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Martina Jindru says hi!
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27/11/2008 11:26:39
 
 
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27/11/2008 11:15:37
Information générale
Forum:
Politics
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01362926
Message ID:
01364392
Vues:
12
>>>>>If the ref had made the right call would it still be cheating? All it comes down to is that he got away with a bad call by the ref. It happens in all sports.
>>>>
>>>>True. This was just (arguably) the biggest missed call ever.
>>>
>>>Last year when the Raptors were fighting it out in the playoffs, Ford took an inbounds pass at the basket for an alley-oop to win the game. The play was challenged, and it was asserted that Ford was a bjillionth of a second late putting it in the basket. The refs reviewed it and upheld the challenge costing the Raptors the playoff round. What they missed and never looked back on was the fact that the clock was started early (ie - before the inbounds pass was touched by anybody - Ford in this case). The replays showed clearly that the clock, in fact, did start early. The basket should have counted.
>>>
>>>That's life in the bigs.
>>
>>Surely that's "allez-oop" (from the French)?

>
>Actually, I don't know. 'oop' is French?

Yeah, they say that, for when one person gives another a boost, as in your example, esp. acrobats.

>Thinking about it, it probably comes from the expression that kids use when one person boosts another person - you know when one person clasps his hands in front and the other person steps up and lunges higher. The yell was always (at the point of the lunge) "Alley-oop". Now where that came from I have no idea, but I'd bet anything that the basketball phrase came from that.

Simply a corruption of the French expr.

>
>Thinking more about it, maybe it's actually a corruption of a combination of French and English - 'Allez up' = 'Go up'.

The English expression "toodleoo" (for "bye bye") originates from the soldiers in France during WWI, as a corruption of "a tout a l'heure" (see you later)

The English expression "scarper" (for "run away"), so I'm told, originates from the Italian "Scapare" (to escape).
- Whoever said that women are the weaker sex never tried to wrest the bedclothes off one in the middle of the night
- Worry is the interest you pay, in advance, for a loan that you may never need to take out.
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