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I'm walking home from shopping on a calm & hot summer evening. And I'm thinking: "What if someone asked me in English for directions ?! I never pay attention to street names and such, I'd have no idea what to say. But at least I speak English "
("someone" = "cute English girl" )
50 meters later, a car stopps and a guy comes out and waves at me. As I approach him, he starts asking me in English how to get from Lyon to Valence. No idea... But what I can tell him is how to the get to the train station in Lyon (I'm actually in Villeurbanne, not Lyon, but close), and that he could ask there for further information.
Granted, it was a guy, not a girl. And his English was worse than mine. (since when is "autobahn" an English word ?! ) But still, it's a sign that someone up there is trying to give me what I want. He/she/it just needs to work on the details...
Now what will I wish for next ?!
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Hey, "autobahn" makes a heck of a lot more sense than the actual English term... "freeway"? What the heck is a free-way? And how come freeways are often elevated and cost money, while "highways" are never high nor costly?
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ARGH...the movie was so terrible. I tuned out halfway through it and barely remember what happened that led up to the ending. That's how memorable it was.
But the premise was very good, and I'd like to read the book if they ever get one at Bookman's.
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mph, peace on Earth ? I don't think I'm ready to take the blame for he/she/it understanding the sounds, but not the writing... (p*ss...) Other suggestions ?!
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Actually, "Freeways" are always free. If you pay to use a road it is a "Toll-road" or "Turnpike". I'm pretty sure the term "freeway" came about to describe roads that weren't toll-roads or turnpikes since most actively maintained roads in the past were on private property and the owners charged a toll.
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Really? People around here (central NY) are always referring to I-90 (all toll) as "The Freeway". It's really the only thing in this entire state I would really refer to as a freeway, coming from CA... even the highways here are crummy little two-lane nightmares.
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He means the Powers That Be might misunderstand him and we'd find ourselves drenched in something nasty.
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[edit - this is in response to z's comment above] Common usage aside, the word does not apply to toll-roads. You probably won't find I-90 listed as the "Such-and-Such Freeway" on any map. Unfortunately many people get lazy in their choice of words and don't really thing about what a term really means.
Additionally, interstate (and many state) roads are more "routes" than "roads". So, for example, I-95 can include sections that are toll-roads. State highways are good examples of this as many go right through the center of towns making zig-zags through the populated areas using ordinary city streets.
I've found that the NE seems a lot more persnickety about the proper names for things than the area where I grew up. In CA, it seemed like you could name a community whatever you thought sounded good... the City of Chico, the Town of Paradise.... but here in NY, "city", "town", "village", and "hamlet" all have very specific meanings. Thus you end up with the Village of Dryden and the Town of Dryden, and they're apparently completely different communities. Very strange.
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Actually, a freeway is a limited access road without any traffic impeding devices (i.e. traffic lights). The lack of such devices is what makes it free. Refer to the freeway definition from free-definition.com. Apparently the non tollroad definition is a common misconception.
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quote: It's really the only thing in this entire state I would really refer to as a freeway, coming from CA... even the highways here are crummy little two-lane nightmares.
Atlanta: 12 lanes in each direction.
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2 lanes in each direction!? There are only two of those in my entire state. Three lanes and more are for flatlanders and big city folk. Real motorists drive the windy pothole-ridden one-lane highways of Vermont's backcountry at interstate speeds. I know I do.
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Such coincidences are actually proof that we are all part (on some level) of the non-local organizing intelligence.
Coincidences on a larger scale can also include the rather common occurrence of separate people coming up with the same idea or process at the same time, while having no knowledge of the other's work or intentions.
Or, say you think about an old friend you haven't seen for years, and they call you that same day.
I think when we move closer to discovering and following the purpose of our lives, coincidences like that become more common (or so it seems to me).
*blush* Why, yes. I have been reading Deepak Chopra. *snicker*
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When I lived in the dorms, I woke up one morning and was trying to remember the French word for rabbit. I knew I knew the word, but for the life of me couldn't remember it. As I left my room and turned the corner, I saw a girl putting up a poster for a play (which I hadn't heard of until this point) called Picasso at the Lapin Agile. Aha! That's it! Lapin!
Now what are the chances of that?
Posts: 8504 | Registered: Aug 1999
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Farmgirl, from his use of the word 'autobahn', as well as from his accent, I'd say probably German. As to why he was talking to me in English: he was just passing by France, he had a loooooong list of cities he had to pass through. I didn't look for departure or destination though. So my guess is that he just didn't know any French, and enough English not to be embarrassed about it
Annie, wow, that's one strange coincidence, and it's even stranger that it ressembles mine, involving something in a foreign language with respect to the country it has happened in. I'm glad you wrote it here, makes me feel less lonely in my weirdeness
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