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Previously on "Plans to evacuate Queen if brexit goes ugly are ready"
'Just really means.....'
Is that a common thing in your experience ?
Ok so there is this thing called a thesaurus.
if you look at it the word just is interchangeable with the word merely when used in the context - so it 'merely means a lynch mob' is a perfectly acceptable alternative to just in that context.
Obviously using the phrase 'merely really' does not work so well.
colloquialism
noun
a word or phrase that is not formal or literary and is used in ordinary or familiar conversation.
"the colloquialisms of the streets"
the use of colloquialisms.
"speech allows for colloquialism and slang"
So I used some slang/informal speech which we use around here which you guys were not aware of.
It is just a phrase used by people I have met which just really means there will be a lynch mob - who may hang people from lampposts or who may run them through with pitchforks.
Although I had hoped everyone would see that neither option is acceptable or expected to literally happen.
So apologies for using colloquialisms from my little corner of the earth.
It is just a phrase used by people I have met which just really means there will be a lynch mob - who may hang people from lampposts or who may run them through with pitchforks.
Although I had hoped everyone would see that neither option is acceptable or expected to literally happen.
So apologies for using colloquialisms from my little corner of the earth.
Which is it? Really means? Or colloquialism?
FFS, when you're in a hole you need to stop digging.
I'm confused now. Did we know what you mean, that you wanted to "string an MP up from a lamppost"? Or did we get that wrong?
I get that you expressed regret for posting it earlier, and fair play to you for that. But that was the time to just walk away from the thread instead of digging yourself deeper.
Can you see how you've made a mess of things? Have a read through the posts above and tell us where you went wrong.
Every day (NB two words) is a school day!
It is just a phrase used by people I have met which just really means there will be a lynch mob - who may hang people from lampposts or who may run them through with pitchforks.
Although I had hoped everyone would see that neither option is acceptable or expected to literally happen.
So apologies for using colloquialisms from my little corner of the earth.
The term 'lampposts and pitchforks' is generally used to mean people will get their comeuppance and be held accountable for their actions
Yes it is based on the hanging of people from lampposts and people then running them through with pitchforks but I think everyone clearly knows that someone using this terms is not actually implying people should be hung from lampposts and then run through with pitchforks.
I mean some people desperately need that but it is not really any of the MPs or MEPs
Never said used at the same time - but if some (incredibly well read and educated person) says lampposts and pitchforks you will know what they mean
Everyday is a school day!
I'm confused now. Did we know what you mean, that you wanted to "string an MP up from a lamppost"? Or did we get that wrong?
I get that you expressed regret for posting it earlier, and fair play to you for that. But that was the time to just walk away from the thread instead of digging yourself deeper.
Yes, I was required to give 12 months notice of leaving. I did this in July 1988 and left in July 1989. A full year before the first inkling of trouble in the Gulf.
Sadly I was never issued with a crystal ball, just a rifle. The one that helped me and the rest to defend the West until the Cold War was all but won.
But I really wish I had opted to be a Big Game Hunter like you............................Tell us more........
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