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pics of my GTI
shivver me timbers.. what the hell does that mean
anyways????
--- David Utley <fahrvegnugen@cox.net> wrote:
> Hmmm, that is a new one... Interesting as well.. I
> may have to reserve
> judgement on that one. Although, you are closer to
> the sea than I am....
> ;-)
>
> Cheers,
> David
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Julie Macfarlane
> [mailto:juliemac57@hotmail.com]
> Sent: Monday, November 08, 2004 7:58 PM
> To: fahrvegnugen@cox.net; smithma7@gmail.com
> Cc: scirocco-l@scirocco.org
> Subject: Re: RE: pics of my GTI
>
> The whole nine yards is an old sailor term. Each
> sail was termed a yard.
> Therefore raising all the sails (9 of them) became
> the "Whole Nine Yards".
>
> 9 yards of ammo would be a strip of cloth wrapped
> ammo 27 feet long.
>
>
>
> Julie Macfarlane
> 1981 MKI 2L 16v w 2Y
> Amsterdam NY
>
>
>
>
> >From: David Utley <fahrvegnugen@cox.net>
> >Reply-To: fahrvegnugen@cox.net
> >To: Mike Smith <smithma7@gmail.com>
> >CC: scirocco-l@scirocco.org
> >Subject: Re: RE: pics of my GTI
> >Date: Mon, 8 Nov 2004 17:15:33 -0500
> >
> >Good assesment, I would buy it... I like to know
> where words evolved from,
> >9 time out of 10 it is stranger than fiction...
> Example... 'The Whole
> >Nine'... IIRC, this came from WWII. Whomever was
> loading the machine gun
> >(which ever type it was), would ask the shooter if
> they wanted the 'whole
> >nine yards' of rounds. This was apparently an
> issue because the longer the
> >ammunition, the higher likleyhood of jamming... If
> someone has a better
> >memory than mine, please feel free to correct me...
> >
> >Cheers,
> > David
> > >
> > > From: Mike Smith <smithma7@gmail.com>
> > > Date: 2004/11/08 Mon PM 04:02:29 EST
> > > To: fahrvegnugen@cox.net
> > > CC: marc_scirocco <marc_scirocco@sympatico.ca>,
> scirocco-l@scirocco.org
> > > Subject: Re: RE: pics of my GTI
> > >
> > > props... <---- Where the shit did that word
> come from, anyways?
> > > >
> > > > David
> > >
> > > Dictionary.com:
> > >
> > > props
> > >
> > > n : proper respect; "I have to give my props to
> the governor for the
> > > way he handled the problem"
> > >
> > > Off the top of my head, I'd have to say that it
> came from the fact
> > > that a prop is a support. And then slang made
> it the way it is. In
> > > the above example, if you switch props for
> support, it still works
> > > fine.
> > >
> > > Amateur wordsmith,
> > > --
> > > Mike
> > > '86 red 16v (Red 5)
> > >
> >
> >
> >---Chrome don't get you home.---
> >
> >
> >_______________________________________________
> >Scirocco-l mailing list
> >Scirocco-l@scirocco.org
> >http://neubayern.net/mailman/listinfo/scirocco-l
>
>
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