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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

1079.0. "Englishisms" by NRSTA2::KALIKOW (RTFW) Sun Dec 05 1993 22:13

    Looked under the above /title thru ::JOYOFLEX but came up empty; can't
    think of what else to call those strings of English words that often
    are seen on T-shirts, sweatshirts, banners etc. of extremely foreign
    manufacture and which are hardly ever seen amidst English speakers
    (presumably because no one in their right mind would BUY one).  But
    however, their apparent "Englishness" or "American-ness" is enough to
    make them fly off the shelves of locales where English is not commonly
    spoken.
    
    I've seen a few of these, but their nature is such that they are almost
    immediately forgotten because of their nonsensicality.  One exception,
    which spawns this note, was so wonderful as to have ensconced itself
    into our trip notes.  When we were touring the Sistine Chapel & Vatican
    Museum last June, we saw a fellow who looked Filipino or Malaysian
    wearing a T-shirt proudly emblazoned with:
    
                             Rural A Guy You Rascal
    
    Any more sightings of this sort of stuff out there?
    
    =====
    
    And because I can't think of where else in this file this should go,
    I'll include a description of a wonderful notepad in daily use by our
    dearest old friends in Washington DC.  Our daughter visited them
    recently and send us a piece of paper from this pad.  She wrote "I
    stole this from a pad mounted on their refrigerator.  No wonder you
    guys are friends!"
    
    It's a lined pad, with two portraits of 19th-century-appearing men on
    the top.  Both are clutching, rather incongruously, paper grocery bags. 
    These gentlemens' names are placed between the portraits:
    
                                  Chopin  Liszt
                                                             
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
1079.1GIDDAY::BURTThere are chickens in the trees Sun Dec 05 1993 22:3110
What the heck does "Rural A Guy You Rascal" mean? Did the T shirt have a 
sub-title?

re Chopin  Liszt
                                                             
Urban myth in Australia from x years ago. Supposedly some elderly ladies were 
great cricket fans, and wanted to knit a special gift for one of the players, 
but they didn't know _her_ size. The player, Lillian Thompson.

Chele
1079.2NRSTA2::KALIKOWRTFWMon Dec 06 1993 07:1513
    Hi Chele -- Re subtitles on the "Rascal" shirt -- none to be seen.  I
    recall having been interested equally in the frescoes of the Sistine
    Chapel and following up that very question.  So I made it my business
    to inspect this fellow's shirt from all angles.  There was some sort of
    insignia reminiscent of a club or school, around which this deathless
    motto was placed.  But of ASCII characters, that was the lot.  My only
    theory as to its purpose was given in the basenote.  Weird, eh?  Any
    visiting Indonesians/Malaysians/Myanmarians sporting similar stuff
    down-under?
    
    Re Lillian -- assumedly a male (garnered from context, never heard of
    him...?)?
    
1079.3Zeb star girls woncha come out tonight?RAGMOP::T_PARMENTERHere's to you, Dr. Heimlich!Mon Dec 06 1993 08:582
    I've had a lot of these in Desperado over the years.  My favorite is
    still "LET'S F2K THE ZEB STAR GIRLS!"
1079.4NRSTA2::KALIKOWRTFWMon Dec 06 1993 09:046
    I *KNEW* I'd seen these collected somewheres!  And if not ::JOYOFLEX,
    then DESPERADO would be the next logical culprit.  Tnx!
    
    But OBTW, .3 is too syntactically correct to compete successfully with
    .0, imho.  But judge who I am to??
    
1079.5MU::PORTERbah, humbug!Mon Dec 06 1993 09:5610
re .0

While visting a primitive part of the 
continent a while ago, I saw a T-shirt 
with

	SOFTWA
	REENGINEERING

on it - does that count?
1079.6PENUTS::DDESMAISONSpress on regardlessMon Dec 06 1993 12:368
 
       Re:      Chopin  Liszt

	One of my best friends has this notepad too, Dan'l, and I've
	been wondering where to mention it in the file, too!  Thanks.

	Di

1079.7MU::PORTERbah, humbug!Mon Dec 06 1993 13:103
When I consider the size of my christmas chopin liszt,
I get panicky, need a drink to calm me down, and end up 
completely brahms and lizst.
1079.8DRDAN::KALIKOWRTFWMon Dec 06 1993 14:308
1079.9SMURF::BINDERCum dignitate otiumMon Dec 06 1993 15:187
    'D I ever tell yez about my friend in Britten who useta cross the
    Bridge and go ice fishin?  It wuz so cold he hadda wear a Parry Coates
    and bring along a Beethoven.  It was a real Paine, too, he never caught
    anything, and he finally got Piston quit.  Yea, well, so I'm Poulenc
    yer legs a little.
    
    I think it's about time to set this string on Falla.
1079.10CSC32::S_BROOKThere and back to see how far it isMon Dec 06 1993 15:2316
I feel like my Bach's to the wall ...

Did you hear about the guy who used cooked minnows when he went fishing ...
he cooked them in a Beethoven.

Buying CDs from all these composers is going to make me Baroque.  (Note to the
Europeans ... and obviously somoething worthy of another note in here somewhere,
for some reason, North Americans insist that Baroque is pronounced as if it
were Broke with an a ... viz baroke ... Note to the N. Americans ... Europeans
pronounce it as barock.)

"Stop interfering ... what a Mendelsohn kid!"




1079.11NOVA::FISHERUS Patent 5225833Tue Dec 07 1993 07:5912
    that was originally
    
    digitalsoftwa
    reengineering
    
    A few years ago I had the opportunity to take the train from
    Maihama to Yokahama through Tokyo daily.  I saw many t-shirts
    and other apparel that were supposed to look like they were
    made in the USA, but the grammar was alwyas slightly wrong.
    [just like that sentence  :-)]
    
    ed
1079.12DRDAN::KALIKOWRTFWTue Dec 07 1993 08:514
    Yep, that's the stuff.  I note with presumption and amusement that you
    have not supplied any of the writings, OBVIOUSLY :-) because they just
    don't fit into English-native mental storage bins.
    
1079.13And the wall is now grayRAGMOP::T_PARMENTERHere's to you, Dr. Heimlich!Tue Dec 07 1993 08:5310
    The Spit Brook road site used to have a blazing "Chinese Red" (i.e.
    reddish-orange, the color of our docs at the time) wall with black and
    white bars representing the ASCII for "digitial software engineering". 
    The phrase was split equally so that "digitalsoftwa" was the top line
    and "reengineering" was the bottom line.  The summer hires that year
    got T-shirts showing the same thing.  
    
    This magnificent artifact has been destroyed and replaced by some dumb
    marketing slogan in ASCII that I have never bothered to translate.  
    
1079.14DSSDEV::RUSTTue Dec 07 1993 09:379
    Re .13: Hey, _I've_ got one of those T-shirts. (They were, as I recall,
    a grass-roots idea in honor of ZK's somethingth anniversary, and for a
    few weeks after they came out half the people in the building were
    wearing them. Looked like the halls were on fire.)
    
    The red wall was silly, but good for direction-giving and lots of
    commentary; the gray wall is just boring.
    
    -b
1079.15Ad libULYSSE::MILDERNihil obstatTue Dec 07 1993 10:5211
    On the baroque note (sorry): Reader's Digest (sorry again) had 
    an anecdote about a music librarian who'd put up the following 
    notice in an attempt to stop people from using the FAX machine 
    for personal use:

                           If it ain't baroque
                               don't FAX it

    -maarten.

1079.16MU::PORTERbah, humbug!Tue Dec 07 1993 11:0012
re .-1

...which leads on to one of my pet peeves.

Why do people type abbreviations (such as "fax") in upper case?
That seems to make some sort of sense when the abbreviation is
formed from a bunch of initial letters but not when it's
just a shorter name.

(Even worse is the upcasing of words which aren't even 
 abbreviations.  Here in network-land, I'm sick of seeing
 the word NODE screaming out from the middle of a sentence).
1079.17Prostitute's lamentHERON::KAISERWed Dec 08 1993 06:394
Once I was Jung
and not aFreud,
but now my Kraft is Ebing
and I am very Sade.
1079.181 across - Emphatic negative worn upside down?VANINE::LOVELLThu Dec 09 1993 07:089
	Over many years and on several continents (even in Boston city),
	I have seen syntactically incorrect T-shirts screaming ;

			ON ON

	What the heck does this mean?

/Chris.
1079.19NOVA::FISHERUS Patent 5225833Mon Dec 13 1993 09:1710
"I note with presumption and amusement that you
    have not supplied any of the writings, OBVIOUSLY :-) ..."
    
    One [not on an item of apparel] was a beverage known as "SWEAT."
    
    It claimed to contain the natural replacement fluids needed by the
    human body.  What native English speaker would thrist for a can of
    SWEAT?
    
    ed
1079.20PointsFORTY2::KNOWLESIntegrated Service: 2B+OTue Dec 14 1993 08:4010
    Re Lillian Thompson - _Two_ men, Dan.
    
    Re barock/baroke
    
    American, having a greater/more influential/more recent immigrant
    population from Europe, is home to a lot of different pronunciations of
    foreign words that British English mispronounces as a matter of
    routine. As it happens, they're both wrong in this case; but who cares?
    
    b
1079.21Hash House HarriersQUOKKA::SNYDERSet your chickens freeFri Jan 07 1994 19:0617
>	Over many years and on several continents (even in Boston city),
>	I have seen syntactically incorrect T-shirts screaming ;
>
>			ON ON
>
>	What the heck does this mean?
    
    ON ON is the call of a Hash House Harrier.  Hashers most often describe
    themselves as drinkers with a running problem.  I'm not hasher (I don't
    drink, but I do have a running problem).  Hash House Harrier clubs are
    found all over the world, the origin being in Malaysia many moons ago. 
    The local Colorado Springs club is the PPHHHH:  Pikes Peak Hash House
    Harriers and Harrierettes.  Many of my fellow ultrarunners are also
    hashers, so it is quite common for me to hear the call of ON ON during
    an ultrarun.
    
    Sid
1079.22Try marketing the drink UFHIS::MDUTTON_COXWed Jan 19 1994 09:394
    While living in Japan one was naturally encountering T-shirts and pub
    names which were nonsensical or phonetically incorrect: The Glasshopper
    Pub, for instance. The most memorable non-alcoholic beverage name was
    Cal Pis....
1079.23MU::PORTERWed Jan 19 1994 11:099
What's wrong with "The Glasshopper"?

Pubs are often named after trades, or after tools used in
trades, and the names are usually chosen to have significance
to the expected clientele.   

Obviously the Glasshopper is named after a large vessel
used for the temporary storage and transportation of 
vitreous materials.
1079.24Could be an American taproomVAXUUM::T_PARMENTERDouble GrandpaWed Jan 19 1994 12:104
    Or, applying Ockham's razor to made-up etymologies of English phrases
    by foreigners, maybe it is a pub frequented by people who hop from
    glass to glass.
    
1079.25thitherer?GIDDAY::BURTScythe my dandelions down, sportWed Feb 16 1994 19:3811
Hello all.

I have a query regarding the expression "Hither, thither, and yon".
I've always interpreted it as "here, there, and further over there" (imagining 
a waving arm vaguely gesturing at the horizon).

Is this correct?


Chele
1079.26PASTIS::MONAHANhumanity is a trojan horseThu Feb 17 1994 03:142
    	Hither and thither imply movement. I am here, but I could ask you
    to come hither. You are there and I could go thither.
1079.27Where are Yither and Yence?TLE::JBISHOPThu Feb 17 1994 10:189
    Person	Location	"To"	"From"
    
    I		Here		Hither	Hence
    You		There		Thither	Thence
    He/She/It	Yonder		<no forms I know of>
    
    Other languages have even more stuff along these
    lines.
    		-John Bishop
1079.28CUPMK::WAJENBERGThu Feb 17 1994 10:403
    Don't forget "Where," "Whither," and "Whence."
    
    Earl Wajenberg
1079.29AUSSIE::WHORLOWBushies do it for FREE!Thu Feb 17 1994 19:1617
    G'day,
    
    I would have gone with 'Chele (assuming she gave me the ok ;-)   )
    
    Yonder is further away than over there and has no sense of motion...
    you need a motion verb ie Go yonder..
     as indeed in come hither,
    
    please consider...
    place    choice of place  choice of time
    Where       whither         whence
              whereever        whenever
    
    aww heck, got me confused now... 
    
    
    derek
1079.30The Happy YondererGIDDAY::BURTScythe my dandelions down, sportThu Feb 17 1994 19:4113
re <<< Note 1079.29 by AUSSIE::WHORLOW 

>    I would have gone with 'Chele (assuming she gave me the ok ;-)   )
    
>    Yonder is further away than over there and has no sense of motion...

OK Derek :)

Couldn't the Irish folksong me modified to 
 "I love to go a yondering, along the mountain track"


Chele
1079.31GIDDAY::BURTScythe my dandelions down, sportThu Feb 17 1994 19:423
NOT me modified - BE modified

Friday fingers
1079.32My only quoteAUSSIE::WHORLOWBushies do it for FREE!Thu Feb 17 1994 22:047
    G'day
    What light by yonder window shines.. 
    like a good deed in a naughty world.
    
    
    djw
    
1079.33JIT081::DIAMOND$ SET MIDNIGHTThu Feb 17 1994 22:301
    Wow, what a nice thread from down yonder.
1079.34Grass widowsGIDDAY::BURTScythe my dandelions down, sportThu Mar 17 1994 23:0511
Hello again,

Is a "grass widow" a divorced woman or a temporarily separated woman?
Why "grass"?
A friend of Slav origins said he was used to the expression "white widow", as 
the woman wan't actually in mourning (black).

Since I'm now interested in topics horticultural, why do widows wear "weeds"?

Chele

1079.35ATYISB::HILLDon't worry, we have a cunning plan!Fri Mar 18 1994 07:426
1079.36my theoryVAXUUM::T_PARMENTERUnsung SuperstarFri Mar 18 1994 08:4310
    Well . . . maybe.
    
    The "golf widow", "football widow", and so forth are artifacts of
    increased leisure time in the modern era, but the term "grass widow"
    dates back to the 16th c. and commonly means a divorced or separated
    woman, also a discarded mistress or woman with an illegitimate child.
    
    W9NCD gives no derivation, but under the word "grass" I find the
    definition "a state or place of retirement <an old horse put out to ~>"
    which seems to fit.
1079.37PASTIS::MONAHANhumanity is a trojan horseFri Mar 18 1994 09:1710
    	As a study of English, "widows weeds" both as a term and a concept
    is a little archaic. My wife's grandmother wore black for 20 years to
    her death, but I haven't noticed the same thing in the next generation.
    
    	I am rather sceptical about a connection between "grass widow" and
    "put out to grass" in view of the 16th c. date for "grass widow". In
    those days too few people were rich enough to regard either the horse
    or the farmland as other than a source of income. I would guess at
    closer connections with "tumble in the hay" i.e., intercourse outside
    the marital home.
1079.38Living over the brushATYISB::HILLDon't worry, we have a cunning plan!Fri Mar 18 1994 10:489
    "tumble in the hay" reminded me of 'living over the brush'
    
    The male and female servants would, betimes, sleep in the same bed
    being separated by a brush (besom type).  If either ventured to the
    other side and indulged in.... without the benefit of clergy they were
    said to be living over the brush.
    
    In due course the phrase was applied to other classes of living
    together, but not married, couples.
1079.39Rathole: "besom type?"DRDAN::KALIKOWIDU/W3: So advanced, it's Simple!Fri Mar 18 1994 10:571
    
1079.40DSSDEV::RUSTFri Mar 18 1994 12:374
    Re .39: Uh, like a broom? [The closest def. of "besom" I know of
    without going home to look in the OED...]
    
    -b
1079.41SEND::PARODIJohn H. Parodi DTN 381-1640Fri Mar 18 1994 13:165
Yes, broom is the definition I remember. And the Americal colonial name for
the same type of device was a bundle board.

JP
1079.42anent bundle boards:DRDAN::KALIKOWIDU/W3: So advanced, it's Simple!Fri Mar 18 1994 14:042
    You mean, that apparatus that was supposed to suppress knotty thoughts?
    
1079.43More on the rathole: besomATYISB::HILLDon't worry, we have a cunning plan!Mon Mar 21 1994 03:224
    besom:
    
    also known as a broom.  Made from a bundle of hazel twigs, into which a
    handle is inserted.  The sort of thing a witch flies around on.
1079.44PASTIS::MONAHANhumanity is a trojan horseTue Mar 22 1994 02:4220
1079.45ATYISB::HILLDon't worry, we have a cunning plan!Tue Mar 22 1994 03:244
    There are many techniques used to keep the streets of Paris clean,
    including people using besoms.  The difference is that the bundle of
    twigs is replaced by a bundle of bright green, plastic, fairly stiff,
    fronds. 
1079.46grassed over ...RANGER::M_SPENCELicense to RideTue Jan 24 1995 15:363
    Couldn't resist a late entry about widows.  I always heard the
    phrase "grass widow" opposed to "sod widow" -- did he walk away
    or was he buried?
1079.47SAPPHO::DUBOISHONK if you've slept w/Cmdr Riker!Wed Jan 25 1995 13:313
"Is grass widow anything like a football widow?" she asks, innocently.

     Carol
1079.48Veni, vidi, widow weedyPEKING::SULLIVANDNot gauche, just sinisterThu Jan 26 1995 05:0615
    Grass widow (or widower) - a person whose husband (or wife) is away for
    a prolonged period.
    
    Widow (2) - a woman whose husband is often away on a specified activity
    (*golf widow*)
    
    Weeds - deep mourning worn by a widow.
    
    
    These are from the Concise Oxford Dictionary.
    
    
    What colour is a Black Widow ? (A venomous spider, Latrodectus mactans,
    of which the female devours the male)
    
1079.49LJSRV2::KALIKOWDuke of URL sez: `TCL my GUI!' Thu Jan 26 1995 07:285
    Yeah, but why *grass*???
    
    Etymological Fictionary-class answers welcome...  I can't STAND not
    knowing -- I'll accept "knowing!" :-)
    
1079.50HLDE01::SOEMBA::RIKMostly HarmlessThu Jan 26 1995 07:447
>    knowing -- I'll accept "knowing!" :-)
 
In the Netherlands, the expression is "green widow". And, as we all know, grass
is green (even more so on the other side)
                                                        
                                                  - Rik -
   
1079.51LJSRV2::KALIKOWDuke of URL sez: `TCL my GUI!' Thu Jan 26 1995 08:242
    You're only making it WORSE!  AIEEE!!! :-)
    
1079.52PASTIS::MONAHANhumanity is a trojan horseThu Jan 26 1995 09:052
    	With a horse, being put out to grass is much like being put out to
    stud.
1079.53SMURF::BINDERgustam vitareThu Jan 26 1995 09:287
    Re .48
    
    > What colour is a Black Widow ?
    
    The female is a black spider with a hairless, glossy abdomen, with a
    length of approximately 1 to 1.5 cm.  She bears a red hourglass-shaped
    mark on the underside of her abdomen.
1079.54If you believe this you'll...PEKING::SULLIVANDNot gauche, just sinisterThu Jan 26 1995 09:3011
    A grass widow is a lady whose marijuana habit has died...          :-)
    
    A grass widow used to be married to a police informer...           
    
    Perhaps she's been turfed out of her lodgings...
    
    Her husband's name was HERBErt...
    
    
    or, possibly...
    
1079.55Oh, really !!PEKING::SULLIVANDNot gauche, just sinisterThu Jan 26 1995 09:327
    On the other hand, it could be a misspelling for "glass window"...
    
    
    ;-)
    
    Dave
    
1079.56Well SO far, .52 wins the credibility sweepstakes for me!!LJSRV2::KALIKOWDuke of URL: `TCL my GUI!!' :-) Thu Jan 26 1995 12:215
1079.57Or to pasture.RICKS::RICKS::PHIPPSDTN 225.4959Thu Jan 26 1995 13:025
      <<< Note 1079.52 by PASTIS::MONAHAN "humanity is a trojan horse" >>>

    	With a horse, being put out to grass is much like being put out to
    stud.

1079.58Oh, & the female eats the male. Yum :-)SAPPHO::DUBOISHONK if you've slept w/Cmdr Riker!Thu Jan 26 1995 14:4517
<    > What colour is a Black Widow ?
<    
<    The female is a black spider with a hairless, glossy abdomen, with a
<    length of approximately 1 to 1.5 cm.  She bears a red hourglass-shaped
<    mark on the underside of her abdomen.

Sometimes, however, the mark is on her back instead of her abdomen.  
The abdomen is also quite large in comparison with the rest of her body.

Also, I believe that in rare cases the color of the mark may actually appear
yellow. 

The male is *considerably* smaller.  It has been a long time since I have
seen one on TV (never recognized one in person) but I believe he is also
black, and I believe he is non-poisonous.

    Carol, who has seen several with the mark on her back
1079.59JRDV04::DIAMONDsegmentation fault (california dumped)Thu Jan 26 1995 19:324
    >Carol, who has seen several with the mark on her back
    
    Guess I'm lucky not to be one you've seen with the mark
    while you're on your back :-)
1079.60AUSSIE::WHORLOWBushies do it for FREE!Sun Jan 29 1995 20:1428
    G'day,
     rathole alert..
    In Oz, we have a relative of the BW.. called the Redback, there were 10
    reported bitings this week! venomous with a well tried antivenine
    available, the most common place for males to be bitten is in the
    nether regions.. from country dunny seats (dunny = toilet)or so they
    say.. spider's  marital habits same as BW!
    
    We have the funnel web too. Totally unrelated to redbacks, Funnel Webs
    can kill a child in 15 minutes.. antivenine available only since about
    1984...     marital habits.. male funnel web has spurs on 2 front legs
    with which to hold female which will kill him if she can.. but he is
    nearly as big as she is.. upto about 2" nose to tail along the body
    with a legspan about 3" typically.. 
    
    The first one I ever saw was on my sock. Unfortunately, my leg and foot
    was in the sock at the time. My wife said I over re-acted...
    
    
   end rathole
    
    
    how about a 'grass' widow, as she would be dressed in lawn?
    
    derek
    
    
    
1079.61GIDDAY::BURTLet us reason togetherSun Jan 29 1995 21:216
I believe the Australian "Huntsman" spider is a relo of the tarantula.

I _hate_ spiders.  For lack of any other weapon I once sprayed half a can of 
carpet shampoo onto a monster strutting along my front porch.    
    
Chele
1079.62Veuve du verre ? Nay !PEKING::SULLIVANDNot gauche, just sinisterMon Jan 30 1995 05:3010
    She's called a "grass widow" because her husband is away so she can't
    get her OATS !!!
    
    
    Spiders are nice ! Leave them alone ! (Of course, we don't usually get
    huge spiders hiding in the toilet in England...)
    
    
    Dave
    
1079.63more down the spider holeRICKS::RICKS::PHIPPSDTN 225.4959Mon Jan 30 1995 09:175
  In the early days of the old west, Arizona, New Mexico etcetera, black
  widows hung out in the same places that you mention a few notes back.  I
  didn't know outdoor plumbing could be that dangerous.

  	mikeP
1079.64Talking about gross spidersREGENT::BROOMHEADDon't panic -- yet.Mon Jan 30 1995 11:553
    By "tarantula", do you mean the North American bird spider?
    
    							Ann B.
1079.65...friendly place..AUSSIE::WHORLOWBushies do it for FREE!Mon Jan 30 1995 17:0324
    G'day,
     Re-.1 = probably.... called tarantulas here, the huntsman is a
    harmless (=there have been no recorded deaths) spider with a large body
    and even longer legs that fan out and around forwards. The largest I
    have ever seen was in the local Blue Mountains - it was half the width
    of a door - and I can vouch, and have witnesses 'cos it was sitting
    on the louvre over the motel door, so I could see just how big it was!
    
   They are light brown in colour, with darker lowest leg segments = makes
    them look like they have paws..
    
    Funnel webs rear up and look like they are holding up their front legs
    like kids hold up their arms when they want to be picked up...
    
    We also have trap-door spiders, mouse spiders and house spiders that
    all bite and can need treatment..
    
    Fortunately, Australia has no major carnivores.. but it does also have
    the top 5 and 8 from the top 11 most venomous snakes in the world..
    
    It also has Great whites in the ocean, box jellyfish and other marine
    stingers.
    
    Derek 
1079.66GIDDAY::BURTLet us reason togetherMon Jan 30 1995 18:387
re .-1
>    Fortunately, Australia has no major carnivores.. but it does also have
>    the top 5 and 8 from the top 11 most venomous snakes in the world..
    
We have some fairly venomous vegetarians too !  :^)

Chele
1079.67That's a crockRICKS::RICKS::PHIPPSDTN 225.4959Tue Jan 31 1995 08:493
>>>>>Fortunately, Australia has no major carnivores.. but it does also have
>    the top 5 and 8 from the top 11 most venomous snakes in the world..
1079.68NOVA::FISHERnow |a|n|a|l|o|g|Tue Jan 31 1995 10:035
    all that and Foster's too.
    
    :-)
    
    ed
1079.69AUSSIE::WHORLOWBushies do it for FREE!Tue Jan 31 1995 17:1111
    G'day,
    
           <<< Note 1079.67 by RICKS::RICKS::PHIPPS "DTN 225.4959" >>>
    >                          -< That's a crock >-
    
     Do you mean 'That is bad'?
    or thatyou do not believe?
    
    derek
    
     
1079.70JRDV04::DIAMONDsegmentation fault (california dumped)Tue Jan 31 1995 19:261
    It's a utensil for cooking animals.
1079.71According to movie legend.RICKS::RICKS::PHIPPSDTN 225.4959Wed Feb 01 1995 07:4411
>           <<< Note 1079.67 by RICKS::RICKS::PHIPPS "DTN 225.4959" >>>
>    >                          -< That's a crock >-
>    
>     Do you mean 'That is bad'?
>    or thatyou do not believe?

  The issue was whether or not there were major carnivores down there.  The
  reference was short for crocodile.  Or have they been converted to peas
  and carrots. 8^)  O.K.  So it should have been croc...

  	mikeP
1079.72AUSSIE::WHORLOWBushies do it for FREE!Wed Feb 01 1995 16:5120
    G'day,
    
    
    Ahhh so...
    
    Yes, the saltie is about the only major one.. and their distribution is
    somewhat limited... and they taste like fishy chicken, or so I'm
    told...
    
    and go well with peas and carrots..
    
    though man who cooks carrots and peas in same pot is...
    
    unhygenic..
    
    
    ;-)
    
    derek
    
1079.73FORTY2::KNOWLESFri Feb 03 1995 09:3214
    Dan -
    
    `grass'- I looked it up recently, forget where. Originally it had
    nothing to do with golf; it was just an Englishing of the French
    `grace'. A `grace' widow was a woman whose husband was not dead, but so
    long gone that she was treated as a widow as a matter of etiquette. (I
    don't know the details of that, but it was probably something like
    coming after married couples in the queue for the dining room but
    before other unattached females.)
    
    If people think of golf when they use it today, fine. But that's not,
    as far as I understand it, the etymology.
    
    b
1079.74LJSRV2::KALIKOWDEC: Triumph of Open InnovationFri Feb 03 1995 13:204
    Tnx, Dick -- that's plausible enough that it doesn't belong in 1007.*!!
    
    :-)
    
1079.75FORTY2::KNOWLESTue Feb 14 1995 08:0217
    I thought I could let `Brian' ride; that's what comes of having a
    one-character signature. But this is getting too much: in the last few
    days I've been Dick, Brian, and Bob. Well Dick (Binder - that's not my
    name) is right: it's `Bob'.
    
    re .72: I checked in a fairly lightweight source for this kind of
    thing - Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable. It didn't mention
    etiquette, but it did mention the Pope. I don't understand the
    canonical niceties, but as I understand it dubbing someone a
    `grace widow' was sort-of a halfway house between divorce (not OK)
    and annulment (OK).
    
    Maybe the `etiquette' angle comes into it somewhere; anyway, Brewer
    confirms the derivation from `grace'.
    
    Bob
    (sheesh, that's _four_ keystrokes)