08-11-2013, 08:28 PM
posted to uk.rec.gardening
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: May 2012
Posts: 2,947
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Is this it?
On 08/11/2013 19:09, sacha wrote:
On 2013-11-08 18:53:06 +0000, David Hill said:
On 08/11/2013 18:38, sacha wrote:
On 2013-11-07 21:54:15 +0000, Bill Grey said:
"Sacha" wrote in message
...
On 2013-11-07 17:48:39 +0000, Bill Grey said:
"Sacha" wrote in message
...
The wind is getting up quite a bit and the sky is very omnibus,
getting a darker grey by the minute. --
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.com
South Devon
www.helpforheroes.org.uk
You wait ages for one storm, then two come together :-)
What a lovely Malapropism.
Bill
It's a Ray-ism. ;-) He always says that and it's passed into the
family dictionary and is now officially official!
--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.com
South Devon
www.helpforheroes.org.uk
It makes for a more colourful life. I have one I just can't shake
off. A friend had a Sealyham Terrier, and as a joke I called it a
Selenium Terror, now I'm stuck with it.
Bill
;-) Sounds appropriate to me! My ex-husband (who was NOT into gardening
at all) once pronounced Cotoneaster exactly as it is spelt. That passed
into family folklore, too "shall we plant a cotton easter"?
That's the way my late mother always pronounced it
And one can see why - makes more sense to the eye. But that did not
detract from the considerable teasing that went on in our family, I'm
afraid. His parents were considerable gardeners and I was starting to
improve my game, so the poor man didn't stand a chance! Ray and I
differ on pronunciations of plant names but it's an amicable wrangle -
Clematis, Alyogyne, Chaenomeles lead to debate!
What about the Day Lily Hemerocallis (Hemero callis or Hemer ocallis)
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