The latest oddities
#801
Posted 04 September 2010 - 15:29
#803
Posted 06 September 2010 - 15:35
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A road in the Guernsey parish of St Martin has been given an unusual name, which is no name at all.
The little stretch of tarmac that runs north from the Route de la Foret to the Chemin Le Roi has had no need for a name, as no property fronted onto it.
However, when an auto-repair business opened up there, one was required for a postage address.
So the parish Douzaine decided to call it the "rue sans nom", French for "road without a name".
The vast majority of roads in Guernsey have names that stretch far back into island history.
Occasionally, however, a new development necessitates the naming of a previously anonymous road.
Parish Constable Richard Strappini, who has researched the history of the area, said according to custom a subcommittee of the Douzaine had been given responsibility for coming up with the new moniker.
He said: "The process is fairly informal but of course the names have got to be appropriate.
"It's meant to be witty and I think people take it that way. It makes people sit up and think."
Mr Strappini explained that there is, in Guernsey, no official register of road names. However, it is very rare for any changes to be made once a name is given.
He told us: "Once something is established, then it passes on and people simply do not change the name of a road willy-nilly.
"So road names go as far back in history as the roads have been there and it's very unusual for a road not to have a name."
Even more unusual, one could say, is a road without a name that is transformed into a road that does have a name and becomes the "road with no name".
They so craxy.
Edited by Bob, 06 September 2010 - 15:36.
#804
Posted 06 September 2010 - 16:20
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm
#807
Posted 07 September 2010 - 08:58
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The sheriff in Montana replied to the message and organised for an undercover policeman to meet with the boys, aged 15 and 16.
One of the teenagers reportedly fainted when the narcotics officer flashed his badge.
The sheriff says the boys would not be charged since their parents were eager to take care of their punishment themselves.
#808
Posted 07 September 2010 - 09:31
Alias, on 7 Sep 2010, 10:58, said:
Quote
The sheriff in Montana replied to the message and organised for an undercover policeman to meet with the boys, aged 15 and 16.
One of the teenagers reportedly fainted when the narcotics officer flashed his badge.
The sheriff says the boys would not be charged since their parents were eager to take care of their punishment themselves.
This so needs to get on Failblog.org
Quote
Imagine a group of people who are all blind, deaf and slightly demented and suddenly someone in the crowd asks, "What are we to do?"... The only possible answer is, "Look for a cure". Until you are cured, there is nothing you can do.
And since you don't believe you are sick, there can be no cure.
- Vladimir Solovyov
#809
Posted 07 September 2010 - 14:24
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Accordting to the Daily Telegraph of September 6, Clive Williams Henley on Thames, Oxon, UK discovered a carrot that looks like Buzz Lightyear from Toy Story while digging up his vegetable patch. The retired electrical engineer immediately ran inside to show his three grandchildren the strangely shaped vegetable.
http://www.globaltimes.cn/www/english/lang...-09/571007.html (click link for picture)
#810
Posted 07 September 2010 - 15:35
The brave hide behind technology. The stupid hide from it. The clever have technology, and hide it.
—The Book of Cataclysm
#815
Posted 08 September 2010 - 05:53
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Imagine a group of people who are all blind, deaf and slightly demented and suddenly someone in the crowd asks, "What are we to do?"... The only possible answer is, "Look for a cure". Until you are cured, there is nothing you can do.
And since you don't believe you are sick, there can be no cure.
- Vladimir Solovyov
#816
Posted 11 September 2010 - 05:14
Edited by Hobbesy, 11 September 2010 - 05:14.
#817
Posted 14 September 2010 - 10:30
I question the general assumption that i am inherently deficient in the area of grammar and sentence structure
#818
Posted 16 September 2010 - 13:32
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Kay Russell, 49, used to have a southern English accent, but her voice changed after she went to sleep with a severe migraine.
Ms Russell has been diagnosed with foreign accent syndrome, an extremely rare condition that can be a side effect of severe brain injury or migraine.
Professor Ian Hickie from the Brain and Mind Institute says the Gloucestershire woman likely suffered an injury which affected the blood flow in the area of the brain which controls speech.
"If you change the brain blood flow, like a small stroke, you can severely interfere with being able to form words and make them sound in the way that you normally do, so they sound very odd," he said.
"People can report that they sound Chinese or they sound French - they certainly don't sound like themselves."
But Professor Hickie says the woman has not really acquired a foreign accent.
"Sadly it's a brain injury-type phenomenon but unlike some other sorts of strokes where people can't speak at all or can't understand what is being said, this is a change in the way the brain controls your normal vocalisation," he said.
"So you can speak but you don't make the sound, the mechanics, the movements required of all those complicated bits to come out as our normal voice."
Previous cases have included people whose newly found accents sounded German, Spanish, Welsh, Italian, Irish or Chinese.
#820
Posted 17 September 2010 - 14:03
Quote
Imagine a group of people who are all blind, deaf and slightly demented and suddenly someone in the crowd asks, "What are we to do?"... The only possible answer is, "Look for a cure". Until you are cured, there is nothing you can do.
And since you don't believe you are sick, there can be no cure.
- Vladimir Solovyov
#821
Posted 17 September 2010 - 14:04
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She blasted his penis off during his sleep.
The woman, named as Kira V, had suggested a farewell dinner after hearing the news she was about to be dumped.
During the meal she plied her lover with alcohol in order to ensure he wouldn't wake up as she tied several firecrackers to his appendage.
After a two-year relationship the man, named by www.life.ru as Alik D, had decided that rather than marry his Kira, it would be best for him to return to his first wife. He had previously fathered a child with his ex and wanted to spend more time with his son.
Kira now faces up to 12 years in prison for her actions and Alik is currently in intensive care, where doctors are battling to save his life.
My 'best friend' hurts by just reading that.
#825
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