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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

197.0. "I've often wondered . . ." by KUDZU::SESSIONS (Captain Video) Fri May 30 1986 16:11

    
    
    	Why is there an expiration date on a pack of sour cream?
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197.1KUDZU::SESSIONSCaptain VideoFri May 30 1986 16:123
    
    
    	Why do they call it "rush hour" if no one's moving?
197.2KUDZU::SESSIONSCaptain VideoFri May 30 1986 16:134
    
    
    	Why are those things called "speed bumps" if you have to
    	slow down to go over them?
197.3Rancid sour cream...Ugh!APTECH::RSTONEFri May 30 1986 18:0114
    Re: .0
    
    > Why is there an expiration date on a pack of sour cream?
    
    Leave one in your refrigerator for a couple of months.  Then open
    it up and tell me if you think it is still edible.
    
    Re: .1, .2
    
    > "rush hour" & "speed bumps"
    
    See Note 149 - Oxymoron!!  [No, I'm not slinging an epithet. That's
    the title of the Note.]
    
197.4BEING::POSTPISCHILAlways mount a scratch monkey.Fri May 30 1986 18:3412
    Re .2:
    
    You don't have to slow down to go over most speed bumps.  They are
    designed improperly, so that many cars can go over them quite well at
    high speeds.  The bumps are so short that the bulk of the car is not
    affected much while the shock absorbers absorb the shock.  I recently
    saw a note about proper design for speed bumps (they should be much,
    much wider) so that slow speeds are comfortable and high speeds are
    uncomfortable, but I don't recall where it is. 
    
    
    				-- edp
197.5who knows?HYDRA::THALLERKurt (Tex) ThallerFri May 30 1986 21:323
    Why do you park in a "driveway", and drive on a "parkway"?
    
    -Kurt*
197.6marketing strategyHYDRA::THALLERKurt (Tex) ThallerFri May 30 1986 21:345
    Why do hotdogs come ten to a pack but hotdog rolls come only with
    eight in a pack?
    
    -Kurt*
    
197.7Spoils of war...POTARU::QUODLINGIt works for me....Sat May 31 1986 04:494
        re .-1
        
        For hungry cooks...
        
197.8Do you eat that crap?FURILO::BLINNDr. Tom @MROSat May 31 1986 14:185
        Re: .6 -- only the cheap grades of hot dogs (the ones designed
        to be fed to small children, who don't know any better) come
        packed 10 to the pack.  Quality hot dogs come 8 in a pack.
        
        Tom
197.9Getting back to the subject of this note...EVER::MCVAYPete McVaySat May 31 1986 19:102
    An English girl I was dating asked me why I ask for the "check"
    in a Restaurant, since it's really a bill.
197.10Handy or Klutzy?CHEV02::NESMITHSee Spot run. Run Spot, run.Sun Jun 01 1986 18:213
    Why is the bandage package that contains special bandages for injuries
    to fingertips, knuckles and joints call the *handy*man assortment?
    
197.11Chop, chopTOPDOC::SLOANETue Jun 03 1986 10:033
    Why is it, that when make firewood, first you chop the tree down,
    and then you chop it up?
    
197.12Saw, Saw.APTECH::RSTONETue Jun 03 1986 10:211
    That's old fashioned!  Now you SAW the tree down, then SAW it up.
197.13NO GOING BACKWARDS ON TREES...NATASH::WEIGLDISFUNCTIONABILITY - A STATE OF MINDTue Jun 03 1986 11:091
    not at all!  someone else cuts it DOWN, then you split it UP????
197.14I came, I saw, I splitTOPDOC::SLOANETue Jun 03 1986 12:424
    I think we've sawed on this one enough. I can't hack it anymore.
    It's time to cut out. I'm going to split.
    
    -bs
197.15Are you built upside down?DELNI::CANTORDave CantorThu Jun 05 1986 22:563
      Why is it that noses run but feet smell?
      
      Dave C.
197.16Well, you know how it is.CLT::MALERThe Color RedFri Jun 13 1986 14:073
Noses run in my family...

	@V@
197.17Phew!APTECH::RSTONEFri Jun 13 1986 14:093
    Re: .16
    
    For the benefit of your associates, please keep your shoes on!
197.18To quote Victor Borge...CSMADM::WELLINGTONLarry WellingtonFri Jun 13 1986 20:223
    Along the same lines, why do you sit DOWN all day, but sit UP all
    night?
    
197.19meanwhile, back at the topicPROSE::WAJENBERGMon Jun 16 1986 09:5010
    Assuming anyone really wanted answers, I'm told there is a general
    trend in English to use the positive of two poles of measurement
    whenever it must use one in an adjective.  Thus a midget is three
    feet TALL, not three feet SHORT.  This explains some, but not all,
    of the curiosities listed in hte previous notes.  (Or if it doesn't
    explain them, at least it fits them into a general pattern.)
    
    I hope some of you are now gruntled.
    
    Earl Wajenberg
197.20... my $ 0.02 ...IJSAPL::ELSENAARHome, on a global tripThu Aug 04 1988 17:303

... how long ago did it cost two dollarcents to enter a topic or a reply?
197.21SPARKL::WARRENTue Nov 16 1993 15:394
    Why is it, when playing volleyball...
    
    If you say "Heads up!", everyone ducks and
    if you say "Duck!", everyone looks UP to see why?
197.22SMURF::BINDERVita venit sine tituloWed Nov 17 1993 06:213
    Actually, I haven't wondered a lot about this, but I think it's
    interesting that in the army, the command to discharge a gun is "Fire!"
    but in the navy it's "Shoot!"  Think about wooden warships...
197.23as inthe Battle ofBritain film...AUSSIE::WHORLOWBushies do it for FREE!Wed Nov 17 1993 13:3619
    G'day,
    
    
    ... and inteh air force its
    
    
    
    
    
    dacka-dacka-dacka-dacka
    
    
    ;-)
    
    derek
    
    
    
    
197.24also the title of several blues songs, I thinkSEND::PARODIJohn H. Parodi DTN 381-1640Thu Nov 18 1993 05:4810
    
    In the early days, didn't Navy gunners (and Marines?) get to say "fire
    in the hole!" after lighting the priming charge? So the Navy's "shoot"
    terminology could have been an attempt to reduce confusion.
    
    Or is that what you say after dropping a grenade into a pillbox or
    tunnel or something?
    
    JP
    
197.25SMURF::BINDERVita venit sine tituloThu Nov 18 1993 07:4911
    "Fire in the hole!" is what miners shout when they are about to ignite
    a dynamite charge in a shaft mine.
    
    The idea in the navy, as I suggested, was that the word "fire" was
    reserved for a conflagration on a wooden warship - they were especially
    likely if the ship was engaging an enemy fortress that had a furnace
    for heating shot, but they'd also happen if the carpenter's paints or
    hot pitch got away from him or of the cook's fire got out of control. 
    (All fires were doused before going into battle except for one tiny
    glass-enclosed candle in the magazine, so the gunner could see to sew
    up the bags as he loaded charges.)
197.26job-relatedVAXUUM::T_PARMENTERWhite folks can't clapThu Nov 18 1993 09:152
    Oh, how nice, the powder monkey gets a candle.
    
197.27OKFINE::KENAHI���-) (���) {��^} {^�^} {���} /��\Thu Nov 18 1993 10:233
    A variation of "fire" vs. "shoot" -- I used to work in television. 
    When a director wanted a camera to stop a zoom, pan, or dolly, he/she'd
    say "woof"-- never "stop."  "Stop" meant "stop everything."