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Re: Words we no longer use
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Hey Elgin, ever hear Bobby Vinton's 'Sealed With A Kiss' ? http://www.lyricsdepot.com/bobby-vin...th-a-kiss.html |
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I thought there was both women's cologne and perfume. At least I remember that quandry when Christmas shopping years ago. They don't make it em like they used to!
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Mercury thermometers were mentioned. I remember getting mercury from them and at school and rolling it around in our hands. I guess that that explains a lot.
Elgin, can you explain why you have never heard of SWAK? |
Re: Words we no longer use
Audio Cassette: Music recorded onto magnetic ribbon enclosed in a plastic case.
Tape deck: Used to play audio cassettes. Boombox: What people used to carry on their shoulders in public, thinking they were cool. Streetcar: Electric trolleys (now called light rail trains). Five and Dime: A convenience store where everything cost either 5¢ or 10¢. (Adjusted for inflation, 5¢ in the 1910's is about $1.00 today) Pencil lead: The precursor to graphite. Milkman: The man that would exchange your empty glass milk bottles on your porch for full ones. Blue laws: When all businesses in Connecticut could not open on Sundays. (Although largely repealed, the sale of alcohol on Sundays in CT is still prohibited.) Tracking Adjustment: When your VHS tapes became all screwy, you needed this to fix it. Tin Lizzy: Slang for a Model T Ford. Motoring: When driving used to be pleasurable. Often associated with pre-Eisenhower Interstate highways, such as Route 66. Quote:
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And Art IV! Since I still have audio casettes and boom boxes in use at my house to play those audio casettes and a casette deck as part of my antiquated stereo system, I really don't think they count yet!!! I also have a cheap VCR and yes it has tracking adjustment on it as well! I'll give you the Five and Dime though, now it is definately the Dollar Store! |
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Hark! - an exclamation my grandmother would say to us kids if we were making too much noise when she was trying to talk on the phone (the big black one with a rotary dial which was part of the party line when I was a kid). It basically meant, "QUIET!" in that context, although it was also used to get our attention. As in, "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing".
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How about
Gee as in Gee Whiz! or Gee Whirlicers (dunno spelling on that one) |
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Oh how much I remember the joy or being four or five years old and figuring out that the "Tracking Adjustment" buttons on the VCR made the static go away. :yikes: Walkman: The original portable music player. Usually consisted of an audio cassette player and an AM/FM radio tuner, although later models substituted the cassettes for audio CDs. Almost entirely replaced by iPods in the middle of the '00s decade. And a few more I just thought of: Duck and Cover: Oh no, it's the flash! Quick, duck and cover! Fallout Shelter: Underground bunkers built in public buildings in the Cold War era from 1940s to the 1960s from fear of an nuclear bomb attack. |
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Wikipedia seems to agree....http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automobile_self_starter Then they started talking about when gas was .17$ a gallon. Quote:
-John |
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And John, gas was $0.24/gal when I was in school in the 70's. How about the Indian Head test pattern broadcast before TV stations started programming for the day. Followed by the National Anthem and station ID. Yes there was a time when TV stations were not on 24/7. For that matter, add 'horizontal hold'. "We control your horizontal and we control your vertical..." |
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