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Pooh-Bah
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The cops wouldn’t help him because he was a fair –NYPD Blue
I can't provide further context but by chance does this ring a bell with anyone
As I wish to improve the clarity of my threads, my question is not what is meant by "fair," but wheteher you understand what the above two paragraphs are attempting to elicit and if not why not--thanks all
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Carpal Tunnel
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It's déjà vu all over again.
Ceci n'est pas un seing.
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Pooh-Bah
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Oops, forgive an old curmudgeon at the onset of Alzheimer's
Still, the question is different this time
Last edited by dalehileman; 11/12/06 04:08 PM.
dalehileman
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Dear Dalehileman, think of it as Walzheimer always, just a positve perspective. The incredible lightness of being.I have all the good reasons to sympathize with you. (and don't know the answer anyway)
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addict
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Dale, My problem with the above post and the discussions that followed it on this board and other(s) has to do with "I can't provide further context". From this. we had no way of judging source or the accuracy of the quote. You could have overheard it at the water cooler, copied it from IMDB, or read it out of a transcript. The context in which you found the quote is often as important to solving the mystery as the context OF the quote.
Eventually, on WW, you admitted that you got the quote from watching the episode yourself but you don't remember a single detail or even generality about the program other than this supposedly "exact" quote. Yet when people had earlier suggested fare and fairy, you were resistent to the possiblity of a misquote.
I am now going to suggest that, for all you know, the poor guy could have been "afire".
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Quote:
Dale, I am now going to suggest that, for all you know, the poor guy could have been "afire".
I'm following this mystery and I'm puzzled. If the man would be afire wouldn't it say "could not help in stead of "would not"? I can imagine they could not help someone "afire", but would not help? Wouldn't you help someone who is afire? (if it means what I think it means). Or is afire not the same thing as on fire? ('-')?
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I stand by what I said in the original thread. notice the word "wouldn't". it implies they could, if they wanted to.
formerly known as etaoin...
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Yes, but now the issue is whether the poor man is on fire or not.A new suggestion by Mirydon.(Myridon?)Changes the case. I would say a burning emergency. Fair or afire or a burning friar? Dale, I love your stubbornness on the subject. Really.
Or maybe it was the colour of the uniform. Yes! the NYPD wore a fair blue uniform and it should have been dark blue.
Last edited by BranShea; 11/13/06 06:07 PM.
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they WOULDN'T help him because he was on fire? I doubt that. the word used was fair, and it is a derogatory word for homosexual. a little digging came up with this: Quote:
fair (adj.) O.E. fæger "beautiful, pleasant," from P.Gmc. *fagraz (cf. O.N. fagr, O.H.G. fagar "beautiful," Goth. fagrs "fit"), from PIE *fag-. The meaning in ref. to weather (c.1205) preserves the original sense (opposed to foul). Sense of "light complexioned" (1551) reflects tastes in beauty; sense of "free from bias" (c.1340) evolved from another early meaning, "morally pure, unblemished" (c.1175). The sporting senses (fair ball, fair catch etc.) began in 1856. Fair play is from 1595; fair and square is from 1604. Fair-haired in the fig. sense of "darling, favorite" is from 1909. Fairly in the sense of "somewhat" is from 1805; it earlier meant "totally." Fairway (1584) originally meant "navigational channel of a river;" golfing sense is from 1910. First record of fair-weather friends is from 1736.
I can't get to the Urban Dictionary from school, but did you try there, dale?
Last edited by etaoin; 11/13/06 06:39 PM.
formerly known as etaoin...
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Yes I know that, but did you or did you not read Myridon's post? The fair = gay thing was all discussed in the original thread. But the context is gone and wel: see higher up.... I simply followed Myridon's suggestion and remarked that that could not be the case as no one would let someone burn unless they could not help. (!**!)
Of course the uniform colour is a random remark and well, this mystery will go into the unsolved cases' file, I'm afraid. We tried...
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