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• #72803
Supported by the Guardian Style Guide too...
Meat Loaf
singsmeatloaf
doesn't sing.To quote "the Loaf" himself:
"When I see my name spelt with one word, I want to slap and choke people. If you do that, you got to be a moron. It's on every poster, every album and every ticket as two words. If you spell it as one, you're an idiot. Bottom line" -
• #72804
Also some hospitals
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• #72805
Does anyone have an official iPod shuffle (3.5mm jack) charge/sync cable they're not using any more that they'd like to pass on for a little ££
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• #72806
From frequent observations of the programme as both a student and an unemployed layabout, a compound noun with a space in it has never been presented as an answer, words are always munged together provided the munging is valid according to the Oxford Dictionary. I deduce from this that single-word-with-no-spaces responses are either an official rule or a very strong point of etiquette (it would feel wrong to see somebody try to use a space, IMO).
If you have a strong stomach for data, you can review the round-by-round details of more than 800 games here to support or dismiss my theory: http://cdb.apterous.org/index.php
It will take only one spaced compound noun to prove me wrong :-)
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• #72807
You could also ask the lovely Ms Dent directly: https://twitter.com/susie_dent
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• #72808
TA Carmina perhaps
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• #72809
Thanks, a friend told me they're actually Sampson. There aren't many around apparently..
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• #72810
Does anyone have any experience removing spray paint from brickwork? Genuine question. I need to fix something I did to my neighbours house 16 years ago.
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• #72811
repaint it to look like brickwork
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• #72812
16 years ago?
Paint the rest to match. -
• #72813
Wire brush or sand blasting.
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• #72814
Jet wash and a wire brush.
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• #72815
Jet wash with acetone
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• #72816
That's a lot of acetone.
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• #72817
Builders merchants, B&Q etc sell dedicated Graffiti Remover sprays. I have no idea how successful they are on old paint
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• #72818
Have Fizik renamed the Arione CX? Or discontinued it?
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• #72819
Anybody with experience of the Kenda Karvs tyres? I need something low cost to use as winter tyres. Must have tread to calm my nerves, but must fit the road bike.
One road bike fouls (only just) with 28mm Gatorskin pumped hard, the other I think has enough space for a 28mm. I'd probably buy for both in 25mm, as I'm running 23's normally.
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• #72820
you don't want tread
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• #72821
Well I can't drink booze before 30 miles on the cuntry roads, and yesterday there were a few hairy moments on shaded parts. Was hoping to get something for the road that wasn't stupidly slow, but would avoid the wheels breaking away when I'm cycling in the rain.
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• #72822
Good slicks have more grip than treaded tyres - more rubber in contact with the road = more grip.
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• #72823
What about water/muck/leaves and so on? I was under the impression that's only true until the slick is running on a lower-resistance surface, so for example a slippery point in the road, mud or whatever. I thought that a bit of grip would dissipate, break the surface, allowing for some grip. Can never get my head around what's the best way to go for winter tyres.
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• #72824
Big volume, low pressure. Gosh, I sound like Scoble.
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• #72825
Haha.
I was jealous of the discbrake frame dad's mate was riding with us yesterday. He couldn't keep up when we put the power down along the dry roads, but he was happy flying off down the muddy downhill roads. His tyres looked like 32mm slicks, they were insanely large. I don't think my Pro3 Grip 23's are the best for winter. Really need something to replace them soon. Friday says rain, again.
Similar questions re: the air quality in my office went "Testing air quality is expensive, tough"