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#2
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On Nov 2, 2:13*pm, wrote:
On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:56:36 -0500, H the K wrote: On 11/2/09 1:43 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:30:26 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 1:16 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:03:36 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:31 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 12:08:48 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:05 PM, wrote: Kroil Oil works exceptionally well on just about any type of rusted or frozen parts. *You can purchased it directly from Kano Labs in a spray can, oil sqiurt can, or a closed container. *If you buy a packaged kit, you can get all of these at a fairly inexpensive price. *It's the only product that I would buy for our maintenance department and machine shop for that type of problem. *I've been able to apply it to bolts that were siezed-up in machinery that had been left in the weather for years. *The parts could be loosened within 10 minutes. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service * * * * * * -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Very interesting and revealing. Thanks. My inclination is to say that you're welcome. *However, I don't think any cynicism that may inhere is baseless considering your penchant for denigrating others. *In fact, I'd wager that you suspect that you have seredipitously stumbled upon information that you may be able to exploit in the future in your various campaigns of character assassination. *Though, I think a thoroughly recondite defense of my unsolicited blurb in relying on what Desiderius Erasmus described of Sir Thomas More to parallel my own assorted vocations may not be beyond you. *But, then again, perhaps it is. *You can always blame it on my tortured 'prose,' *if the latter is the case. All cynicism aside, though, you're welcome. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service * * * * * * -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Nothing nefarious. Your far simpler language and simple spelling errors in the "Kroil post" tell me what I need to know. You've deduced that I have the capacity to transpose vowels on occassion, and that I'm as apt to leave behind sloppy editing as well? Or is it that you've discovered that I can mingle well with the audience? *Perhaps it reveals that I don't use a spell checker? *It certainly couldn't be the case that I sometimes try to squeeze notes into a busy day. *Whatever the case may be, Harry, I think that you're merely clever by half, even in your evaluations. *Again, perhaps I'm just cynical. (Perhaps I'm just a Slade devotee.) -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service * * * * * * -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Your conclusions on my deductions are incorrect. Let's just say that any decent English teacher would be able to put together an hilarious class based upon your "fogged up" prose. Some of your tortured prose reads as if it were fed through an English language complicator/mixmaster. Serendipitously, indeed. I suppose I'll have to refer to the Hodge's Harbrace when I get home to check the legitimacy of your "an hilarious" construction. *I can do that in an hour, I think, over lunch. *I don't know why I don't keep a "Harbrace" here at the office. *Perhaps, it's that you're falling back on more esoteric usage to help 'clear' the air. *I can appreciate that. -- Esoteric? Those of us of a certain age who actually studied English formally learned that in speech "an" was used before a word beginning with an "h" if the first syllable of that word was unstressed. The first syllable of "hilarious" is unstressed. Another example, perhaps more familiar: *"An" historian. Surely your English language complicator/mixmaster "knows" that. , whether or not the h is silent. As if! *I'll trade you my English language complicator/mixmaster for your Wayback Machine. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service * * * * * * *-------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You've got to realize that if you don't believe, do, think and act like Harry, then in his eyes, you are to be mocked for everything, called names, insulted and lied about. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 2 Nov 2009 11:19:11 -0800 (PST), Loogypicker
wrote: On Nov 2, 2:13*pm, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:56:36 -0500, H the K wrote: On 11/2/09 1:43 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:30:26 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 1:16 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:03:36 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:31 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 12:08:48 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:05 PM, wrote: Kroil Oil works exceptionally well on just about any type of rusted or frozen parts. *You can purchased it directly from Kano Labs in a spray can, oil sqiurt can, or a closed container. *If you buy a packaged kit, you can get all of these at a fairly inexpensive price. *It's the only product that I would buy for our maintenance department and machine shop for that type of problem. *I've been able to apply it to bolts that were siezed-up in machinery that had been left in the weather for years. *The parts could be loosened within 10 minutes. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service * * * * * * -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Very interesting and revealing. Thanks. My inclination is to say that you're welcome. *However, I don't think any cynicism that may inhere is baseless considering your penchant for denigrating others. *In fact, I'd wager that you suspect that you have seredipitously stumbled upon information that you may be able to exploit in the future in your various campaigns of character assassination. *Though, I think a thoroughly recondite defense of my unsolicited blurb in relying on what Desiderius Erasmus described of Sir Thomas More to parallel my own assorted vocations may not be beyond you. *But, then again, perhaps it is. *You can always blame it on my tortured 'prose,' *if the latter is the case. All cynicism aside, though, you're welcome. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service * * * * * * -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Nothing nefarious. Your far simpler language and simple spelling errors in the "Kroil post" tell me what I need to know. You've deduced that I have the capacity to transpose vowels on occassion, and that I'm as apt to leave behind sloppy editing as well? Or is it that you've discovered that I can mingle well with the audience? *Perhaps it reveals that I don't use a spell checker? *It certainly couldn't be the case that I sometimes try to squeeze notes into a busy day. *Whatever the case may be, Harry, I think that you're merely clever by half, even in your evaluations. *Again, perhaps I'm just cynical. (Perhaps I'm just a Slade devotee.) -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service * * * * * * -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Your conclusions on my deductions are incorrect. Let's just say that any decent English teacher would be able to put together an hilarious class based upon your "fogged up" prose. Some of your tortured prose reads as if it were fed through an English language complicator/mixmaster. Serendipitously, indeed. I suppose I'll have to refer to the Hodge's Harbrace when I get home to check the legitimacy of your "an hilarious" construction. *I can do that in an hour, I think, over lunch. *I don't know why I don't keep a "Harbrace" here at the office. *Perhaps, it's that you're falling back on more esoteric usage to help 'clear' the air. *I can appreciate that. -- Esoteric? Those of us of a certain age who actually studied English formally learned that in speech "an" was used before a word beginning with an "h" if the first syllable of that word was unstressed. The first syllable of "hilarious" is unstressed. Another example, perhaps more familiar: *"An" historian. Surely your English language complicator/mixmaster "knows" that. , whether or not the h is silent. As if! *I'll trade you my English language complicator/mixmaster for your Wayback Machine. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service * * * * * * *-------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You've got to realize that if you don't believe, do, think and act like Harry, then in his eyes, you are to be mocked for everything, called names, insulted and lied about. My suspicion is that Harry wants to showcase his 'exceptionalism.' He's certainly free to do so. And I can employ my Rube Goldberg, designer, English language complicator/mixmaster with the daring alacrity of an impudent layman just as well. (I just have to figure out where to plug the darn thing in.) :) -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 14:54:59 -0500, H the K
wrote: On 11/2/09 2:29 PM, wrote: On Mon, 2 Nov 2009 11:19:11 -0800 (PST), Loogypicker wrote: On Nov 2, 2:13 pm, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:56:36 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 1:43 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:30:26 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 1:16 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:03:36 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:31 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 12:08:48 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:05 PM, wrote: Kroil Oil works exceptionally well on just about any type of rusted or frozen parts. You can purchased it directly from Kano Labs in a spray can, oil sqiurt can, or a closed container. If you buy a packaged kit, you can get all of these at a fairly inexpensive price. It's the only product that I would buy for our maintenance department and machine shop for that type of problem. I've been able to apply it to bolts that were siezed-up in machinery that had been left in the weather for years. The parts could be loosened within 10 minutes. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Very interesting and revealing. Thanks. My inclination is to say that you're welcome. However, I don't think any cynicism that may inhere is baseless considering your penchant for denigrating others. In fact, I'd wager that you suspect that you have seredipitously stumbled upon information that you may be able to exploit in the future in your various campaigns of character assassination. Though, I think a thoroughly recondite defense of my unsolicited blurb in relying on what Desiderius Erasmus described of Sir Thomas More to parallel my own assorted vocations may not be beyond you. But, then again, perhaps it is. You can always blame it on my tortured 'prose,' if the latter is the case. All cynicism aside, though, you're welcome. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Nothing nefarious. Your far simpler language and simple spelling errors in the "Kroil post" tell me what I need to know. You've deduced that I have the capacity to transpose vowels on occassion, and that I'm as apt to leave behind sloppy editing as well? Or is it that you've discovered that I can mingle well with the audience? Perhaps it reveals that I don't use a spell checker? It certainly couldn't be the case that I sometimes try to squeeze notes into a busy day. Whatever the case may be, Harry, I think that you're merely clever by half, even in your evaluations. Again, perhaps I'm just cynical. (Perhaps I'm just a Slade devotee.) -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Your conclusions on my deductions are incorrect. Let's just say that any decent English teacher would be able to put together an hilarious class based upon your "fogged up" prose. Some of your tortured prose reads as if it were fed through an English language complicator/mixmaster. Serendipitously, indeed. I suppose I'll have to refer to the Hodge's Harbrace when I get home to check the legitimacy of your "an hilarious" construction. I can do that in an hour, I think, over lunch. I don't know why I don't keep a "Harbrace" here at the office. Perhaps, it's that you're falling back on more esoteric usage to help 'clear' the air. I can appreciate that. -- Esoteric? Those of us of a certain age who actually studied English formally learned that in speech "an" was used before a word beginning with an "h" if the first syllable of that word was unstressed. The first syllable of "hilarious" is unstressed. Another example, perhaps more familiar: "An" historian. Surely your English language complicator/mixmaster "knows" that. , whether or not the h is silent. As if! I'll trade you my English language complicator/mixmaster for your Wayback Machine. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You've got to realize that if you don't believe, do, think and act like Harry, then in his eyes, you are to be mocked for everything, called names, insulted and lied about. My suspicion is that Harry wants to showcase his 'exceptionalism.' He's certainly free to do so. And I can employ my Rube Goldberg, designer, English language complicator/mixmaster with the daring alacrity of an impudent layman just as well. (I just have to figure out where to plug the darn thing in.) :) -- Once again, your suspicions are wrong. If I wanted to "showcase" my facility with the written language here, I could easily do it. But there's no point. Newsgroups are for a written version of conversational English, fast and informal. Harry, what I stated is that my suspicion is that you want to showcase your "excpetionalism." That is not to imply that you are doing this by an ostentatious display of your mastery of the English language. That would be "an hilarious" inference on your part, if I may abscond with a trinket from your 'display'. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 14:15:28 -0600, wrote:
On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 14:54:59 -0500, H the K wrote: On 11/2/09 2:29 PM, wrote: On Mon, 2 Nov 2009 11:19:11 -0800 (PST), Loogypicker wrote: On Nov 2, 2:13 pm, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:56:36 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 1:43 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:30:26 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 1:16 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:03:36 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:31 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 12:08:48 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:05 PM, wrote: Kroil Oil works exceptionally well on just about any type of rusted or frozen parts. You can purchased it directly from Kano Labs in a spray can, oil sqiurt can, or a closed container. If you buy a packaged kit, you can get all of these at a fairly inexpensive price. It's the only product that I would buy for our maintenance department and machine shop for that type of problem. I've been able to apply it to bolts that were siezed-up in machinery that had been left in the weather for years. The parts could be loosened within 10 minutes. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Very interesting and revealing. Thanks. My inclination is to say that you're welcome. However, I don't think any cynicism that may inhere is baseless considering your penchant for denigrating others. In fact, I'd wager that you suspect that you have seredipitously stumbled upon information that you may be able to exploit in the future in your various campaigns of character assassination. Though, I think a thoroughly recondite defense of my unsolicited blurb in relying on what Desiderius Erasmus described of Sir Thomas More to parallel my own assorted vocations may not be beyond you. But, then again, perhaps it is. You can always blame it on my tortured 'prose,' if the latter is the case. All cynicism aside, though, you're welcome. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Nothing nefarious. Your far simpler language and simple spelling errors in the "Kroil post" tell me what I need to know. You've deduced that I have the capacity to transpose vowels on occassion, and that I'm as apt to leave behind sloppy editing as well? Or is it that you've discovered that I can mingle well with the audience? Perhaps it reveals that I don't use a spell checker? It certainly couldn't be the case that I sometimes try to squeeze notes into a busy day. Whatever the case may be, Harry, I think that you're merely clever by half, even in your evaluations. Again, perhaps I'm just cynical. (Perhaps I'm just a Slade devotee.) -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Your conclusions on my deductions are incorrect. Let's just say that any decent English teacher would be able to put together an hilarious class based upon your "fogged up" prose. Some of your tortured prose reads as if it were fed through an English language complicator/mixmaster. Serendipitously, indeed. I suppose I'll have to refer to the Hodge's Harbrace when I get home to check the legitimacy of your "an hilarious" construction. I can do that in an hour, I think, over lunch. I don't know why I don't keep a "Harbrace" here at the office. Perhaps, it's that you're falling back on more esoteric usage to help 'clear' the air. I can appreciate that. -- Esoteric? Those of us of a certain age who actually studied English formally learned that in speech "an" was used before a word beginning with an "h" if the first syllable of that word was unstressed. The first syllable of "hilarious" is unstressed. Another example, perhaps more familiar: "An" historian. Surely your English language complicator/mixmaster "knows" that. , whether or not the h is silent. As if! I'll trade you my English language complicator/mixmaster for your Wayback Machine. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You've got to realize that if you don't believe, do, think and act like Harry, then in his eyes, you are to be mocked for everything, called names, insulted and lied about. My suspicion is that Harry wants to showcase his 'exceptionalism.' He's certainly free to do so. And I can employ my Rube Goldberg, designer, English language complicator/mixmaster with the daring alacrity of an impudent layman just as well. (I just have to figure out where to plug the darn thing in.) :) -- Once again, your suspicions are wrong. If I wanted to "showcase" my facility with the written language here, I could easily do it. But there's no point. Newsgroups are for a written version of conversational English, fast and informal. Harry, what I stated is that my suspicion is that you want to showcase your "excpetionalism." That is not to imply that you are doing this by an ostentatious display of your mastery of the English language. That would be "an hilarious" inference on your part, if I may abscond with a trinket from your 'display'. Harry has done well enough showcasing his achievements, possessions, photography skills, and sexual prowess to impress the hell out of me. He needn't waste time trying to impress with his mastery at cut'n'pasting. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 15:22:33 -0500, JohnH
wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 14:15:28 -0600, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 14:54:59 -0500, H the K wrote: On 11/2/09 2:29 PM, wrote: On Mon, 2 Nov 2009 11:19:11 -0800 (PST), Loogypicker wrote: On Nov 2, 2:13 pm, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:56:36 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 1:43 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:30:26 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 1:16 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:03:36 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:31 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 12:08:48 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:05 PM, wrote: Kroil Oil works exceptionally well on just about any type of rusted or frozen parts. You can purchased it directly from Kano Labs in a spray can, oil sqiurt can, or a closed container. If you buy a packaged kit, you can get all of these at a fairly inexpensive price. It's the only product that I would buy for our maintenance department and machine shop for that type of problem. I've been able to apply it to bolts that were siezed-up in machinery that had been left in the weather for years. The parts could be loosened within 10 minutes. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Very interesting and revealing. Thanks. My inclination is to say that you're welcome. However, I don't think any cynicism that may inhere is baseless considering your penchant for denigrating others. In fact, I'd wager that you suspect that you have seredipitously stumbled upon information that you may be able to exploit in the future in your various campaigns of character assassination. Though, I think a thoroughly recondite defense of my unsolicited blurb in relying on what Desiderius Erasmus described of Sir Thomas More to parallel my own assorted vocations may not be beyond you. But, then again, perhaps it is. You can always blame it on my tortured 'prose,' if the latter is the case. All cynicism aside, though, you're welcome. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Nothing nefarious. Your far simpler language and simple spelling errors in the "Kroil post" tell me what I need to know. You've deduced that I have the capacity to transpose vowels on occassion, and that I'm as apt to leave behind sloppy editing as well? Or is it that you've discovered that I can mingle well with the audience? Perhaps it reveals that I don't use a spell checker? It certainly couldn't be the case that I sometimes try to squeeze notes into a busy day. Whatever the case may be, Harry, I think that you're merely clever by half, even in your evaluations. Again, perhaps I'm just cynical. (Perhaps I'm just a Slade devotee.) -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Your conclusions on my deductions are incorrect. Let's just say that any decent English teacher would be able to put together an hilarious class based upon your "fogged up" prose. Some of your tortured prose reads as if it were fed through an English language complicator/mixmaster. Serendipitously, indeed. I suppose I'll have to refer to the Hodge's Harbrace when I get home to check the legitimacy of your "an hilarious" construction. I can do that in an hour, I think, over lunch. I don't know why I don't keep a "Harbrace" here at the office. Perhaps, it's that you're falling back on more esoteric usage to help 'clear' the air. I can appreciate that. -- Esoteric? Those of us of a certain age who actually studied English formally learned that in speech "an" was used before a word beginning with an "h" if the first syllable of that word was unstressed. The first syllable of "hilarious" is unstressed. Another example, perhaps more familiar: "An" historian. Surely your English language complicator/mixmaster "knows" that. , whether or not the h is silent. As if! I'll trade you my English language complicator/mixmaster for your Wayback Machine. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You've got to realize that if you don't believe, do, think and act like Harry, then in his eyes, you are to be mocked for everything, called names, insulted and lied about. My suspicion is that Harry wants to showcase his 'exceptionalism.' He's certainly free to do so. And I can employ my Rube Goldberg, designer, English language complicator/mixmaster with the daring alacrity of an impudent layman just as well. (I just have to figure out where to plug the darn thing in.) :) -- Once again, your suspicions are wrong. If I wanted to "showcase" my facility with the written language here, I could easily do it. But there's no point. Newsgroups are for a written version of conversational English, fast and informal. Harry, what I stated is that my suspicion is that you want to showcase your "excpetionalism." That is not to imply that you are doing this by an ostentatious display of your mastery of the English language. That would be "an hilarious" inference on your part, if I may abscond with a trinket from your 'display'. Harry has done well enough showcasing his achievements, possessions, photography skills, and sexual prowess to impress the hell out of me. He needn't waste time trying to impress with his mastery at cut'n'pasting. Actually, I somewhat surprised that he's continued with this dialogue as long as he has. One would get the impression that he's almost enjoying it. (And I sincerely doubt that it's out of the narcissistic pleasure of engaging persons of a perceived lower caliber.) -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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In article ,
says... On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 14:54:59 -0500, H the K wrote: On 11/2/09 2:29 PM, wrote: On Mon, 2 Nov 2009 11:19:11 -0800 (PST), Loogypicker wrote: On Nov 2, 2:13 pm, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:56:36 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 1:43 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:30:26 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 1:16 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:03:36 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:31 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 12:08:48 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:05 PM, wrote: Kroil Oil works exceptionally well on just about any type of rusted or frozen parts. You can purchased it directly from Kano Labs in a spray can, oil sqiurt can, or a closed container. If you buy a packaged kit, you can get all of these at a fairly inexpensive price. It's the only product that I would buy for our maintenance department and machine shop for that type of problem. I've been able to apply it to bolts that were siezed-up in machinery that had been left in the weather for years. The parts could be loosened within 10 minutes. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Very interesting and revealing. Thanks. My inclination is to say that you're welcome. However, I don't think any cynicism that may inhere is baseless considering your penchant for denigrating others. In fact, I'd wager that you suspect that you have seredipitously stumbled upon information that you may be able to exploit in the future in your various campaigns of character assassination. Though, I think a thoroughly recondite defense of my unsolicited blurb in relying on what Desiderius Erasmus described of Sir Thomas More to parallel my own assorted vocations may not be beyond you. But, then again, perhaps it is. You can always blame it on my tortured 'prose,' if the latter is the case. All cynicism aside, though, you're welcome. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Nothing nefarious. Your far simpler language and simple spelling errors in the "Kroil post" tell me what I need to know. You've deduced that I have the capacity to transpose vowels on occassion, and that I'm as apt to leave behind sloppy editing as well? Or is it that you've discovered that I can mingle well with the audience? Perhaps it reveals that I don't use a spell checker? It certainly couldn't be the case that I sometimes try to squeeze notes into a busy day. Whatever the case may be, Harry, I think that you're merely clever by half, even in your evaluations. Again, perhaps I'm just cynical. (Perhaps I'm just a Slade devotee.) -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Your conclusions on my deductions are incorrect. Let's just say that any decent English teacher would be able to put together an hilarious class based upon your "fogged up" prose. Some of your tortured prose reads as if it were fed through an English language complicator/mixmaster. Serendipitously, indeed. I suppose I'll have to refer to the Hodge's Harbrace when I get home to check the legitimacy of your "an hilarious" construction. I can do that in an hour, I think, over lunch. I don't know why I don't keep a "Harbrace" here at the office. Perhaps, it's that you're falling back on more esoteric usage to help 'clear' the air. I can appreciate that. -- Esoteric? Those of us of a certain age who actually studied English formally learned that in speech "an" was used before a word beginning with an "h" if the first syllable of that word was unstressed. The first syllable of "hilarious" is unstressed. Another example, perhaps more familiar: "An" historian. Surely your English language complicator/mixmaster "knows" that. , whether or not the h is silent. As if! I'll trade you my English language complicator/mixmaster for your Wayback Machine. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You've got to realize that if you don't believe, do, think and act like Harry, then in his eyes, you are to be mocked for everything, called names, insulted and lied about. My suspicion is that Harry wants to showcase his 'exceptionalism.' He's certainly free to do so. And I can employ my Rube Goldberg, designer, English language complicator/mixmaster with the daring alacrity of an impudent layman just as well. (I just have to figure out where to plug the darn thing in.) :) -- Once again, your suspicions are wrong. If I wanted to "showcase" my facility with the written language here, I could easily do it. But there's no point. Newsgroups are for a written version of conversational English, fast and informal. Harry, what I stated is that my suspicion is that you want to showcase your "excpetionalism." That is not to imply that you are doing this by an ostentatious display of your mastery of the English language. That would be "an hilarious" inference on your part, if I may abscond with a trinket from your 'display'. I done thinked you been teached him a good lessin" snerk -- Wafa free again. |
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posted to rec.boats
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On 11/2/09 2:13 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:56:36 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 1:43 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:30:26 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 1:16 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 13:03:36 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:31 PM, wrote: On Mon, 02 Nov 2009 12:08:48 -0500, H the wrote: On 11/2/09 12:05 PM, wrote: Kroil Oil works exceptionally well on just about any type of rusted or frozen parts. You can purchased it directly from Kano Labs in a spray can, oil sqiurt can, or a closed container. If you buy a packaged kit, you can get all of these at a fairly inexpensive price. It's the only product that I would buy for our maintenance department and machine shop for that type of problem. I've been able to apply it to bolts that were siezed-up in machinery that had been left in the weather for years. The parts could be loosened within 10 minutes. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Very interesting and revealing. Thanks. My inclination is to say that you're welcome. However, I don't think any cynicism that may inhere is baseless considering your penchant for denigrating others. In fact, I'd wager that you suspect that you have seredipitously stumbled upon information that you may be able to exploit in the future in your various campaigns of character assassination. Though, I think a thoroughly recondite defense of my unsolicited blurb in relying on what Desiderius Erasmus described of Sir Thomas More to parallel my own assorted vocations may not be beyond you. But, then again, perhaps it is. You can always blame it on my tortured 'prose,' if the latter is the case. All cynicism aside, though, you're welcome. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Nothing nefarious. Your far simpler language and simple spelling errors in the "Kroil post" tell me what I need to know. You've deduced that I have the capacity to transpose vowels on occassion, and that I'm as apt to leave behind sloppy editing as well? Or is it that you've discovered that I can mingle well with the audience? Perhaps it reveals that I don't use a spell checker? It certainly couldn't be the case that I sometimes try to squeeze notes into a busy day. Whatever the case may be, Harry, I think that you're merely clever by half, even in your evaluations. Again, perhaps I'm just cynical. (Perhaps I'm just a Slade devotee.) -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Your conclusions on my deductions are incorrect. Let's just say that any decent English teacher would be able to put together an hilarious class based upon your "fogged up" prose. Some of your tortured prose reads as if it were fed through an English language complicator/mixmaster. Serendipitously, indeed. I suppose I'll have to refer to the Hodge's Harbrace when I get home to check the legitimacy of your "an hilarious" construction. I can do that in an hour, I think, over lunch. I don't know why I don't keep a "Harbrace" here at the office. Perhaps, it's that you're falling back on more esoteric usage to help 'clear' the air. I can appreciate that. -- Esoteric? Those of us of a certain age who actually studied English formally learned that in speech "an" was used before a word beginning with an "h" if the first syllable of that word was unstressed. The first syllable of "hilarious" is unstressed. Another example, perhaps more familiar: "An" historian. Surely your English language complicator/mixmaster "knows" that. , whether or not the h is silent. As if! I'll trade you my English language complicator/mixmaster for your Wayback Machine. -- I don't need one. I can write at many levels of complexity, and pick the one appropriate for the audience. Here, for example, I try to write prose that measures Grade Level 6 with a Reading Ease Score in the low 80's on the Flesch-Kincaid scale. Those are the scores that used to be used as optimum on the copy desks of most big city newspapers. My guess is that FauxNews strives for Grade Levels 4-5, with a Reading Ease score in the mid-90's...about the same as the Sunday comics. |
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