Hey foreign guys...Yankee question
- Frogman Ladue
- Posts: 479
- Joined: 06 Apr 2014, 00:22
- Location: USA, Ohio
Re: Hey foreign guys...Yankee question
What is VAT?
Re: Hey foreign guys...Yankee question
Value added tax ................ another rip off. 20% added to everything you buy (most things, but some are exempt) and they wonder why the black market thrives over here 
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Re: Hey foreign guys...Yankee question
Basically sales tax at every level of the economy, not just retail.
Re: Hey foreign guys...Yankee question
Good news is it doesn't apply to exports. So my Photon Extreme adapters should be cheaper delivered in OZ than in the UK.
- Frogman Ladue
- Posts: 479
- Joined: 06 Apr 2014, 00:22
- Location: USA, Ohio
Re: Hey foreign guys...Yankee question
Explain "sod's law".
-
CustomRifleScopesUK
Re: Hey foreign guys...Yankee question
The law of sod is, If you think it's going to happen it will happen !
Re: Hey foreign guys...Yankee question
Murphy's law squared.
Re: Hey foreign guys...Yankee question
What does the American phrase 'Take a raincheck on that' mean? I noticed it crept into a certain Yorkshire based soap a while back but they soon put a stop to it.
The early bird may get the worm, but it's the second mouse that gets the cheese.
Re: Hey foreign guys...Yankee question
From the "drive in" movies i think.......frogman?
- Frogman Ladue
- Posts: 479
- Joined: 06 Apr 2014, 00:22
- Location: USA, Ohio
Re: Hey foreign guys...Yankee question
I get it...Sod's Law = Murphy's Law. "If anything can go wrong, it will."
The word "Raincheck" is antiquated. I haven't heard that word since the early 1980's.
Say went to the gun store. Gun store is holding a sale on .223 Sakos at 200quid a unit. Sale runs all week. Store runs out of guns on Thursday. You come in Friday and want a gun. Store is out of stock. You say "ill take a raincheck on that". Store would offer you a "Raincheck". A piece of paper that says, whenever the store gets more .223 Sakos back in, they'll sell you one at this week's sale price.
Back in the day, a Raincheck meant something. There was an agreement between the buyer and the seller. Beit, an Implied Contract, or Implied Handshake deal.
Selling practices and false advertisement are a big thing in the US.
As time went on, retailers got shady in selling practices. For example....same thing again at the gun store, same deal, week long sale. Gun store only has 3x .223 Sakos to sell. They run out at noon on Monday. Sale lasts all week. 100 folks come in the store between Tuesday and Friday wanting a .223 Sako for only 200quid. Store offers a Raincheck. Store never orders .223 Sakos again. But, they got 100 folks to enter the store, buy a box of ammo or beef jerky, and gave them a piece of paper (Raincheck) that is worth nothing. Sooner or later the public got wise to being offered a Raincheck on a sale...the public finally realized that he retailers were never going to reorder whatever product they offered a Raincheck on. It got to the point that when a saleperson offered you a rain check, the public equated the offer as the salesman telling you to "f@#ck yourself" while being professional and maintaining a friendly smile. In time, no one wanted Rainchecks anymore. No one wanted to put up with the shady selling practices. So 'Muricans did what 'Muricans do...said "f@#$ck you" sued a bunch of stores, cried to the president,...president says "f@#$ck you stores" laws were passed, no more shady selling,...Raincheck is now beyond "dead"...the public wants to forget about the entire concept.
Now those that remember Rainchecks or the slang term "I'll take a Raincheck on that" equated the term with a tongue-in-cheek, polite alternative of telling someone to go "f@#$ck" themselves.
For example...used contextually and correctly;
Brooksy, say you're sitting down at the corner pub, drinking a pint, watching the foote-bole` on the telly. rodp comes in, sits down on the end. He orders a pint. After a while, he starts blowing you kisses, and winks at you. He says from across the bar, "You look pretty, like one of my sheep. What say we go to the loo and cuddle a bit?"... ...If this was 1988-or-you are over the age of 60 a polite retort for rodp's gracious offer would be "I'll take a raincheck on that!"
With the Yorkshire soap, I can only fathom two meanings on the phrase.
A.) The soap is so good, that it sells out regularly. "I'll take a raincheck on that"...because it's so good, I want it when ever the retailer receives more from the soap company.
B.) "Yorkshire Soap" "F@#$ck You!"
What does the American phrase 'Take a raincheck on that' mean? I noticed it crept into a certain Yorkshire based soap a while back but they soon put a stop to it.
The word "Raincheck" is antiquated. I haven't heard that word since the early 1980's.
Say went to the gun store. Gun store is holding a sale on .223 Sakos at 200quid a unit. Sale runs all week. Store runs out of guns on Thursday. You come in Friday and want a gun. Store is out of stock. You say "ill take a raincheck on that". Store would offer you a "Raincheck". A piece of paper that says, whenever the store gets more .223 Sakos back in, they'll sell you one at this week's sale price.
Back in the day, a Raincheck meant something. There was an agreement between the buyer and the seller. Beit, an Implied Contract, or Implied Handshake deal.
Selling practices and false advertisement are a big thing in the US.
As time went on, retailers got shady in selling practices. For example....same thing again at the gun store, same deal, week long sale. Gun store only has 3x .223 Sakos to sell. They run out at noon on Monday. Sale lasts all week. 100 folks come in the store between Tuesday and Friday wanting a .223 Sako for only 200quid. Store offers a Raincheck. Store never orders .223 Sakos again. But, they got 100 folks to enter the store, buy a box of ammo or beef jerky, and gave them a piece of paper (Raincheck) that is worth nothing. Sooner or later the public got wise to being offered a Raincheck on a sale...the public finally realized that he retailers were never going to reorder whatever product they offered a Raincheck on. It got to the point that when a saleperson offered you a rain check, the public equated the offer as the salesman telling you to "f@#ck yourself" while being professional and maintaining a friendly smile. In time, no one wanted Rainchecks anymore. No one wanted to put up with the shady selling practices. So 'Muricans did what 'Muricans do...said "f@#$ck you" sued a bunch of stores, cried to the president,...president says "f@#$ck you stores" laws were passed, no more shady selling,...Raincheck is now beyond "dead"...the public wants to forget about the entire concept.
Now those that remember Rainchecks or the slang term "I'll take a Raincheck on that" equated the term with a tongue-in-cheek, polite alternative of telling someone to go "f@#$ck" themselves.
For example...used contextually and correctly;
Brooksy, say you're sitting down at the corner pub, drinking a pint, watching the foote-bole` on the telly. rodp comes in, sits down on the end. He orders a pint. After a while, he starts blowing you kisses, and winks at you. He says from across the bar, "You look pretty, like one of my sheep. What say we go to the loo and cuddle a bit?"... ...If this was 1988-or-you are over the age of 60 a polite retort for rodp's gracious offer would be "I'll take a raincheck on that!"
With the Yorkshire soap, I can only fathom two meanings on the phrase.
A.) The soap is so good, that it sells out regularly. "I'll take a raincheck on that"...because it's so good, I want it when ever the retailer receives more from the soap company.
B.) "Yorkshire Soap" "F@#$ck You!"

















