Oliver McCrum
Oliver McCrum
originally posted by Marc Hanes:
Oliver, I am not sure sure. I kinda like digging ditches. I was probably a farmer in another life. Or soldier in World War I.
I'm in wholesale, though.
originally posted by Marc Hanes:
Oliver, I am not sure sure. I kinda like digging ditches. I was probably a farmer in another life. Or soldier in World War I.
originally posted by Oliver McCrum:
originally posted by Marc Hanes:
Oliver, I am not sure sure. I kinda like digging ditches. I was probably a farmer in another life. Or soldier in World War I.
I'm in wholesale, though.
originally posted by kirk wallace:
originally posted by Sharon Bowman:
Provincial FranceOr this picture (via Justin Chearno) from a pizza place in M“con.
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I can imagine that the pizza is very poor, but, also, who cares, with those wines on offer. I do recall a very nice clam pizza in the wilds, about 500m from the beaucastel vineyards with a bottle of reyas, back in the late '90s.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
So, Slicker, ...
There is, by the way, an article in today's Review section of the NY Times written just for you.
originally posted by SFJoe:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
So, Slicker, ...
There is, by the way, an article in today's Review section of the NY Times written just for you.
I suspect him of not being a virgin.
originally posted by MLipton:
Wow. Overreact much, Herr Professor Doktor Dick?
Mark Lipton
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I admit to thinking that those are two different claims.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
There is, by the way, an article in today's Review section of the NY Times written just for you.
originally posted by richard slicker:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
I admit to thinking that those are two different claims.
me too. thing is, either of them can be expressed by the same form of words in both instances.
fb.
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
This is alas true with regard to the phrases "could care less" and "couldn't care less." It's probably true that I don't get out enough (or I do get out enough), but I wasn't aware that the semantic loss had extended to "less trivial" and "more trivial." Should it ever extend "more pleasurable" and "less pleasurable" (or not extend to that) please keep me out of the loop--or in the loop, as the case may be.
originally posted by richard slicker:
originally posted by Jonathan Loesberg:
This is alas true with regard to the phrases "could care less" and "couldn't care less." It's probably true that I don't get out enough (or I do get out enough), but I wasn't aware that the semantic loss had extended to "less trivial" and "more trivial." Should it ever extend "more pleasurable" and "less pleasurable" (or not extend to that) please keep me out of the loop--or in the loop, as the case may be.
semi seriously: i don't think you should fear for "more pleasurable" and "less pleasurable." i think that the problem, as with "couldn't care less," is that trivial is semantically negative (in that more trivial = more less important), and that, cognitively, english speakers struggle with negation (hence, i think, the "too trivial to ignore" canard).
i have sometimes wondered whether speakers of languages that have agreement for negations (ne... pas) do a better job. maybe i'll see if can't get someone to look into it one day.
fb.
originally posted by SFJoe:
So, Yixin, this is what you had in mind when you started your new biz?
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
In PA, the governor seeks to privatize liquor and wine sales. Hopefully this will not lead to a worse selection.