Isn't Housey what the girls used to refer to Horsham and, as I was given to understand by a visiting Horsham Latin Club, vice versa?but what's 'Housey'?

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Isn't Housey what the girls used to refer to Horsham and, as I was given to understand by a visiting Horsham Latin Club, vice versa?but what's 'Housey'?
I think you'll find it's a 'wallet of governors', but on special occasions (Royal visits and the like) I've heard it called a 'bank'...Alan P5age wrote: Not sure about "bunch" of governors though. A tedium is the collective term, I believe.
gma wrote:Isn't Housey what the girls used to refer to Horsham and, as I was given to understand by a visiting Horsham Latin Club, vice versa?but what's 'Housey'?
I agree with you englishangel. It has to be 'was' because 'a bunch' is singular, 'bunches' is the plural. You wouldn't say 'there WERE a bunch of grapes over there', you'd say 'there WAS a bunch'. Am I right or am I more confused than I thought I was?englishangel wrote:Josh you are drinking too much tea, I think it is affecting your English grammar.
I may be hoist by my own pedant here (O' Level English Grade C in 1970) but surely 'there WAS a bunch of governors'.
Grammatically no colloquially yes.Ajarn Philip wrote:That's a very interesting post, Alan - would you like to know the origin of the expression 'beyond the pale'? Well, it...![]()
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More relevantly (at the moment, though someone will undoubtedly complain that we're off topic without explaining what the topic is), can you say that the Spanish football team 'are' celebrating 'their' European Cup win?
well i dont know about the rest but i feel quite honoured that your chose to fill us in on it all first!Urgh-My-Pancreas wrote:
anyway, must go, mum wants me to tell her all about it!!!
xxx idgie xxx