If only the cabbies would play nice!NYC, too. The pedestrians rule there. LOL![]()
O......M......G.......I had completely forgotten about that, lol. Nice find!Yes, it appears that Britain and the US have very different laws concerning pedestrians crossing the street.
Jaywalking - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
If you were a school child in the US in the 1960s, you could not watch cartoons or after school programs without seeing this commercial/public-service-announcement a billion, zillion, trillion times. The song was also played over and over on the radio.
And practically everyone remembers it, it was drilled into you so thoroughly!
Little did I know at that time that in Britain that sign is the equivalent of an upraised middle finger in America. (So that’s what Churchill had been flashing Hitler all through the war!) You never ask for two loaves of bread in Britain with a forefinger and middle finger V-sign. You use your thumb and your index finger. If not, you’re at risk of receiving a fist sandwich instead of two loaves of bread.
I have a friend, Paul, who was given a cigar as a young man by Winston Churchill. He saved the cigar and later donated it to the Churchill Centre. An account of the history of the cigar was published in the New Haven Register, and also on Paul's blog. (Well worth reading, IMHO.)
The 50 Year Journey of Sir Winston Churchill's Cigar
The Anti-Yale: * The 50 Year Journey of Sir Winston Churchill's Cigar
What I wanted to ask about in this thread is the meaning of Churchill's famous V-for-Victory hand gesture. Paul says in his column that this hand gesture means something significantly different in Britain than it means in the United States.
He writes:
Britons, is this true? I had never heard of this before. If you can shed any light on this practice for this benighted American, please do.
Yes and no... it's a rude gesture here if done with the back of your hand towards the person it's aimed at. But, from the wikipedia page on the hand sign and Churchill's useage:
So, yes it's rude, but apparently Churchill didn't mean it that way.
Shows the influence of the US media ...Interesting ... so we actually have it completely wrong, with the lorry being the heavy one.
But the word sounds less awe-inspiring![]()
I'm assuming it means a lot of people believe Tom Hiddleston will play the next James Bond? So something like "commonly/widely believed/predicted"?I've come across an expression in British English that I cannot find a definition for, namely, "hotly-tipped." As in "Tom Hiddleston is hotly-tipped to play the next James Bond." I would guess this means "highly recommended" or "strongly touted" or something like that. But this is just a guess.
I'm assuming it means a lot of people believe Tom Hiddleston will play the next James Bond? So something like "commonly/widely believed/predicted"?
From the Google dictionary entry for "tipped":
verb
past tense: tipped; past participle: tipped.
[...]
2. British
predict as likely to win or achieve something.
"Christine was widely tipped to get the job"
Tommy Boy is a 1995 American road comedy film directed by Peter Segal, written by Bonnie and Terry Turner, produced by Lorne Michaels, and starring former Saturday Night Live castmates and close friends Chris Farley and David Spade.
Through Danny, I learnt how Peter Rachman had seemingly solved the problem of "stats" - statutory or sitting tenants - who were the bane of 1960s property developers. The law gave them the right to stay in their flats at a fixed rent for life if they wanted - and they had a habit of living an awfully long time. But Rachman had certain robust methods, such as carrying out building works all round them, or taking the roof off, or "putting in the schwartzers" (West Indians) or filling the rest of the house with prostitutes, that made stats eager to move.