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Endurance Lends Itself To Enjoyment
Comments
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Generally try to be
because its called an epg
See that's why I got confused, I was looking for the epg button on the remote (it doesn't have one, only a TV guide button)
Anyway back to what I was doing, where's the any key on this keyboard.... :think:Historic Debt August 2009 = £63,600 10th March 2017 = £0 100% paid all gone!
Mortgage started June 2015 = £170,000 January 2022 = £134,000
Saving for Xmas 2022= . . Amazon £55
If you focus on what you have left behind, you won't see what lies ahead - Gusteau0 -
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Yes.I'm ok thanks bubbs.I had a heavy cold or something.Felt dizzy as well and dreadful backache.
I've been thinking a lot and decided that it's a waste of my time posting most of the wombles because a lot of people now the game has changed are not doing comparison shops anymore.Buy a few udis or candles or toothbrushes.Throw in a few sweets.a banana,carrot etc and get up to £100 for nowt.
hope your feeling better after the cold xx dont let a few peoples shopping put you of posting your wombles, a lot of us still do comparison shops and I am sure a lot of us have benefited from what you posts xxx0 -
Thanks, I looked at that but msm couldn't show any comparisons with any other supermarket so I assumed it couldn't be that one. I couldn't see it on any bodies shops to get the details of comparison prices so I couldn't see where it had been mentioned, other than general comments about it still working.
It has worked for ever;)
ASDA Chosen by You Carver Ham (250g)
5
ASDA £2.50 any 2 for £4.00
£1.00 / 80p / 100g
Tesco
£2.00 any 2 for £3.00
---Sealed pot challenge number 003 £350 for 2015, 2016 £400 Actual£345, £400 for 2017 Actual £500:T:T £770 for 2018 £1295 for 2019:j:j spc number 22 £1,457Stopped Smoking 22/01/15:D:D::dance::dance:- 5 st 1 1/2lb :dance::dance:0 -
Does it only have 4 channels
:rotfl::rotfl:
It has 5 if we twist the coat hanger on top.
Proper posh we areHistoric Debt August 2009 = £63,600 10th March 2017 = £0 100% paid all gone!
Mortgage started June 2015 = £170,000 January 2022 = £134,000
Saving for Xmas 2022= . . Amazon £55
If you focus on what you have left behind, you won't see what lies ahead - Gusteau0 -
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We have friends like that.
Obviously valentines day was last weekend and (despite most of them being married) we saw expensive gifts and card pics posted on Facebook.
More fool them I say, I'm a cheap date and a box of 1p chocs or a visit to the pictures courtesy of sweet Sundays would keep me happy any day :j
I've just started using fb again and found it bizarre that people were posting pictures of what they gave each other, I thought it was a private thing. I definitely wouldn't be posting a picture of what I gave dh for valentines day:rotfl:
Happy Anniversary x
Happy anniversary to Izzy too xFinal cigarette smoked 02/01/18
Weight loss 2017 28lbs
Weight gain 2018 8lbs :rotfl:0 -
Savvybuyer wrote: »Some would say you can't obtain fresh fish from any supermarket at all:rotfl:. I hate to be pedantic (no I don't:D) but people could say that it's not "fresh fish"; instead it is "fish sold as fresh". Very subtle difference. I'm a man of fine distinctions again:rotfl:.
Fish can be sold as fresh if it has been on ice since being caught (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2846668/Supermarkets-selling-fresh-fish-s-really-15-DAYS-old-Experts-said-food-four-Britain-s-biggest-chains-start-taste-just-day-fridge.html). That doesn't mean that it is "fresh" in the eyes of what customers generally may be likely to assume - i.e. out of the water in the last few days. Then again, I'm reading the Daily Mail article there and taking each word literally as if it were an Act of Parliament. I don't think it is quite meant to be taken that way! People generally (including DM journalists I suspect) don't write in that sort of precise and totally exact way.
Henceforth, the phrase "fresh fish" will be banned from my using and I shall refer to "fish sold as fresh" (without any implication that it is not, but equally doesn't imply that it is when it may not be "fresh" according to customer's view standards although it might be "fresh" according to legal and supermarket standards - therefore a more neutral term that doesn't necessarily accept that it is fresh but then doesn't necessarily reject it either). You can pick me up if I refer to "fresh fish" ever again;) (other than in the context of discussing whether the term "fresh fish" is appropriate or not etc.;);):rotfl:).
Same thing is true of fruit and veg. "sold as fresh" in the supermarkets btw:rotfl:.
Good question, when is fresh actually "fresh"? Potatoes for example grow at certain times of the year, must therefore be stored for a while until being sent to the supermarket to be sold - but still have a BBE date on them as do most items. When we buy fresh meat do we think it was alive earlier that day ... week ...?
Anon0 -
Savvybuyer wrote: »Some would say you can't obtain fresh fish from any supermarket at all:rotfl:. I hate to be pedantic (no I don't:D) but people could say that it's not "fresh fish"; instead it is "fish sold as fresh". Very subtle difference. I'm a man of fine distinctions again:rotfl:.
Fish can be sold as fresh if it has been on ice since being caught (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2846668/Supermarkets-selling-fresh-fish-s-really-15-DAYS-old-Experts-said-food-four-Britain-s-biggest-chains-start-taste-just-day-fridge.html). That doesn't mean that it is "fresh" in the eyes of what customers generally may be likely to assume - i.e. out of the water in the last few days. Then again, I'm reading the Daily Mail article there and taking each word literally as if it were an Act of Parliament. I don't think it is quite meant to be taken that way! People generally (including DM journalists I suspect) don't write in that sort of precise and totally exact way.
Henceforth, the phrase "fresh fish" will be banned from my using and I shall refer to "fish sold as fresh" (without any implication that it is not, but equally doesn't imply that it is when it may not be "fresh" according to customer's view standards although it might be "fresh" according to legal and supermarket standards - therefore a more neutral term that doesn't necessarily accept that it is fresh but then doesn't necessarily reject it either). You can pick me up if I refer to "fresh fish" ever again;) (other than in the context of discussing whether the term "fresh fish" is appropriate or not etc.;);):rotfl:).
Same thing is true of fruit and veg. "sold as fresh" in the supermarkets btw:rotfl:.
you really make me laugh savvy xxx
can i call it fresh fish when the boys catch it and bring it back from the beach, but not on ice though;) but only a few minute walk its then cleaned and cooked with in an hour
but what about if i put it in the fridge and cook it the next day is it still fresh0
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