Dramatik wrote: » I'll go get my coat so...
jimmycrackcorm wrote: » Studies have shown that converting a signalized intersection to a roundabout reduces severe crashes by 78 percent and overall crashes by 48 percent.
con___manx1 wrote: » We were British for a long time before that.hundreds of years. That's why 200,000 Irish fought for the Brits in ww1 The rising didn't even recieve great support at the beginning. It's only when the brits shot Connolly and the rest in kilmanhim after the rising that support really increased. It was a big mistake shooting them as they made marters out of em.
Tell me how wrote: » The groups of Spanish students speaking at high volume, high speed on public transport are mostly discussing the Kardashian's. I asked a 10 yr old Irish girl who's been raised in Spain since she was 2 yesterday.
Ipso wrote: » I'm not sure about everyone else but I remember in Irish history at school we were taught that Brian Boru saved Ireland from the Vikings. But parts of Dublin were practically a Viking kingdom, they never left after the battle of Clontarf and Vikings fought on both sides of the Battle of Clontarf. Besides Brian had his eye on the Northen UiNiall's kingdom, couldn't you say his skirmishes were almost like a civil war?
Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » Incidentally an interesting fact about Viking Dublin is that it was primarily a slave city. It hosted a very large slave market where both Irish and foreign slaves were traded and sent away to places as far apart as Iceland (where a huge percentage of the population has Irish ancestry as a result) and Anatolia, modern Turkey.
pickarooney wrote: » The word 'quare' meaning 'very' is one of only a handful of surviving terms from the extinct Norman dialect of Forth and Bargy (Yola) in Wexford.
Hannibal_Smith wrote: » Apparently the Indian guy in Short Circuit, is a white guy painted darker :eek:
Senna wrote: » They often say that all the gold in the world could fit into a large house. But scientists say there is enough gold in the ground to cover the surface of the earth with a 4 meter thick layer of pure gold. Of course most is in the core and not accessible. There is also 20000000 tons of gold in the waters of the earth's oceans, but it is so dilute that getting it out of the water is near impossible, plenty of companies have tried to work out an efficient way to extract, but it will never be cheaper than just mining it.
redcup342 wrote: » Most swear words and curses refer to women, genitals or sex.
Chancer3001 wrote: » When you lift weights at the gym you're actually tearing apart the fibres of your muscle and breaking it down. Your body then fixes it back up using protein. When it fixes it it makes it slightly bigger in the hopes it won't tear so easily next time
Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » That or urine/faeces. It's interesting that this isn't inevitable or natural. The TV series Deadwood, set in the gold mining town of the same name in post Little Bighorn Dakota, it's a famously foul-mouthed series, where thirty seconds without an f or c word of some kind is almost unheard of. But in historic Deadwood those words would seldom be used, and all the swear words referred to religious beliefs (ie literal profanities)
cdeb wrote: » Realt Dearg Sec wrote: » That or urine/faeces. It's interesting that this isn't inevitable or natural. The TV series Deadwood, set in the gold mining town of the same name in post Little Bighorn Dakota, it's a famously foul-mouthed series, where thirty seconds without an f or c word of some kind is almost unheard of. But in historic Deadwood those words would seldom be used, and all the swear words referred to religious beliefs (ie literal profanities) Sfoot ("By God's foot") and gadzooks ("By God's hooks - the hooks being those on the cross) are two used by Shakespeare.
Ipso wrote: » I think the c word shares an origin with a word for rabbit. Think coinin.
eisenberg1 wrote: » That makes sense now. I noticed before that wexford used the word in a different context...as in "he's quare tall" whereas in Dublin itnwould be " he's a quare (strange) sort". And something you might not know...there are Shelmalier, Forth and Bargy Roads in Dublin.
Wibbs wrote: » the Cockney/London "Cor blimey", god blind me.