Your attention, please. Tangy pork roll. That is all.
Your attention, please. Tangy pork roll. That is all.
I suspect that the restaurant biz is learning from their cousins in the hotel industry. Hotels have gotten away with resort fees for over 20 years.
English has called almond milk “almond milk” since at least the late 1300s.
Yes, calling it almond milk goes back to “The Forme of Cury” which was published in the late 1300s.
English has used the phrase “almond milk” since AT LEAST the 14th century--see the cookbook “The Forme of Cury.”
War. “Summer.” End of conversation.
Almond milk has been called almond milk (if you excuse the Middle English spelling of mylke) since at least 1390. See the classic cookbook “The Forme of Cury.
“Imagine the cast of the Jersey Shore, but with the sharp edges of New Yorkers.” Dude, four of the original cast were New Yorkers.
“but there’s something refreshingly honest about checkered aluminum floors, exposed pipes” Aluminum floors? Is that something I’ve missed all these years, or is it a typo for linoleum floors?
“. . . for anyone baffled why anyone would learn about math when nobody is forcing them.” Right. Is the USA the only country (I was going to say “developed country” but I can’t imagine people in a country trying not to be poor would express that thought, either) where someone would write a line like that in an…
“The Vikings are the winningest team to never win a Super Bowl and I thought the Eagles would be runners up for that honor . . .” Should that be based on the Super Bowl Era (1966 to date)? Otherwise you’re picking up the great Browns teams of the All-America Football Conference and the 1950s NFL while penalizing the…
Ladies and Gentlemen, one of the 10 best third basemen ever, Scott Rolen, projected for <11% of the vote.
Why would a New Zealand newspaper quote prices in Australian dollars (AU$512M)?
“Its” not “it’s.” Or given its frequency should we just give up and accept that we’ve evolved a possessive form of the word it in American English?
“Seasons in the sun” by Terry Jacks?
Since 2003? Why 2003 as the starting point for comparisons? Is there a reason for 2003 as the starting point or does starting the count at 2003 help make this a story?
Didn’t the Supreme Court address this in 1943? In West Virginia State Board of Education v Barnette the Court ruled that forcing students to salute the flag and say the Pledge violates the 1st Amendment.
Snapper soup is on the menu of most diners here in South Jersey. Usually comes with a bottle of (very low end) sherry, too.