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Balderdash and Piffle, BBC2 14 MAY 2007 23:20-23:50 A co-presentation by popular poker pixie Victoria Coren featuring special-interest guest researcher Jo Brand who worked as a psychiatric nurse prior to tackling the rather less stressful
uk.culture.language.english
by
fcs
2 yr 310 days ago
Numbers, Universities, United States, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Arts, Music, Colours, Animals, Writing, American, Songs, Schools, Languages
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misc.education.language.english
by
a. gwilliam
3 yr 145 days ago
Universities, Articles, Students, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Schools, Classes, Songs, Ireland, Music
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You learn something very day, they say, and I just learned that the Beatled lifted the lyrics for one of ... Comedy of Patient Grissell. OBSC. Oxford Book of Sixteenth Century Verse, The. E. K. Chambers, comp. (1932) Oxford University Press. I did
misc.writing.screenplays.moderated
by

4 yr 125 days ago
Universities, Countries, Conversational, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, Songs, Schools, Students, Lyrics
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You learn something very day, they say, and I just learned that the Beatled lifted the lyrics for one of their best songs from a very respectable source: Golden slumbers kiss your eyes, Smiles awake you when you rise. Sleep, pretty wantons, do not
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I went to grad school with a guy who spoke perfectly normal English, but his father went to the terlet and changed the earl in hiscar. There's a song by Pure Prairie League (although written, IIRC, by Nick Gravenites) called "I'll Fix
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And another interesting question might be: HOW did you know? I learned it when I bought one of Ewon McColl and Peggy Seegar's recordings. I can't remember the album, but it may have been "Black and White". There was a song about
alt.usage.english
by
steve hayes
5 yr 274 days ago
Universities, Dates, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Relationships, Friendships, Colours, Students, Schools, Ireland, Friends, Songs, Music
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I've never heard that. When we sang it at school in England (1940s-1950s), we always sang 'ree-o'. It's sung that way on Saydisk's CD "Sea Songs & Shanties," with that song recorded in 1956 in Cornwall. Regional,
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But not the English sailors. "We're bound for the Rye-oh Grand..." I've never heard that. When we sang it at school in England (1940s-1950s), we always sang 'ree-o'. It's sung that way on Saydisk's CD "Sea
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But not the English sailors. "We're bound for the Rye-oh Grand..." I've never heard that. When we sang it at school in England (1940s-1950s), we always sang 'ree-o'. All I can recall right now is the chorus: "And
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