Ed
4.7K posts

Ed
@Premphoto
Betting on horses and sports - mainly football - to earn a living
whenever, wherever Katılım Ağustos 2009
403 Takip Edilen195 Takipçiler

@groovedodger1 @BigBearF1 Loads of kids with broken wrists, and also used as a bolas 😂
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Who is the lead female singer on #theassembly she has a great vocal range. I wish they would release an album of their covers
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@StevePop78 Sorry for your loss and as a Newcastle fan I hope you get the right outcome. Profits before true fans is happening all too often
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40 YEARS COUNT FOR NOTHING SAFC. I can't believe the way my family have been treated regarding our season tickets, as season ticket holder for last 20-years and hardly missing a home match the last 40-years I have been refused a new season ticket as I want to move from 76 yards to general admission. 2 years ago we moved into the black cats bar as my dad had mobility issues and struggled getting into his seat, we reluctantly agreed to stay when changing to the 76 yards as we new it would be my dad's last season, with help from family/friends we managed to absorb the astonishing price increase from £850 to around £2300. Unfortunately my dad joined the Heaven Branch in February. As we are/we're season ticket holders we presumed we would just move seat next season. When we informed the club we would like to move back to general admission we were told we would have to join the waiting list which had already Been accepting people for 3 weeks. I reached out further to club liason officers and they agreed I had a special case and would review this week's ago, with no reply from latest emails I was loosing hope and have just received a phone call from ticket office to say they have refused my request. After supporting our club through some of the darkest days especially the last 10 years I have now been brushed to one side as they have enough demand to fill the place without my family. Thank you very much SAFC @CWaters_SAF
@SunderlandAFC @RedAndWhite2017 @RokerReport @ALS_Fanzine @Phil__Smith @SunderlandEcho @TheDiddyman1 @Capt_Fishpaste @SkySports_Keith @Tweed_Barnesy @BlcSafc @ConnorBromley @mickylough95 @TheWearsiders
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Here’s a link to the @MENnewsdesk article by @diannebourne. 2 nights at @GarrickTweet are SOLD OUT, so I’ve added an extra night. Still some tickets for Buxton, Shrewsbury, Lytham and Southport: manchestereveningnews.co.uk/whats-on/comed…
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@RacingPost 4..Starts farcical. Lack of watering that stuffed a few anteposts
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@The_HorseGuru In the words of Richard Baerlein, now is the time to bet like men.
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@robscott121114 I used to get 50. Now I'm severely restricted on what I can bet with them and get no offers
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🥕 How the naming difference developed
1. Scotland historically used “turnip” for both vegetables
Older Scots tended to use turnip as a general word for round root vegetables. A Scottish food writer notes that people “over a certain age” still treat the names as interchangeable, with colour being the only distinction rather than species.
2. The swede became the dominant “turnip” in Scottish cooking
Swedes grow extremely well in Scotland’s cold, damp climate and became the standard root vegetable for winter dishes. They are hardy, frost‑tolerant, and easy to store, so they became the everyday “turnip” by default.
3. The English naming system is the opposite
In England:
Swede = the big, purple‑skinned, yellow‑fleshed vegetable
Turnip = the smaller, white‑fleshed one
In Scotland, the big yellow one is the everyday “turnip,” and the smaller white one is rarely used, so the distinction never stuck.
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