>>>>>Must have been a best seller <g>. I bet if he rear-ended you, you could find a lawyer who would sew the author of the book <g>
>>>>
>>>>Accidentally, "to sew someone" in our slang back home means "beat him dead in a card game". Though I assume you had a different game in mind, with a similar outcome :).
>>>
>>>I meant "sue". This is the peculiarity of English where words with different meanings are spelled the same <g>
>>
>>But they aren't pronounced the same - at least over here. "Sew" is pronounced as "so" (But we
sow seeds in a field (also pronounced as "so"). Similarly a variant of "show" is "shew", also pronounced the same.
>
>You are right. I was just trying to weasel myself out of admitting that I made a spelling mistake <g>
And we incorporate French from time to time so 'Sue' and 'Sault' are pronounced 'soo'
I ain't skeert of nuttin eh?
Yikes! What was that?