1101
Boston
(lemmy.world)
A place to share screenshots of Microblog posts, whether from Mastodon, tumblr, ~~Twitter~~ X, KBin, Threads or elsewhere.
Created as an evolution of White People Twitter and other tweet-capture subreddits.
Rules:
Related communities:
I got a lift from a tourist from Boston when I was hitchhiking from Falkland to Auchtermuchty in Scotland
He had an A4 sheet of paper that his wife had taped to the front of the glove box that said "LEFT YA FUCKIN BOZO" to make sure he stayed on the ~~right~~ wrong side of the road
My wife learnt to drive here in the UK, she has a song she sings when she's anywhere with opposite sides for traffic. Goes something like: Right hand side of the road, right hand side of the road, dear god right hand side of the road....shit fuck, right hand side of the road!
If he was from Boston, it was probably letter, not A4
The wife probably found some paper in Scotland to write the sign
I know, what a silly reply that was! Like he would bring a sheaf of paper 8000 miles or whatever in case his wife wanted to write a sign!
Is that guy so fucking argumentative cos he's from Boston? ๐
An entire sheaf? How many signs do you think she wrote?
Maybe 500. Or is there an imperial version for US size paper? 368.5?
There's no imperial anything for the US, since they use US customary units. But it's probably a bushel.
Well don't hide your light under 365 sheets of paper then I dunno
If you actually are curious, they come in packs of 500 and we call that a reem of paper. They also come in boxes of 10 reems, and sometimes you can find a half a reem at the local shop but it's probably the same price as a reem.
No, we call it a "ream."
Sorry about your funny bone
Everyone knows bushels are for fruit!
I probably shouldn't upvote people just because they say the first thought that crossed my mind.
Yes, you should.
https://youtu.be/pUF5esTscZI?si=ow74ziiiHMFUL4sY
Is that a real word?
Yes it means "A track suitable for wheeled traffic, especially for through communication, often in street names" according to Chambers dictionary