"Jim Wilkins" <
[email protected]> writes:
"Richard Smith" wrote in message news:[email protected]...
The perils of mistranslation - you benefit from experience and travel...
----------------------
The applicable phrase is good judgment comes from experience, and
experience comes from bad judgment. I hope I didn't accidentally
insult anyone too badly. A few German beers increased the quantity of
my foreign speech but did nothing for its quality. That applies in
English too.
:-)
The good stuff. When you sign-out of the day and go to a parallel
universe.
I have also lived in "ciderland" - places where they make cider
(in Britain "cider" is fermented juice of cider apples).
That is very "parallel reality". As I explained to a local who is/was
a prodigeous cider-drinker, it's like a train ticket. You buy a train
ticket in Crewkerne to go to Axminster, get on the train and next time
the doors open you are in Axminster. Likewise "loopy-juice" - you
arrive in ciderland - good place to be back to.
I worked in a foundry, and within minutes of leaving work you were
mixing with holidaymakers who had come from all over Europe to be
there. Calling in at the pub (public house) and drinking "Thatcher's
Dry" - a "real" natural cider - after a day in the foundry.
By the way - 80% of the burners in all the world for powerstations
running on residual oil (it's got all the impurities concentrated in
it) came from that foundry. I speculated that if the apple harvest
failed the world's oil-fired powerstations would come to a stop.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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