offshore171
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- Oct 8, 2014
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Those who come from South Australia call it LAYGO.
I think they also throw in a hyphen in there somewhere
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Those who come from South Australia call it LAYGO.
It canes doesnt it.Well, at my place it was often called "OUCH!!!" when I left a few blocks on the floor
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Oh one of my pet peeves...and it's mostly Americans that do this!Just don't pluralise it, like the Americans do.
You build with Lego, not Legos.
That's a bit strange. It's obviously a brand as well as an adjective. So not 'always'.Oh one of my pet peeves...and it's mostly Americans that do this!
Lego themselves made an announcement about it:
You have Lego, you play with Lego. Lego have just released a batch of new sets on 1st June. My Lego collection goes back over 40yrs. I have a lot of Train and City Lego. I don't like Lego pieces scattered across the ground. There are quite good imitation Lego available nowadays. One can never have too much Lego.That's a bit strange. It's obviously a brand as well as an adjective. So not 'always'.
Well, I'm biased. Using this IPA pronunciation guide, to me it's been ['lɛɛgɔ] (though, the lazy ones, me included, usually replaced 'g' with 'k' because 'g' is rarely used in our language). There's a more correct way to way to show the long vowel but I don't know how to write it on the laptop. When speaking in English, you'd hear ['lɛgoʊ].That wasn't the question - it was how do you pronounce it and especially as a kid in the distant past
Indeed, I'm not great with grammar but I think of Lego is a "collective thing". Lego refers to the system or the collection of bits you have, not to an individual component.You have Lego, you play with Lego.
Another good example!Indeed, I'm not great with grammar but I think of Lego is a "collective thing". Lego refers to the system or the collection of bits you have, not to an individual component.
You play with Lego, but you have a piece of Lego or a Lego brick. Or you have multiple pieces of Lego or Lego bricks.
Like when you're welding bits of iron together, you have piece of iron or you're welding iron, you don't have "an iron" and you aren't welding "irons" together (unless it's for the purpose of flattening clothes of course).
Worse when someone here does it, and you know they've been infected with yet another plain-old-incorrect Americanism.The Lego vs Legos is one thing Americans do that bugs me (at least online, not necessarily in person).
And then there is Albany named after Lord Alba - but some say Al bany and some say All banySince Lego has been settled, time for an off topic tale.
Hobart ( Ho-bart) was named for the then Lord Hobart, back in the UK.
The Lords Hobart survive to this day and from time to a time, Lord Hobart visits Hobart.
Funny thing is, the Lords Hobart pronounce their name like 'Hob-bet'. He always gets asked what he thinks about the local pronunciation and has given to reply. "I’ve given up trying to correct people, now I accept it as a local dialect".
# oh, yes, cue the Hobbit jokes if you must
It's a busy town apparently!So, you have never spent much time in Adelaide, discussing this?