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Another Ambiguous US Expression
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De
30/05/2007 07:55:38
 
 
À
30/05/2007 05:45:07
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Forum:
Politics
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01229081
Message ID:
01229254
Vues:
17
>>>>>>>There's often mention of US "Oversight Committees"
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>I assume these are in order to oversee a process to ensure it's done properly (I've never heard the expression applied in British politics).
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>But it sounds to me like a committee of forgetful old fuddy-duddies:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>"Oh forgive me for not having done such-and-such; it was an oversight on my part" :-)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>One for your English section, Dragan.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>Added to the list - will be posted when I return home and merge the data.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>BTW, one of my favo(u)rites is "I shoot her, I miss her". Is she alive after this sentence?
>>>>>
>>>>>O'wise one. Please explain "Don't look a gift horse in the mouth".
>>>>
>>>>Oh, I know, I know! When buying a horse, you check its teeth. If someone gives you a horse, checking its teeth would be an insult. So, when you are given a gift, don't start checking it over as if you're trying to make sure you weren't cheated.
>>>
>>>
>>>Perfectly explained. Kudos. Explanations that good are line hens' teeth....
>>
>>Thanks for the kudos, but I still want to know why slow down and slow up mean the same thing, and why there is no such expression as speed down or hurry down. Well, ok, there is hurry down, but it's got nothing to do with acceleration or deceleration, and it's usually hurry on down anyway.
>
>I've never heard "slow up". "Pull up" yes.

Yes, I've heard "pull up", but that means 'stop' rather than decelerate. 'Slow up' is a fairly common phrase around here. "Slow down" is probably more common, but still...
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