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To: libertarianPA
McDonalds lost my business when their fries started tasting like cardboard. Burger King in East Tennessee are by in large pathetic and I’m being charitable. My last meal there included a Whopper {the only thing actually done right} a hamburger pouring out the sides with mustard and ketchup, half frozen fries, and a coke in which after drinking I found a dead fly in the cup. Wendy’s is where I go now for a burger or a mom and pop type grill. Special orders don’t make them come unglued and I’ve never got a burger that wasn’t fully cooked.

As for eating fast food Subway usually gets my money. The healthy side is a plus but to be honest a foot long Roast Beast on White made to order to me taste far better than anything the other fast food chains can produce. Wendy’s is second IMO in overall quality.

28 posted on 06/26/2007 12:47:11 PM PDT by cva66snipe (Kool Aid! The popular American favorite drink now Made In Mexico. Pro-Open Borders? Drink Up!)
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To: cva66snipe
McDonalds lost my business when their fries started tasting like cardboard.

Me too -- when they knuckled under to the health nuts and stopped making them in suet. Oooh, they used to be soooo good. And knuckling under only encourages them -- they're never satisfied!

33 posted on 06/26/2007 1:01:39 PM PDT by maryz
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To: cva66snipe

From Straightdope:

What is the origin of the phrase “by and large?” Why do Americans say something so completely inane? My sister has been agonizing over that one for years. (Well, maybe she hasn’t actually agonized over it, but she really wants to know.) —Robert Cook

SDSTAFF Dex replies:

Americans? Olivia Isil cites the BBC’s highly acclaimed screen adaptation of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, where Miss Bennet remarks on the betrothal of Mr. Wickham to the odious Miss King: “by and large, it was to be expected.”

The phrase “by and large” today means “generally speaking,” “mostly” or “on the whole.” The origin is nautical, and had a very precise meaning. It was an order to the man at the helm of a sailing ship, meaning to sail the ship slightly off the wind. A similar command was “full and by” which meant to “sail as close to the wind as it can go.”

The risk of sailing too close to the wind was the danger of being “taken aback” (when the sails press against the mast and progress halts.)

Thus, when a person doesn’t want to “sail” directly into a statement, “by and large” is a hedge, a phrase of circumspection, a way of saying that the statement is an imprecise generality.

Sources:
Olivia Isil, When a Loose Cannon Flogs a Dead Horse, There’s the Devil to Pay (seafaring words in everyday speech)
William and Mary Morris, Morris Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins
Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable


36 posted on 06/26/2007 1:15:32 PM PDT by Old Professer (The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, and writes again.)
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