Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Author Topic: Amiga Forever 2011 Premium Edition Give Away for the Cheap Asses  (Read 23453 times)

Description:

0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

Offline TheBilgeRat

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: May 2010
  • Posts: 1657
    • Show all replies
bazinga!
 

Offline TheBilgeRat

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: May 2010
  • Posts: 1657
    • Show all replies
Re: Amiga Forever 2011 Premium Edition Give Away for the Cheap Asses
« Reply #1 on: May 06, 2011, 07:12:38 PM »
Quote from: Transition;636040
Yes, you win free stuff.

The End

:)


Naaahh....


Too simple!  How about right when they're about to win free stuff, someone slaps them with a haddock!  :lol:
 

Offline TheBilgeRat

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: May 2010
  • Posts: 1657
    • Show all replies
Re: Amiga Forever 2011 Premium Edition Give Away for the Cheap Asses
« Reply #2 on: May 06, 2011, 07:14:10 PM »
Quote from: Franko;636041
It's the same here with petrol prices but as I don't drive then it doesn't bother me. Only if I'm in a car and the driver pulls in to the garage to fill it up, I then attract the attention of the cashier and point at the prices and make the sign for that's nuts at him or her (generally I get the sign back for f-off in reply)... :)

PS:while we're on the subject why do you call it "gas" in the USA, its a liquid, never could get me head round that one... :)

gas is short for gasoline:  From Wikipedia:

Etymology

   
 A gasoline can (which are typically red) from Midwest Can Company
 
 
 "Gasoline" is cited (under the spelling "gasolene") from 1865 in the Oxford English Dictionary.[1] The trademark Gasoline was never registered, and eventually became generic in North America and the Philippines.
 The word "petrol" has been used in English to refer to raw petroleum since the sixteenth century.[1] However, it was first used to refer to the refined fuel in 1892, when it was registered as a trade name by British wholesaler Carless, Capel & Leonard at the suggestion of Frederick Richard Simms, as a contraction of 'St. Peter's Oil.' [2] Carless's competitors used the term "motor spirit" until the 1930s.[3][4] The Oxford English Dictionary suggests that this usage may have been inspired by the French pétrole.[1]
 In many countries, gasoline has a colloquial name derived from that of the chemical benzene (e.g., German Benzin). In other countries, especially in those portions of Latin America where Spanish predominates (i.e., most of the region except Brazil), it has a colloquial name derived from that of the chemical naphtha (e.g., Argentine/Uruguaian/Paraguaian nafta).[5]. However the standard Spanish word is 'gasolina'.
 

Offline TheBilgeRat

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Join Date: May 2010
  • Posts: 1657
    • Show all replies
Re: Amiga Forever 2011 Premium Edition Give Away for the Cheap Asses
« Reply #3 on: May 06, 2011, 07:19:54 PM »
Quote from: Franko;636046
Ahhh... as simple as that eh... well I never... :)

Sometimes the simple things in life are hard to see... :)

Must be why, when I look in the mirror there's no-one there... :)


See?  It was you brits all along, and it stuck here in the colonies after you all moved on to "petrol" :lol: