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Kuwaiti-born Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is accused of masterminding the 11 September attacks on the United States.
A pronunciation I find hilarious is booey for buoy.
We also call the act of drunk driving "drinking and driving," which also makes it clear that you shouldn't drive if you've been drinking.
So what you want not do do is drive and drink.
And a dog walker is one who is walking while on the dog?
And a baby sitter is one who is sitting while on the baby?
To skate means to slide across. While not a normal usage by any means, I've a good feeling that "skate ice" does indeed make sense, though it's a crappy pairing.
Heh. That thread is hilarious -- I should really start visiting MeCha again. But you know where you said "I'm very much aware that everything I wrote about the date format is ethnocentric nonsense"? That was well said (and admirably self-aware), and it pretty much applies to everything else as well. The fact is (and I know this is very hard for people to accept), idioms don't make any sense. They don't. Why "hard up" for money? Why do "slow up" and "slow down" mean the same thing? Why do you park in a driveway and drive... oh, never mind. You get my point. We all accept our own idioms without a second thought, but when we hear somebody else's, we get all verklempt and want an explanation, by god. But all that's going on is that the Brits say "drink driving" and we say "drunk driving," and there's not really much else that can be said about it. For all I know, in Australia they might say "wombat driving" to mean the same thing, and we'd just have to accept it. (Warning, overloud sentence approaching:)
LANGUAGE ISN'T LOGICAL.
Th- th- that's all, folks!