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Joined: Aug 2000
Posts: 2,204
Pooh-Bah
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Pooh-Bah
Joined: Aug 2000
Posts: 2,204 |
This may be a time-and-usage thing. In the '40s and 50s, in Britain (London area) the term "crematory" was very common; these days, it is very rarely (possibly never) used here. Certainly, national news reports always use the second form so I don't think it is a North/South thing over here.
Second thoughts: [/b;ue] My guess would be that "crematorium" sounds rather more up-market - the Latinate ending adds "class" to the whole dreary proceedings.
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Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 1,156
old hand
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old hand
Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 1,156 |
We took a course about death in grade eleven. (Great subject for cheerful young teens, eh?) And I never heard anything but "crematorium".
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 5,400
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 5,400 |
Re:a large part of the wrapper leaves were grown in New England, where special barns limited the amount of sunshine, to make leaf grow slowly without prominent veins.
the barns were for curing the leaves..and the are a particular design with vented sides. (maybe one of the southern members knows the name for the siding.)
the acutal field were covered with gauze-- or something about that weight. heaver then netting or cheese cloth, white, the field were wrapped up like gifts! tops and sides!
They were all along the connecicut river valley, (now one big strip mall and Interstate 91) when i was a child, it was all tobacco. I suppose they grew along other river valleys, too.
Tobacco was also grown all along the Bronx river valley, and the Bronx Botanital gardens has an old mill that has been made into a food court.. its not an old flour mill, but a snuff mill.. to grind the local grown tobacco into snuff.
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Joined: Nov 2000
Posts: 819
old hand
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old hand
Joined: Nov 2000
Posts: 819 |
'condominiums' has entirely replaced the correct 'condominia', along with other similar horrors.
Condom - in - ium Sounds like a place where prophylactics are in use. Are these places brothels?
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 5,400
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 5,400 |
you mean you all don't just use condo's or co-op's?
i think 50% of all NY would have to guess that a condominia or even a condomimium is a the same as condo! same with coopperative apartments! many here are called "Mitchel-Lamma's" from a tax law that helped get them built.
and Geoff-- codnom are not an issue in NY condo's-- large percentage of NY condo's are the blue haired crowd!
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 2,605
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 2,605 |
From a real-estate point of view a condo and a co-op are very different things. In the former you own your unit; in the latter you are a shareholder in a corporation that owns the entire co-op building.
Thus only the former gives you an "ownership" directly akin to the classic ownership of separate plot of land, with established rules that have developed as to precisely what rights that "ownership" means.
[P.S. And an attorney will have much more work, and a much higher fee, for converting a building to co-op rather than to condo.]
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Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 322
enthusiast
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enthusiast
Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 322 |
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Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 2,605
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 2,605 |
boronia, my misread -- you're correct. Helen, sorry. Have edited.
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Joined: Mar 2000
Posts: 1,981
Pooh-Bah
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Pooh-Bah
Joined: Mar 2000
Posts: 1,981 |
We have neither condos or co-ops.
We have flats.
Estate agents sometimes sell apartments but we still call them flats. Some are leasehold (99yrs usually), effectively owner-occupied, with either an external landlord holding the freehold or a share in a separate company which owns the freehold. Some operate on a landlord-tenant basis with a private landlord, some are owned by the local authority and leased to tenants, some are owned by housing associations and leased to tenants.
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Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 6,296
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 6,296 |
Tangent alert!
We used to have a creamery here in Richmond. There was a huge statue of a big glass bottle of milk outside the creamery. Really nice place to have a sandwich. Now it's closed along with some of the other old-fashioned places that gave Richmond some sweetness: Mrs. Morton's Tea Room and the Miller & Rhodes Tea Room, which was very cool with tables covered with white linen table cloths and Eddie Weaver at the organ playing anything you could name.
Feeling a little nostalgic, World'sWaning
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