Irrational Hatred
People who say "less" when they mean "fewer" ought to be turned into soup, the soup fed to baboons and the baboons fired into an active volcano. What has you grinding your teeth with rage, and why?
Suggested by Smash Monkey
( , Thu 31 Mar 2011, 14:36)
People who say "less" when they mean "fewer" ought to be turned into soup, the soup fed to baboons and the baboons fired into an active volcano. What has you grinding your teeth with rage, and why?
Suggested by Smash Monkey
( , Thu 31 Mar 2011, 14:36)
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Quite right.
The area code for London is 01. This 020 nonsense is just not cricket.
( , Thu 31 Mar 2011, 20:31, 1 reply)
The area code for London is 01. This 020 nonsense is just not cricket.
( , Thu 31 Mar 2011, 20:31, 1 reply)
This gets my goat.
Especially those who insist that it's "020" followed by the 'actual' number. I don't care if the official line is that "020" is the London area code: all inner London numbers start with 0207 and all outer London numbers start with 0208, so the area code for inner London is 0207 and the code for outer London is 0208. Want to know roughly where a business is located? Look at the area code: it's what it's there for.
If you want to get arsey and technical about it, then arguably {London} = 020, where {London} contains {Inner London} and {Outer London} and values of 0207 and 0208 are attributed to {Inner London} and {Outer London} respectively, but this argument is never advanced. People prefer to insist that "London is 020" while bursting several blood vessels around their eyes and staining their audience's clothing with spittle.
( , Thu 31 Mar 2011, 20:39, closed)
Especially those who insist that it's "020" followed by the 'actual' number. I don't care if the official line is that "020" is the London area code: all inner London numbers start with 0207 and all outer London numbers start with 0208, so the area code for inner London is 0207 and the code for outer London is 0208. Want to know roughly where a business is located? Look at the area code: it's what it's there for.
If you want to get arsey and technical about it, then arguably {London} = 020, where {London} contains {Inner London} and {Outer London} and values of 0207 and 0208 are attributed to {Inner London} and {Outer London} respectively, but this argument is never advanced. People prefer to insist that "London is 020" while bursting several blood vessels around their eyes and staining their audience's clothing with spittle.
( , Thu 31 Mar 2011, 20:39, closed)
Bollocks
New (020) 8xxx xxxx are now allocated in central London also.
Learn your facts.
( , Thu 31 Mar 2011, 20:56, closed)
New (020) 8xxx xxxx are now allocated in central London also.
Learn your facts.
( , Thu 31 Mar 2011, 20:56, closed)
well, years ago whilst working for BT we would not use the leading 0
Every fucking number has it so why state it. And the correct number is all the numbers. No other number will do if you want to make a call. Put a space where you fucking well want. It doesn't matter. Unless you are working in the exchange and need it for a cab box. It doesn't matter a fucking jot. There are no spaces - you can't press space. now fuck off....
A year of working the 100 line sets me against you number plebs.
( , Thu 31 Mar 2011, 23:46, closed)
Every fucking number has it so why state it. And the correct number is all the numbers. No other number will do if you want to make a call. Put a space where you fucking well want. It doesn't matter. Unless you are working in the exchange and need it for a cab box. It doesn't matter a fucking jot. There are no spaces - you can't press space. now fuck off....
A year of working the 100 line sets me against you number plebs.
( , Thu 31 Mar 2011, 23:46, closed)
"0" was the trunk line prefix, as I recall
All it did was tell the exchange that the subsequent string of digits should be routed externally.
So yes, the actual area code doesn't have an initial nought, but omitting the initial nought means that things don't work. It might not be part of the area code in fact, but it is in practice.
However, Galactic Yeti's point about 0207 and 0208 falls down if he tries to place an intra-London telephone call without the initial 7 or 8.
( , Fri 1 Apr 2011, 2:27, closed)
All it did was tell the exchange that the subsequent string of digits should be routed externally.
So yes, the actual area code doesn't have an initial nought, but omitting the initial nought means that things don't work. It might not be part of the area code in fact, but it is in practice.
However, Galactic Yeti's point about 0207 and 0208 falls down if he tries to place an intra-London telephone call without the initial 7 or 8.
( , Fri 1 Apr 2011, 2:27, closed)
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