Have you been partying again?
Wha...? Who...Me?
What do you mean:
"Again"?
also --- in the states the "nest" part is pronounced like a bird nest. I think at least in England that part is pronounced with a long E sound.
I would've thought it would be pronounced "th" like in "teeth". "A Nestea-all-o-jist" sounds weird.
I think in Canada it's "Anesthetist" as well. I'd ask my brother, he's a nurse and should know, but ... it's 3am there and his shift ended at 11pm.
So since we're yabbering (yammering?) about language, I have a question:
Does anybody here know approximately when "disembark" from an aircraft became "de-plane"?
It's a few decades ago at least, I think. I vaguely recall when I first heard a flight-attendent announcement with "de-plane", I thought "Thas th' stoopedist ting Oye evah hoid!"
It's been a while since I did a cruise-ship gig, but when you disembark, ehhh sorry... when you leave — do you "de-ship", "de-boat" or "de-float?"
Excuse me, I have to de-house and drive to the local shop where I will then de-car... I'm still short a couple oddball bits for a build, so I guess you could say I'm de-parting.