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Besides "Fraisier", is there another sitcom that has a liberal use of higher-level English vocabulary in its scripts?

2006-10-08 07:54:34 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Entertainment & Music Television

7 answers

Oh what is it called? It comes on PBS and its about this crazy old British woman everyone hates to talk to! And I remember one episode the police thought they stole a Rolls Royce!

2006-10-08 07:57:37 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Frasier was also the gayest sitcom ever. Even though the Crane brothers were straight, they acted gayer than anyone on Will and Grace.

Love Jack

2006-10-08 08:28:33 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you have gotten particularly some super solutions with lists of words, so I won't repeat them. and you have gotten a number of solutions that say there are no words beginning with Q that have not have been given a u after them. and you already know what? they are the two appropriate! words that come from English origins have a u following an preliminary Q. yet there are words that are to 3 quantity used in English and that ensue in dictionaries (particularly Scrabble dictionaries!) that have not have been given the u. it is by using the fact they are distant places words. maximum come from chinese language (the famous pinyin device of writing Mandarin chinese language in Roman characters makes use of a Q for the "Ch" sound) or Arabic, yet there are a a number of different languages additionally. So technically you may say there are no "English" words that have not have been given the u. and you may say that there are, because of the fact they are in English dictionaries.

2016-10-15 23:35:14 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Jack - I think you are confusing foppishness with gayness. There was never any suggestion in the scripts that either brother were gay. Niles was unhappily married and lusting after Daphne every episode and Frasier trying to bed any available woman in Seattle.

2006-10-16 05:09:21 · answer #4 · answered by Albert Hall 2 · 0 0

I think it was called "Family Affair" with Buffy & Jodie and the
sophisticated English Butler.

2006-10-08 08:02:06 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I thought 3rd Rock from the Sun did.

2006-10-08 08:02:28 · answer #6 · answered by kate 7 · 0 0

If you want the vocab goods,watch BBC.

Their programs are more linguistically complex.

2006-10-08 08:02:04 · answer #7 · answered by moebiusfox 4 · 0 0

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