Common
Freddy Woo writes, "My wife thinks calling the front room a lounge is common. Worse, a friend of hers recently admonished her daughter for calling a toilet, a toilet. Lavatory darling. It's lavatory."
My own mother refused to let me use the word 'oblong' instead of 'rectangle'. Which is just odd, to be honest.
What stuff do you think is common?
( , Thu 16 Oct 2008, 16:06)
Freddy Woo writes, "My wife thinks calling the front room a lounge is common. Worse, a friend of hers recently admonished her daughter for calling a toilet, a toilet. Lavatory darling. It's lavatory."
My own mother refused to let me use the word 'oblong' instead of 'rectangle'. Which is just odd, to be honest.
What stuff do you think is common?
( , Thu 16 Oct 2008, 16:06)
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I think this is accurate.
No matter how much I shake it, even if I fluff it for about a minute, anxiously glancing at the bathroom door, I always get a wet patch.
Can't they make a special one-way, non-drip, willy valve sock or something?
( , Mon 20 Oct 2008, 13:14, 1 reply)
No matter how much I shake it, even if I fluff it for about a minute, anxiously glancing at the bathroom door, I always get a wet patch.
Can't they make a special one-way, non-drip, willy valve sock or something?
( , Mon 20 Oct 2008, 13:14, 1 reply)
The problem is
that the valve is some way from the nozzle. It's like turning off your garden hose at the tap, although on a smaller scale (unless you have a 30m cock). Water still drips out the end.
Perhaps there's a market for Tena Gentleman?
( , Mon 20 Oct 2008, 13:38, closed)
that the valve is some way from the nozzle. It's like turning off your garden hose at the tap, although on a smaller scale (unless you have a 30m cock). Water still drips out the end.
Perhaps there's a market for Tena Gentleman?
( , Mon 20 Oct 2008, 13:38, closed)
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