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 tachitorres
 
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							| Policeman caught me doing ninety 
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							| When singing a song with some of my students I came across this sentences "Policeman caught me doing ninety" and I don �t know what it really means. Can anyone out there help me? Thanks a lot for your help and have a great day. |  17 Jan 2013      
					
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 douglas
 
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							| It means I was driving 90 miles per hour and a policeman stopped me for exceeding the speed limit.   90mph--is WAY over the speed limit in the USA and you can lose your license for driving that fast. |  17 Jan 2013     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| Douglas, you answered that like a man with experience!   Bruce  |  17 Jan 2013     
					
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 Jayho
 
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							| Or it could be 90kmh which is nowhere near as fast as 90mph but still is probably over the speed limit in most residential areas |  17 Jan 2013     
					
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 douglas
 
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							| >Bruce-Luckily I �ve never been caught at those speeds in the USA.  I �ve caught myself there, but luckily noticed on time (it happens when you �ve been driving the Autobahns for so many years and suddenly are crossing the desert somewhere in the good ole USA). |  17 Jan 2013     
					
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 libertybelle
 
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							| I bet it was kilometers! 
 They use both in the UK
 (miles and kilometers)
 
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 cunliffe
 
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							| I got caught (get this!) three consecutive mornings by the same new camera, doing 34 on a dual carriageway, with no one else around at 6.30 a.m. I was fined �60 a go and had 9 points on my licence. It is a disgrace in this country, just a way of raising extra tax. In terms of traffic controls and such like, we go by miles. |  17 Jan 2013     
					
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 douglas
 
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							| Being as how Bowling For Soup originated in Wichita Falls, Texas (my dad used to live there), I �m pretty sure they are referring to miles per hour in their song "No Hablo Ingles".   |  18 Jan 2013     
					
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 Jayho
 
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							| ... but, if they originally hail from just over the border, it could be kph ... No Hablo Ingles |  18 Jan 2013     
					
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 douglas
 
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							| ..but being typical "white boy" Americans, they very possibly don �t even know if a kilometer is more or less than a mile  .   <<Note: I am a "white boy" American--there is no racism intended here.>> |  18 Jan 2013     
					
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