Inka dinka doo, a dinka dee, a dinka doo.
Oh what a tune for crooning!
Inka dinka doo, a dinka dee, a dinka doo,
it's got the got the whole world spooning.
Eskimo bells up in Iceland are ringing,
they've made their own paradise land singing,
"Inka Dinka Doo", a dinka dee, a dinka doo,
simply means "Inka dinka dee, a dinka doo."
Jimmy Durante,
tuneful non-geographer, 1920s-1950s
Yeah, he sure was a lot of fun, Jimmy Durante.
I'm presently in the process of purchasing old television
programming and just love the early shows. The new
TV programming doesn't keep me satisfied. It sucks.
Especially A.B.C. line-up of crap.
The Jimmy Durante TV show was great!
__________________
1933-2010
The Party of Treason
The Democratic Party
Oh, shut up.
Durante was the highest paid night club performer in the 1950's. Rose
Marie was the highest paid female night club performer.
Phil
> Oh, shut up
Hey Jim 'boy',
why did you post a stupid, lame Jimmy Durante song here in
ba.broadcast?
Is someone broadcasting Jimmy Durante? - or are you just a turd who
likes
a lame old childrens's-type song. Again, why did you post it here?
Oh, shut up?
Never, loser Jim.
I am eagerly awaiting your next addition/post to ba.broadcast.
I was civil, it is your choice to be hostile, and now to receive the
coming rebukes.
Let's Roll!
> Oh, shut up.
Hey Jim Boy,
you appear to like old SILLY, Juvenile, Childish type songs.
Here is one for you, maybe you will recognize it:
Fe Fi Fo Fum
I smell the blood of an Englishman!
Mad Dogs and Englishmen, that is. Collier derives it's name
from the coal sellers of early England. A coal seller, and
a crazy Englishman to boot.
What were you saying Jim? ["oh, shut up"]
I've realized that you are yet just another crazy, and I mean
CRAZY Englishman........wanting to control the world, as your
genetic make-up makes you do what you do. That is one of
the reasons why you lash-out against me. Your English genes
tell you to act insane and illogical and without good reason.
That's an Englishman for you!
Fe Fi Fo Fum
I smell the blood of an Englishman!
Where is Higgles the woman, when we need her.
Where is she hiding, in the moderated clique of control freaks?
Who knows.
> Collier derives it's name
> from the coal sellers of early England.
Does anyone else here not know that a collier
is a *coalminer*, or not know when to use
an apostrophe, or answer his own post
more than once?
Most people DON'T know that the surname: Collier
is derived from coal sellers of early England. Serf-like
creatures who through the ages, have come to this
newsgroup and will be filled will ashes in own his mouth.
Ancestors who couldn't think of a clever enough name
for themselves, only to grab the title of being one that
sells coal. The Irish have to laugh!
> or not know when to use
> an apostrophe, or answer his own post
> more than once?
Leave it to an Englishman to DICK-tate how to
use the English language. The Irish and countless
others, namely those blasted colonials the Americans,
like to talk and speak and write differently from the
POMS like yourself Jim. Control Freak.
Don't worry, YOU WILL UNDERSTAND ME when I write.
>
> > On Aug 1, 7:16 am, Free Form <joe.sixpack.2...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > Collier derives it's name
> > > from the coal sellers of early England.
>
> > Does anyone else here not know that a collier
> > is a *coalminer*,
>
> Most people DON'T know that the surname: Collier
> is derived from coal sellers of early England.
(sigh) Behond what follows, I will not respond further to
this troll who writes with minimum knowledge
occasionally slipping in a hint that he is a school
dropout from a Commonwealth country.
A security guard at a place where I
once worked "patiently" explained to me that
the name is French. It is not. He was
from New England and his French Canadian
father had given him a French name and
he knew about this stuff, he assured me. Never
mind that I speak French fluently. (The name
shows up in French phone books, just as
French names are in English phone books. A
similarly spelled word in French is a choker
necklace and makes no sense as a surname.)
It was pointless arguing with him. That's why
he's a security guard.
The surname is taken from an occupation
as is common practice nearly worldwide and
the occupation is coalmining. The word is used on
every other page in D. H. Lawrence novels which
are set among the coal pits of Nottinghamshire and
Derbyshire. In the U.S., the noun is commonly
heard in coalming regions from Pennsylvania
to Kentucky. The so-called *early* English of the
poster's scanty knowledge on the other hand derived
their fuel from burning timber and in parts of
England, not to mention Ireland, from peat and
not from burning coal.
Any native speaker of English who
reads will know this common fact. People
who run on about things they don't know well
won't.
And the ancestors were English speaking Irish
Catholics on one side and Jews on the other.
> And the ancestors were English speaking Irish
> Catholics on one side and Jews on the other.
Jews?
I doubt that one, highly!
Jim.
1649: Oliver Cromwell obtains backing from the British
parliament for the execution of King Charles I on a charge
of treason. Afterwards, Cromwell permits the Jews to enter
England again, effectively reversing the Edict of Expulsion
issued by King Edward I in 1290, which expelled all Jews
forever from England and made the provision that any who
remained after November 1st 1290, were to be executed.
Indeed England is not the first country to expel the Jews.
Here is a partial list of all the areas from which the Jews
have been banished from, sometimes on numerous
occasions, over the last thousand years:
England - 1290
Mainz - 1012
France - 1182
Upper Bavaria - 1276
France - 1306
France -1322
Saxony, 1349
Hungary - 1360
Belgium - 1370
Solvakia - 1380
France - 1394
Austria - 1420
Cologne - 1424
Mainz - 1438
Augsburg - 1438
Upper Bavaria - 1442
Netherlands - 1444
Brandenburg - 1446
Mainz - 1462
Lithuania - 1495
Portugal - 1496
Naples - 1496
Navarre - 1498
Nuremberg - 1498
Brandenburg - 1510
Prussia - 1510
Genoa 1515
Naples - 1533
Italy - 1540
Naples 1541
Prague - 1541
Genoa - 1550
Bavaria - 1551
Prague - 1557
Papal States - 1569
Hungary - 1582
Hamburg- 1649
Vienna - 1669
Slovakia - 1744
I happen to be watching a great movie called:
The Pit And The Pendulum
Vincent Price,
1961
I like the music, even though it isn't period music from
the 1500's. I love the 1500's, so much happened.
A great movie, especially for Christine Crap
and Copie Copeland the professed "Roman Catholics"
with the Inquisitions and the torture chambers.
Copie and Witch-Craft are with that - the Roman Inquisition.
Torture
Torturing Bernie Ward - that would be Cope the evil little "man".
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