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Only if you're inside the building. Otherwise (and including the ... the translation of the above would be "on the platform". Possibly, but I can see an AmE train station making some sort of public address announcement that bags
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No. Idiomatic AmE would have "*in* the station". Only if you're inside the building. Otherwise (and including the former case), your "at the station". But I suspect that the translation of the above would be "on the
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The real problem is, it's a translation. It makes more sense in my own language. I just realise how awfully confusing it is.
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Sliding sideways (and why not?), the announcements at my local ... "on the station" in this sense used in the US? No. Idiomatic AmE would have "*in* the station". Only if you're inside the building. Otherwise (and including
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Taumata.....hu.
I searched for the translation, it seems a tale.
You can be proud, what a pictures I found!!
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On Fri, 26 Sep 2003, in alt.usage.english, message , Skitt (Email Removed) writes I provided translation when I replied to him. It's often ... think. It's sometimes just a throw-away ending to a sentence. Yeah, if you like the generally
alt.usage.english
by
mark browne
6 yr 60 days ago
Whom, Marriage, Translation, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Relationships, Usages, Animals, Languages
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What's the words that starts with 'mini mini miny more ...' that kids use to pick a choice? Here's an interesting theory that it is a kind of medieval exorcism that has been garbled in translation: http://phrases.shu.ac.uk/bulletin
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What's the words that starts with 'mini mini miny more ...' that kids use to pick a choice? Here's an interesting theory that it is a kind of medieval exorcism that has been garbled in translation: http://phrases.shu.ac.uk/bulletin
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Thus spake Evertjan.: Simon R. Hughes wrote on 26 sep 2003 in sci.lang.translation: I need a folk name for the common birdsfoot trefoil ... a word of four syllables, but any help will do.) Dutch: "Gewone rolklaver" (Lotus corniculatus
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