Omega Owners Forum

Chat Area => General Discussion Area => Topic started by: JamesV6CDX on 28 March 2018, 01:59:49

Title: Who has changed
Post by: JamesV6CDX on 28 March 2018, 01:59:49
The word Gudge0n.... to automatically be displayed as "wrist"  ::)
Title: Re: Who has changed
Post by: Varche on 28 March 2018, 08:18:28
Limp gudgeon
Title: Re: Who has changed
Post by: Varche on 28 March 2018, 08:19:31
Word censor developed AI?
Title: Re: Who has changed
Post by: Andy B on 28 March 2018, 08:50:00
The word Gudge0n.... to automatically be displayed as "wrist"  ::)

It was changed early doors on your original thread ...... presumably as a certain admin had always called them wrist pins instead of speaking English  :-X
Title: Re: Who has changed
Post by: deviator on 28 March 2018, 09:25:47
What's wrong with you? Works here

Gudgeon
Title: Re: Who has changed
Post by: Field Marshal Dr. Opti on 28 March 2018, 10:11:44
Always a wrist pin. Not what I typed. :-\

Always a Marathon bar.
Title: Re: Who has changed
Post by: Field Marshal Dr. Opti on 28 March 2018, 10:13:19
Gudgeon.
Title: Re: Who has changed
Post by: TheBoy on 28 March 2018, 10:31:56
Yes, its definitely inn the word censor, not sure why, although urban dictionary has a couple of quotes for it that were news to me ;D
Title: Re: Who has changed
Post by: aaronjb on 28 March 2018, 10:51:26
Yes, its definitely inn the word censor, not sure why, although urban dictionary has a couple of quotes for it that were news to me ;D

I presume because the use of the words "wrist pin" winds up a couple of members here who cry "But the British English word is, and always has been, Gud-geon!" ;D

I mean.. if I had control of the word censor, that's exactly the kind of stunt I'd pull.

Fortunately I don't ;D
Title: Re: Who has changed
Post by: Andy B on 28 March 2018, 21:22:07
Yes, its definitely inn the word censor, not sure why, although urban dictionary has a couple of quotes for it that were news to me ;D

I presume because the use of the words "wrist pin" winds up a couple of members here who cry "But the British English word is, and always has been, Gud-geon!" ;D

I mean.. if I had control of the word censor, that's exactly the kind of stunt I'd pull.

Fortunately I don't ;D

I guess that I'm included in that.  It was me that questioned James' original use if wrist pin. If there's a British word rather than a US word why shouldn't  we use it?
Title: Re: Who has changed
Post by: Doctor Gollum on 28 March 2018, 21:24:04
If wrist pin...  ::)

 :D
Title: Re: Who has changed
Post by: Nick W on 28 March 2018, 21:40:39
We don't hang bells on wrist pins.
As we're English, we use the original term - gudge0n-pin