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2006-08-23 06:03:50 · 44 answers · asked by Summer Rain 2 in Entertainment & Music Other - Entertainment

stop going on about english brekkies, i want one now, lol.

2006-08-23 06:23:24 · update #1

44 answers

Sausage,egg, bacon, tomato's, mushrooms, fried bread and black pudding with HP sauce all washed down with a big mug of tea and a ciggy. Heaven!!

2006-08-23 06:21:02 · answer #1 · answered by wizard prang 3 · 2 0

When I hear the word English it reminds of the sketch that the cast of Goodness Gracious Me did called "Going for an English" where they all sat round a table ordering an English meal and giving the waiter loads of hassle. Really funny and well thought out.

2006-08-23 06:17:13 · answer #2 · answered by jacqui752002 2 · 1 0

Mad Mod from the Teen Titans. The English language. England. Tea. Queens. Lots of things.

2006-08-23 06:11:36 · answer #3 · answered by SithGirl8 2 · 1 0

Language

2006-08-23 06:09:22 · answer #4 · answered by Tortured Soul 5 · 0 1

A tyrant (Greek ????????, tyrannos) became initially one which illegally seized and managed a governmental skill in a polis. Tyrants were a set of persons who took over many Greek poleis in the course of the revolt of the middle preparation in the sixth and seventh centuries BC, ousting the aristocratic governments. Plato and Aristotle outline a tyrant as, "one which regulations without regulation, seems to his own earnings rather than that of his topics, and makes use of severe and vicious strategies—adversarial to his own human beings besides as others".[a million] In common utilization, the be conscious "tyrant" consists of connotations of a harsh and vicious ruler who places his or her own pursuits or the pursuits of an oligarchy over the superb pursuits of the final inhabitants, which the tyrant governs or controls. The Greek time period carried no pejorative connotation in the course of the Archaic and early Classical sessions yet became obviously a nasty be conscious to Plato, and as a outcome of the decisive impression of political philosophy its unfavourable connotations basically higher down into the Hellenistic era, growing synonymous with "Authenteo" - yet all over again period which carried authoritarian connotations around the turn of the first century A.D.[citation necessary] in the course of the sixth and seventh centuries BC, tyranny became regularly regarded upon as an intermediate degree between narrow oligarchy and more desirable democratic sorts of polity. even with the undeniable fact that, in the overdue fifth and fourth centuries, a clean sort of tyrant, the defense force dictator, arose, rather in Sicily.

2016-11-27 00:49:39 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I hope that all my citizens are thinking about me sitting on the throne in a little black number. Who was that ungrateful subject who mocked the Guards outside the palace, going on about silly hats. Anymore insults about my staff from that upstart, will find that person floggged outside the Palace, then thrown into the Tower for a jolly good measure, you can't get anymore ENGLISH than us Windsors, I'll have all you peasants know

2006-08-23 08:10:24 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Shakespeare and poetry, classes in school, my nationality, England and all the pomp and circumstance of Royal parades/pageants and the touristy places you can go to like the Tower of London, Houses of Parliament, fish and chips, pubs (foreign countries try and have English pubs but they are not as good as ours), English weather, pride in being English.....

2006-08-23 06:12:34 · answer #7 · answered by blondie 6 · 1 0

A language that the English speak, and the Americans don't.

2006-08-23 07:47:36 · answer #8 · answered by Rotifer 5 · 1 0

Essays for English class.

2006-08-23 06:08:44 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Immigration

2006-08-23 06:17:05 · answer #10 · answered by mushy peas 2 · 1 0

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