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I must be at that age when

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Doc_Spock | 20:36 Wed 13th Aug 2008 | ChatterBank
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everything confuses me.

Just reading earlier posts and I have not got a clue what is going on.

I shall have a drink presently or should that be soon.

Is there a difference between, I am presently having a drink and I am having a drink presently.


Must go , I can hear matron.

I am typing this in crayon as we are not allowed anything sharp.
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Hi Doc-long tiime no speak -well seems like it -i would have the drink presently -cant tho (: lol.Go for it and then lets have a blast of the banjo to lift the mood :)

U and the totty in Yoville tonight -dont think im gonna see much TV so might see ya there xx

Question Author
Hi Drissy, need to go and spend some coins later. XXX
Will try and see ya there -beach party ???? (we can but dream lol)
Doc,
'presently' means of course 'right now' - but it came to mean, in the parlance of the upper classes, 'in the near futere' or '(almost) immediately' - so nowadays you unfortunately have to distinguish between these two meanings - right now, or soon. I think if it refers to a whiskey and soda, it means right now. If it refers to shooting things (peasants ? pheasants ?) it probably means the middle of next week
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Cheers Dubliner.

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