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I thought you were a regular visitor to ZimA smack, in the fanny etc
I thought you were a regular visitor to ZimA smack, in the fanny etc
I heard the expression somewhere down there. Somewhere disreputable, probably. Vernacularity of the argot may account for a variation in interpretation. A different bit of anatomy would be highly likely...I thought you were a regular visitor to Zim
Was I right, or did I misunderemember?Mottie might know this one, in Southern Africa, what is a PK?
Possibly the descent stage of the LEM, 6 were left, 1 may have crashed on the moon.What are there SEVEN of, left deliberately on the moon??
half rightWas I right, or did I misunderemember?
I'm wondering if they adopted PK for a small kid - pickaninny.
If that's right,
What are there SEVEN of, left deliberately on the moon??
Laser reflectorshalf right
Whas the other half then?half right
That is what I was thinking. Where did you get that info, though, because it appears to be wrong?Laser reflectors
So what was the whole meaning?Kaya meaning house where the servants lived in the garden, small house, ie outside loo.
Piccanninni Kaya - small house- outside privySo what was the whole meaning?
I thought there was some basis to my memory so I spent a while, and found this:
Urban Dictionary: PoesKlap
A nasty and very effective smack upside the head. Afrikaans Origin and derived from Poes (vagina) Klap (smack)www.urbandictionary.com
Not sure of the number, I first heard it on an interview with a moon landing denier being asked to explain how they got thereThat is what I was thinking. Where did you get that info, though, because it appears to be wrong?
I heard it on a Sky At Night program, from the astronomer Maggie Aderin-Pockock.
She said 7.
She should be right, as she heads an optical instrumentation group at a co called Astrium.
The WIkipedia entry says there are 5 missions, but the first sentence could imply 7 if you read it quickly.
This article says there are FIVE, with one more on a llunar orbiter.
same as http://www.parabolicarc.com/2020/08/11/laser-beams-reflected-between-earth-and-moon-boost-science/Laser Beams Reflected Between Earth and Moon Boost Science - NASA
Dozens of times over the last decade NASA scientists have launched laser beams at a reflector the size of a paperback novel about 240,000 miles (385,000www.nasa.gov
A may-be-interesting article here https://www.space.com/lunar-laser-bounce.html
So I was wrong, cos she was wrong, so you can have it.
(Also, I can't find 7 of anything else to pretend was the answer)