Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I now have it


The New Book of Knowledge.


( admittedly it's only from A to erm...A )


However, feel free to ask me anything "A" wise that's burning you up.


From Awis, Attucks-Crispus, to Azov, the Abnaki Conference & Abhorrers.




Really, honestly, fascinating.



*looks up Aachen & Able-bodied seamen*



ANNETTE:-S

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/20373-ask-annette-anything/
Share on other sites

PeckhamRose Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Why did that large bit of land east of California

> / Nevada get called

> Arizona?

>

> Why did that other bit of land near Texas get

> called Arkansas and why is it pronounced Ark An

> Saw.

>

> Why is that bit of land east of Russia get called

> Alaska.

>

> A?


Yes indeed.


And people from Ark-An-Saw call them selves Arkansawyers or Arkansans


That's Americans all-round 4 U


Amazing ah ?


ANNETTE:)


( has the euro-zone crashed yet ? )

Awkward grammar appals a craftsman. A Dada bard

as daft as Tzara damns stagnant art and scrawls an

alpha (a slapdash arc and a backward zag) that mars

all stanzas and jams all ballads (what a scandal). A

madcap vandal crafts a small black ankh - a hand-

stamp that can stamp a wax pad and at last plant a

mark that sparks an ars magna (an abstract art that

charts a phrasal diagram). A pagan skald chants a dark

saga (a Mahabharata), as a papal cabal blackballs all

annals and tracts, all dramas and psalms: Kant and

Kafka, Marx and Marat. A law as harsh as a fatwa bans

all paragraphs that lack an A as a standard hallmark.


Christian B?k

Arse has been around for a very long time. Probably the Hittites.


Americans were the first to change the pronunication to ass, because they are.


Arizona was derived from some obscure foreign language, but nobody knows which one. Could be Basque, could be native American, but best off not bothering.


Arkansas was a French name, and should be treated with the disrespect that deserves. It derives from the same Sioux stem as Kansas even though it's pronounced differently.


Alaska is from Aleutian Russian, meaning that it was battered by the sea.


Aardvark is Dutch for earth pig, named after Mockney Piers.


Annette is a French word for undescended testicles.


Aquarius Moon is very unlikely to have a sensible question.

Huguenot Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Arse has been around for a very long time. Probably the Hittites.


Not quite so ancient and a little to the south, you may be thinking of Arses of Persia?


I once seriously considered coming back as Arses of Southwark - it has a certain je ne sais quoi about it, no?

aquarius moon Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I have loads of sensible questions,

>

> but don't think I will get a sensible

> answer.......?!!


You just never know aquarius :)


Mind you H, Arses of Southwark does have a certain "clang" to it.


As does Angmering & Annie Jump Cannon (1863-1941) foremost Astronomer who prepared then Henry Dapper catalogue, a system used to classify stars.



Ad valorem tariff anybody ?


NETTE:)

Alleyn's Collage.


Dulwich College c1870

In 1538 Henry VIII seized control of Bermondsey Abbey, and hence Dulwich. He sold the rights to Dulwich on to a London goldsmith, Thomas Carlton, for ?609 18s.2d. In October 1605 his grandson sold up to Edward Alleyn, a famous Elizabethan actor, for ?4,900.

Alleyn had a major impact on the way Dulwich was run for many years. Alleyn built a college to help educate 12 poor children, and made provision for 12 elderly people. This college is now world famous as Dulwich College. Two other schools also benefit from his gift, James Allen's Girls' School, founded in 1741 by the Warden of Dulwich College, and Alleyn's School, a boys school founded in 1842. Significantly Alleyn gave the manorial rights and freehold of his land to the College who were then able to block the over development of Dulwich.


I wonder if I qualify to be a resident as an Elderly Person?

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Londis isnt a take away or fast food outlet. Its simply another convenience store.
    • Greg came out at last minute notice to address a leak at the flat. He stayed for 90 mins to try and fix it but turned out it was a communal pipe. He was quick to write a report so we could get Southwark onto it. Great plumber, would recommend highly. 
    • My daughter, a single parent, has been let down by her children's' father, who was supposed to have them for part of the school holidays, So we are helping out. Our grand daughter aged 11 is no problem, but 9year old is more difficult to please. Has an interest in computers and coding, does not like crowds (neurodiverse)  Is keen n how things work and enjoys taking things apart. He is already going to the transport museum and has been to the science museum  Husband and I have some mobility problems so nothing too strenuous. have done Horniman's a number of times.  Is there any local holiday schemes where we can enrol him in for 2/3 days. There seems to be a number relating to singing/dancing and drama but nothing science/maths based. He does not have an interest in sport at the moment. Grand children live in Sussex and will be attending Holiday Clubs for a couple of weeks  
    • When I had a dead fox in my garden the council told me to put it in my wheelie bin, the green one.  I warned the dust bin men when they came that it was in there.They said they get worse than foxes put it!  Dead bodies!?  In the heat it might be better to bag it up first. Pam
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...