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rosalind

22nd October 2021, 14:00
Hello all
Jigjag, what a nice welcome. We once went to New Brighton on a school treat.
Did they do a risk assessment?
Freezing cold water, stomach pump if swallowed. Sand in the (egg) sandwiches. For most children the furry (sic) was no doubt a treat, for me just same old, same old. Return to Liverpool on furry, bus back to school, bus back to Pier Head, furry to Woodside, bus home. Only good thing , a few opportunities to avoid paying the fare. I can't imagine what New Brighton is like today. Was there ever an Old Brighton? Or Nether Brighton, Brighton Wallop?

Statins are my hobby horse. I would not take them for large amounts of folding money.

Most of us must remember when the advice for a painful back was strict bed rest! Also after a varicose vein operation, which killed my Aunt Rosalind (the rest, not the operation). Why should dietary advice be any different? I am looking forward to the day when low fat diets are properly busted.

Ah , busted. Now, that's a good word.
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jigjag

22nd October 2021, 22:38
Rosalind

Yes I remember those bus and ferry journeys well. Now the train up the Wirral is so fast and frequent, makes such a difference. New B is much changed now, for the better in my opinion. Supermarkets, shops, bars, ten-pin bowling, fairground, theatre, great fish and chips - it has everything!

I will take your advice and ask the surgery if I really need statins. My diet is much better than when I was put on them.
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rosalind

23rd October 2021, 22:28
I just found this nice addition to the "trix" words-

Newcastle Quarter Sessions 1843
Persecutrix, Margaret Ann Dewar
(Catherine Kidd sentenced to 1 month's imprisonment with hard labout for "simple larceny")
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jono

23rd October 2021, 22:41
Rosalind, interesting that Chambers differentiates simple larceny, petty larceny, compound larceny and grand larceny (that being larceny of property of the value of one shilling or more). And I like persecutrix.
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rosalind

23rd October 2021, 23:08
Goodness, I wonder what trivial item Catherine had stolen? Two years later she was sent down for nine months for stealing a "tin-can, having previously been convicted of a felony". This word seems to mean a more serious crime.
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rosalind

23rd October 2021, 23:10
One shilling in 1843 is still only about £5 today
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jono

24th October 2021, 00:43
OED has both persecutrix (rare) and persecutress. “One who persecutes, or harasses others on account of opinions or beliefs”. 1484 from the French persécuteur
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rosalind

24th October 2021, 09:37
In that case, I wonder if the word was actually prosecutrix and I mis-read it. I can't check because, although I wrote down a letter and number reference I have no idea which catalogue! Seems more likely-
"A female victim of a crime on whose behalf the state is prosecuting a suspect" (Wiktionary)
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grunger

24th October 2021, 20:13
Rosalind Jono

Thanks.

I love those words, which I have not heard before: persecutrix, persecutrices, prosecutrix and prosecutrices.

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tyke51

24th October 2021, 20:41
Grunger

I see you as a persecutrix ... mesmerising `batters` with your devious spin bowling!
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