Absolutely. She's still banned though. :wink:
Printable View
The backs of all my remote controls seem to be falling off, it’s all happening at the same time, both downstairs and upstairs. I suspect there’s a sinister reason and I’ll be appearing on an alien abduction show talking about my remote control problems and the weird dream I had about being gang probed.
“We need to play with a bit of swagger”
Absolutely meaningless bollocks. Unless we want our players impersonating the Gallagher brothers.
Humming. Just humming in general.
The term “mansplaining”.
In my experience it’s largely a nonsense word, made-up so that the women at work can try and sound clever about whichever tradesman they’ve had in doing an honest job.
And if I wanted to be a d1ck about it I would say it’s sexist as well.
Neither had I until it became the new favourite word amongst some colleagues of mine. But I believe it’s used to describe when a man tries to explain something to a woman in an oversimplified and/or condescending way. I hope I didn’t just mansplain that 😀
Don’t get me wrong - it probably has its place on the occasion. I’m just talking about my experience of hearing it used and overused. And I could pick a lot of peeves about my work colleagues!
I could tell you, but that would be 'mansplaining' ;-)
In all fairness, the term originated with a proper meaning, which was when some (rather stupid) men would try to explain things on behalf of women, things that surely only the woman herself could understand (e.g. their experiences of misogyny in the workplace). It's a bit like when some rich white actor tries to explain poverty and racism.
Like many other useful terms and phrases, the word was sadly hijacked and can now be used to shut men up, when somebody just doesn't want to hear what somebody has to say about any subject.
Famous(ish) people posting dramatically "I'm taking a break from all of the negativity on social media" only to reappear two days later.
Trying to open vacuum sealed products...getting that wee tab at the side to actually work and rip off the top film can be an impossible mission.
Often I just resort to an infuriated slash with a knife or kitchen scissors after struggling for ages to get the damn thing to peel off so I can get to the contents!
People that leave 1 star reviews for a product when their complaint is entirely regarding the service of Amazon etc and nothing to do with the actual product or company selling the product.
On the theme of reviews.
When people review a hotel and don't give any thought to the star rating or what they paid when judging it.
We went for a couple of days down south last summer. We didn't want to spend a fortune so picked a hotel at about £45 a night. The reviews were mixed at best but we chanced it. It was fine. Dated and tired but spotlessly clean and the continental breakfast was fine.
I always like to leave a review and particularly so when somewhere has been getting an unfair raw deal. I dug a bit into the other reviews and some of them were ridiculous. The 1 star reviews included 'I had to climb a flight of stairs and there was no porterage although the receptionist did offer to help', 'we struggled to get parked, the website did mention limited parking but this was still disappointing', 'the continental breakfast was poor offering only fruit, cereal, pastries and toast. No hot option'......
It's £40 a night. If it's clean, tidy and the staff are polite then you should be relatively happy. If you want multiple breakfast options, ample on site parking, porters or a concierge and similar then pay the going rate for that. Don't mark people offering a budget option down because you have unrealistic expectations.