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I like Popty Ping - almost onomatopoeic. My Welsh is severely limited, I can't think of much more than Croeso Y Cymru and iechyd da
Maybe it's just place names:
Llanthony - one of my favourite spots (with Double Dragon on draught) in it's full Welsh splendour is Llan-dewi-nant-honddu. If you've never been and you're in the region of the Brecon Beacons I commend it to you, good food and beer and a lovely setting.
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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I've been there a few times - it's at the other end of the Brecons from me, and I used to pass nearby on my way to Hay on Wye to swap my mother with my elder brother.
It's a beautiful area - if a little close to England for my taste!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Quote: a little close to England One of its many benefits!
When we had shops in Bristol, we could go there for a day trip (possibly including dropping in to Hay for some books.) The walk up to Offa's Dyke is spectacular, especially when the Hawthorn's in bloom.
We stayed one night in the Priory a few years back on a visiting our old haunts trip back to the UK. We did clock up a few miles on that trip!
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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B. Clay Shannon wrote: I have always (with the exception of a certain brand of hair products) heard the word "suave" combined with "debonair" - never standalone (and vice versa).
PARKLIFE!
B. Clay Shannon wrote: In the past it has been applied to men like Cary Grant ("Cary Grant is suave and debonair"); in modern times, two obvious candidates for such a description are Pierce Brosnan and, say, Ndamukong Suh.
PARKLIFE!
B. Clay Shannon wrote: But I wonder: is it possible to be "suave" but not debonair? Debonair but not suave? If so, please give some examples. e.g., is Ted Nugent suave but not debonair? Is Barack Obama debonair but not suave?
PARKLIFE!
B. Clay Shannon wrote: Would it, in fact -- since these two adjectives seem inseparably linked -- actually be a "backhanded compliment" to call someone "suave" OR "debonair" (not both)? IOW, would calling someone suave be tantamount to saying they are decidedly NOT debonair? Similarly, would calling someone debonair be tantamount to saying they are decidedly NOT suave?
Alllllllll the people, so many people and they all go hand in hand, round and round through their PARKLIFE.
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I am unable to answer these questions for fear of losing my man card. Sorry.
By the way, O is a communist and Nugent is a psycho retard.
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I tend to agree with your assessment of Nugent, although I really like some of his music (especially his eponymous offering from the 70s). I can separate the [mad]man from the music.
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Yeah, there has to be a separation from the music, I agree.
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As for Obama, I see him as George Bush with a better tan.
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I noticed that when I looked at what the political cartoonists did: same ears, more shading.
cat fud heer
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B. Clay Shannon wrote: As for Obama, I see him as George Bush with a better tan.
Yes, that's true. That's why he was re-elected in 2008, because there were so many people, like yourself, who loved W and wanted more of him in 2008. So since there was no difference they went ahead and re-elected him in 2008 but with a different name.
They are both Presidents. They are both male. They both wear suits. They both live in America. They both eat food for their meals. So many similarities and no one would've noticed without your astute political savvy calling attention to this sameness.
Oh, now there is a word: Savvy!
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Why would you assume I was a fan of "W"? I am not; I am apolitical. The "red" and "blue" they are described as is, to me, more like gray and silver.
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B. Clay Shannon wrote: Why would you assume I was a fan of "W"
Oh, I didn't know you voted for Obama. That's fine. But I don't think that voting is apolitical. But, if it is, then that is okay too. Voting and not voting, they are the same in an asymmetrical world where not-equal is equal to equal. It's only in the symmetrical world where things which are different, but seem the same.
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I didn't vote for Obama! The word "apolitical" means "without politics" - I do not vote!
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B. Clay Shannon wrote: I do not vote!
In my books, this equates to "I do not have the right to complain about things that politicians do!".
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I liked Nugent in his Damn Yankees[^] phase. He certainly knows how to write a hook.
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They're not synonyms.
i.e. I'm happy to drink soave, but dubonnet is for girls.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Serious question...the answer is, of course, "Yes" because a "No" would be an exercise in absolutism, putting upon me the onus of proving impossibility.
OK...Enough with the mealy-mouthing that happens on political fora.
With all due consideration given to my brethren and cistern (ooops) forum-mates who did the etymological thing, here's my take from the idiomatic.
I can see if someone is debonair. It's a matter of dress and carriage.
OTOH, it isn't until I interact with someone that I know if they are suave.
Just my thoughts
cat fud heer
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BiggerDon wrote: I can see if someone is debonair. It's a matter of dress and carriage.
So James Bond is debonair, but not suave? (I mean come on! Shaken?!)
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Au contraire!
One can be both, and James Bond is the classic example of that.
I've known people who are debonair and not suave. They dress well, carry themselves with confidence and aplomb, but when they open their yaps they're immediately irritating someone. There's a seven letter word that starts with "a" and looks like an asterisk that describes them.
Then there are the people who are suave without being debonair. They really don't care about what other people think of them but are great at getting other people to like them. "Charming and disarming" comes to mind. They can also be those asterisk-types but you don't hate them for it.
cat fud heer
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suave: (especially of a man) charming, confident, and elegant.
debonair: (of a man) confident, stylish, and charming
So, in-a-word: no
If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader.-John Q. Adams You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering.-Wernher von Braun Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.-Albert Einstein
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Actually, based on those definitions, if you were charming, confident, and elegant but NOT stylish, you would be suave (only); and if you were confident, stylish, and charming but NOT elegant, you would be debonair only. It's an exercise left to the reader how you can be stylish but not elegant, or elegant but not stylish.
My take on it: Daniel Boone was stylish but not elegant (he was debonair, perhaps), whereas Abraham Lincoln was elegant but not stylish (he was suave, I reckon).
So who is/was suave AND debonair (both stylish AND elegant)? Edgar Allan Poe, Bret Harte (the writer, not the pugilist), et al.
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What? Did Apple replace Swift already....? Or is this the new name for Angular? Am I on CodeProject??
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Cary Grant was suave and debonair; ie a good guy.
James Mason was merely suave; ie a bad guy.
You really should pay attention when watching North By NorthWest.
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Suave comes from spanish: suave = soft, and by extensión, delicate or "good behavior"
Ella es suave = She is delicate
On the other hand, debonair comes from french. De bon air = from good air. By extensión from good family.
In english the two words have derived into a similar meanings but the origins were very different. So, you can use them separately or at the same time and the meaning is different in each case.
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