Lost in translation (was: How do Dredgers work?)
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Which brings us neatly to contender for most stolen roadsign in Britain...
Replacing this probably explains Kent's high council tax
Edit: Well - it worked this morning
Replacing this probably explains Kent's high council tax
Edit: Well - it worked this morning
Last edited by Makara on Sun Nov 29, 2009 5:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Makara, apparently I'm not authorised to see that picture. While not being feline, curiosity is indeed killing me!
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It's working for me now - and was indeed worth the wait!
Edit: I've rehosted it - just in case:
Edit: I've rehosted it - just in case:
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
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this is a clip from a mail my mate sent me when we were discussing a similar theme of place names, tickled me like :-
"My mate, Rick, does a presentation with videos he edited, for unis etc on a variety of historical bits and pieces. One of them is placenames and how they change. there was a place called Dun, meaning hill, in the middle ages. It was abandoned and then rebuilt by people who didn't know the origin of the name, so being on a hill, for which they used the word Mow, they called it Dunmow. Same thing happened again, only this time they didn't know either original name's meanings, but being on a hill and being pretentious nurks, they called it Dunmow-on-the-hill. Imagine how ecstatic they were to find out that they lived in Hill-hill-on-the-hill."
"My mate, Rick, does a presentation with videos he edited, for unis etc on a variety of historical bits and pieces. One of them is placenames and how they change. there was a place called Dun, meaning hill, in the middle ages. It was abandoned and then rebuilt by people who didn't know the origin of the name, so being on a hill, for which they used the word Mow, they called it Dunmow. Same thing happened again, only this time they didn't know either original name's meanings, but being on a hill and being pretentious nurks, they called it Dunmow-on-the-hill. Imagine how ecstatic they were to find out that they lived in Hill-hill-on-the-hill."
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Sounds similar to the disputed Torpenhow Hill (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torpenhow_Hill) made famous on QI.
A similar affect is seen in British River names since Tyne, Tees, Ouse, Esk are all old local dialect names for a river so we have
River Tees = River River, River Tyne = River River, etc...
And now it would seem, this off-topic, is now off-topic!
A similar affect is seen in British River names since Tyne, Tees, Ouse, Esk are all old local dialect names for a river so we have
River Tees = River River, River Tyne = River River, etc...
And now it would seem, this off-topic, is now off-topic!
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
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Good point, I should have anonymised those 'berliners'...
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Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.