Film, Media & TV5 mins ago
I see England, I see France
Last week I saw an old episode of Moonlighting. the name of the episode was I see England, I see France, I see Maddie's netherworld. It immediately struck me as probably being a paraphrase, so I searched for that phrase barring the netherworld-part, and got tons of hits. I gather it's a 'teasing rhyme' (if that be the term) and that the last part of it would normally be I see (name)'s underpants. But even that sounds like a paraphrase to me, as if the origin was oh I don't know - a Churchill speech or something... "I see England, I see France, united in ..." etcetera. (Just fantasizing.)
Does anyone know anything about the origin - or if the rhyme is the origin.
Thanks in advance and for now, more personal thanks sometime next week.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by DaSwede. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Erm, I don't usually find this kind of clip funny... but this one... I do. (She's nice, though.)
focus
Calling it a day - g'night.
So now you have a super zoom camera jno, but do you have a high speed one?
neti at carnival
http://images.tribe.net/tribe/upload/photo/256 /bd1/256bd1f8-efc1-472a-8c87-bb4e0b0ffc0a.larg e-profile.jpg
Of course the other mob down the Rhine in Cologne would never have stooped to such silly behaviour !
Then of course on Shrove Tuesday or Fastnacht we used to have lovely pancakes . Not with lemon and sugar but with Speck ....Mmmm!
And as the old saying goes Am Aschermittwoch ( Ash Wednesday ) ist alles vorbei...in other words ..That's yer lot !
And a stinking hangover to contend with .
All they seem to have here these days is a pancake race at Ulney .European countries seem to have much more fun at this dismal time of the year than we do .
Gobsmacked at Shaney's tale - tell me in confidence, do they wear lederhosen as well or is that just slander? At the risk of sounding like Kellie Pickler in the quiz show ("I thought Europe was a country") I still have to ask: Isn't the UK part of Europe?? Last one: Is your husband German, Shaney?
Ha ha jno filming yourself at work...
Where's Ninny R today? (That be your hip hop name, bitch.)
And no ....lederhosen are not de rigeur in Nordrhein Westphalia....they leave that to the Bavarians .
Altweiberfastnacht is the Thursday before Rosenmontag and it's traditional that women are allowed to cut off the ties of any man they like and also to kiss them whether they like it or not !
Rosenmontag is the day before Shrove Tuesday ..what used to be known here in merrie old old England as Collop Monday when you chanced your luck on what there was to eat. All to do with the beginning of Lent .
Big excuse to have a bldy good time before giving up gin for the duration ....................as if !
a'noon revellers....no carnival here either, but we have got the rain....the only semblance of a parade where I come from was a convoy of milk floats, pop lorries (remember when the pop man came?) & the local scrap dealers pick ups wrapped up in crepe paper with a few balloons tied on....good job it didn't rain in those days - the kids would have gone home looking like they'd been tie-dyed...
oh dear, Vin's full of wind again
I need something calming:
learning
playing
(Hard to believe that dolphins are gang rapists, innit...)
Time for American Idol on the telly over here so bye (unless you've got an act to compete...?)
http://www.vestaldesign.com/blog/2005/07/diy-i kea-coffin.html
jno here's a great blog for your son to keep an eye on. It's in Swedish but I think he'll enjoy just scanning the objects - and he'll be able to discern manufacturers by the bold lettering and the links.