some sussex words for Mud
Clodgy - muddy and wet, like a field path after heavy rain
Gawm - especially sticky, foul-smelling mud
Gubber - black mud of rotting organic matter
Ike - a mess or area of mud
Pug - a kind of loam, particularly the sticky yellow Wealden clay
Slab - the thickest mud
Sleech - mud or river sediment used for manure
Slob - thick mud
Slough - a muddy hole
Slub - thick mud
Slurry - diluted mud, saturated with so much water that it cannot drain
Smeery - wet and sticky surface mud
Stoach - to trample ground, like cattle; also the silty mud at Rye harbour
Stodge - thick puddingy mud
Stug - watery mud
Swank - a bog
Pug - a kind of loam, particularly the sticky yellow Wealden clay
does this explain why, having grown up to use the word "pug" for brick mortar/cement, when i used the term with anyone outside of sussex they give me a weird look like i've had a seizure?
(incidently, apparently the Inuit only have a handfull of words for snow, but use alot of adjectives to descibe what its doing. we on the other hand have some a few dozen words to describe rain)