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		Grammar and Linguistics > Whip Round     
			
		 Whip Round 
		
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 douglas
 
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							| Whip Round 
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							|  Hi All,   Just an interesting tidbit I stumbled upon while browsing the BBC News site this morning:   I found a term I had never heard before: Whip Round   For BE speakers, you probably all know the term, for AE speakers, we use a completely different term: passing the hat   Some info on it�s origin: https://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/whip-round.html    ( I guess this would have been a great WOD entry, but I would probably forget it by the time I ever had the chance to use it.)   Have a great weekend, Douglas |  27 Sep 2019      
					
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 maryse pey�
 
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							| Ah Ah ! Here�s our superhero Douglas ! Interesting things to be dealt with so !   And after the Whip Round let�s consider the Square Dance ! And what about the Triangle of the Bermuda ?   Sorry, I couldn�t help associating "geometrical" ideas.   As you said on another post this site is wonderful and makes us reflect and discover new things ! That�s what I call a very good day, indeed !   Thanks Douglas and, please, stay yourself ! You are a boss !   Hugs.   Maryse. ;) ;) ;) |  27 Sep 2019     
					
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 spinney
 
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							| Thank you, Douglas! I was thinking of doing another worksheet on idioms to do with money. I�m pretty sure I didn�t use this one last time, and I definitely did not know the origin. Of course, there is another expression which both sides of the Atlantic can use with confidence, "to start a kitty." All kinds of humourous possibilities with a word like that.   |  27 Sep 2019     
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| When I saw that heading, I wondered who the whip round was for!  I usually put a fiver in the kitty on such occasions. |  27 Sep 2019     
					
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 Aisha77
 
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							| You Americans speak closer to Spanish, I can tell by the idioms and the constructions and the dialect, probably due to the influence of the Latin community...  :)   |  27 Sep 2019     
					
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 Engteachar
 
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							| In Argentina we use a phrase "hacer una vaquita", which translated into English would be "make a little cow"... hahahaha... interesting!! |  29 Sep 2019     
					
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