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Elite 11+ - Fleecing a supermarket near you!
Comments
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fairclaire wrote: »Im recording it. It's one of those where I don't think I'll want to wait a week for the next episode
I'll watch it over a couple of nights once it's done. I do like doing this. Im very impatient with thrillers.
SO NO SPOILERS PLEASE
It was very good;)To do is to be. Rousseau
To be is to do. Sartre
Do be do be do. Sinatra0 -
uglybugball wrote: »I thought it was £7.00 ie Sains price less £3.00
I may be wrong too:rotfl::rotfl:
I think OP is right - it's £7.49. (Assuming we count points as equivalent to cash.)
3000 points = £3.
Difference Morries to Sains price (M £17.49 - S £10) = £7.49.
Total £10.49.
But you lose 49p in points as maximum can collect from any transaction is £10 worth of points. So, £10 off the Morries price of £17.49 is £7.49. Don't need fillers or any other item on the shop as just minimum spend of £15 on Morries price, already achieved by one bottle of 70cl Grants. Obviously, do not buy any more than one bottle as maximum points is still £10!0 -
purpledonkey wrote: »I miss the free toys in cereal boxes. Remember these?
Oh I remember them.... also those shrinky dinks things that you coloured in and then baked in the oven? :rotfl:
I dunno why but shrinky dinks just sounds so wrong!:rotfl:
I have been very good tonight. I'm trying to teach myself Excel 2013!
I am not a techy person _pale_ but I have been asked to upload a load of lab test results for a referral vet?
I am using a free months trial of Excel 2013, does anyone know an economical (?) way of getting a full version of that or the older Excel?
Thank you x
P.S. Wow thanks for the huuge Mozzies list Savvy that must have taken ages?
Not got my head round the Mozzies points things yet! :eek:
I love that OCD cleaners programme FC, I'll watch it with you! :beer:"I expect to pass through this world but once. Any good, therefore, that I can do or any kindness I can show to any fellow creature, let me do it now. Let me not defer or neglect it for I shall not pass this way again."
Stephen Grellet, (1773-1855).0 -
ohh let me know how you get on, I have 2 outstanding MBG due from them :mad:Keep Moving 2018 challenge.
January....
Week 1-4 total 159.44 miles
Week 5.... 41.66 miles
Not moving anywhere! House renovations taken over life!!0 -
vouchercrazy wrote: »you will make 49p per bottle
1 Grants Whisky 17.49 10.00 7.49 7490 3000 10490= 10.49
Good luck with that :cool:
:rotfl:Apparently, everybody knows that the bird is [strike]the word[/strike] a moorhen0 -
scottishshortie wrote: »Watched that one of my relatives is a hoarder so have some sympathy for them but some of these stoop to low
I know my obsessive cleaning annoys people. My OHs face tonight said 'no, you might get some new ideas' To be fair he is very subtle when I go too far. He never critises or complains, even though I must be a huge pain in the butt sometimes. He does get a look that I recognise that tells me Im going too far thoughI don't mind, it reigns me in a bit mostly
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TrulyMadly wrote: »It was very good;)
In James Nesbitt we trust. I honestly can't remember seeing him in anything bad0 -
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Savvybuyer wrote: »I think OP is right - it's £7.49. (Assuming we count points as equivalent to cash.)
3000 points = £3.
Difference Morries to Sains price (M £17.49 - S £10) = £7.49.
Total £10.49.
But you lose 49p in points as maximum can collect from any transaction is £10 worth of points. So, £10 off the Morries price of £17.49 is £7.49. Don't need fillers or any other item on the shop as just minimum spend of £15 on Morries price, already achieved by one bottle of 70cl Grants. Obviously, do not buy any more than one bottle as maximum points is still £10!
Sorry I think this is wrong the 10.00 cap is only on the match part and you have only use 7.49 the more has no cap but you are only allowed 20 promotional items0 -
fairclaire wrote: »:eek: That's my favourite word
'reasonable' the most open to interpretation word in the history of the world......ever!! I love exploring others views of 'reasonable'. In itself it more open to personal thoughts than any other word I know
'reasonable doubt'........'reasonable force' etc etc......I have been searching my whole adult life for the answer to 'What is reasonable......' :rotfl::rotfl::rotfl:
Of course, we both had interpretations (you even had 3:p) and our differing interpretations were reasonable, as we both manage very easily to put ourselves into the role of being "reasonable people".
I think, in the context of criminal law for example, if you are before a magistrate, "reasonable" is whatever the magistrate puts themselves in the position of deciding: for, after all, they are a "reasonable" person aren't they? Very easy to treat ourselves as reasonable, as always all in our own bubble of perception and unable to see any other perception which, to us, may be unreasonable - our own perspective and perception is always a reasonable one!0
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