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Message board > Members' Opinion Polls > Members' poll: What is/was your favourite VIII 
  

What is/was your favourite VIII
Everyone has a favourite boat, past or present.
BP1  26%
Denys Lawrence  12%
BP2  21%
Margot  3%
BP3 [Karlische]  18%
BP4 [Aylings]  0%
BP5 [the wooden thing]  6%
Peter Brandt  9%
Titan  0%
Conqueror  3%
Fair Maid of Kent  0%
Henry  3%
Total: 34 members' votes
by Setting someone up for a punchline... - Sun 16th Oct 2005, 5:12pm
Where's Magpie and Stump?
by Eton Boy - Sun 16th Oct 2005, 5:48pm
What about Chiswick? (I fear Queen's would be a little too obscure...)
by sat - Sun 16th Oct 2005, 7:17pm
Where is Mary Tudor?
by Tom C - Sun 16th Oct 2005, 11:13pm
sat said: Where is Mary Tudor?
in your ass
by jmg - Mon 17th Oct 2005, 9:04am
Eton Boy said: What about Chiswick?
Ravens?
by jpd - Mon 17th Oct 2005, 9:15am
Scylla & Charybdis?
by Turning into a nautical version of Mornington Crescent - Mon 17th Oct 2005, 9:27am
jmg said: Ravens?
Trowlock Island
by jpd - Mon 17th Oct 2005, 9:31am
Lagoon Nebula?
by Simon - Mon 17th Oct 2005, 9:47am
Richmond draw-off?
by Ingers - Mon 17th Oct 2005, 8:32pm
jmg said: Ravens?
But that's not an Ait, it's an "Ayitie".
by jpd - Tue 18th Oct 2005, 8:29am
Ingers said: But that's not an Ait, it's an "Ayitie".
I think you're mistaken (unless there's a joke there that I missed).
by mjb - Tue 18th Oct 2005, 8:56am
jpd said: (unless there's a joke there that I missed).
I was under the impression that although it was spelled "ait", it was pronounced "Ay-Eye-Tee"
by Simon - Tue 18th Oct 2005, 5:05pm
jpd said: (unless there's a joke there that I missed).
I think, like Eyot, Buoy, Chiswick, Grosvenor and Loughborough, it's a word which non-natives struggle to pronounce.
by sat - Tue 18th Oct 2005, 6:31pm
Simon said: I think, like Eyot, Buoy, Chiswick, Grosvenor and Loughborough, it's a word which non-natives struggle to pronounce.
And not forgetting Hartlepool.
by gf - Tue 18th Oct 2005, 6:38pm
Simon said: I think, like Eyot, Buoy, Chiswick, Grosvenor and Loughborough, it's a word which non-natives struggle to pronounce.
Indeed, but the original inversion (as per Matt's comment above) was made by a native in trying to explain the word.
by jmg - Tue 18th Oct 2005, 7:45pm
gf said: Indeed, but the original inversion was made by a native in trying to explain the word.
guilty. I was young...
by provocateur - Thu 20th Oct 2005, 5:30pm
Simon said: Buoy
Everybody on this island struggles to pronounce this word.
by jpd - Thu 20th Oct 2005, 5:55pm
provocateur said: Everybody on this island struggles to pronounce this word.
Using your own argument from previous language debates - common usage dictates that the word is pronounced "boi" in this country; since everybody here understands that it's part of our language (which is called English).

Anyway, the word has origins in the Old French word "boue" (not mud - it's "bouée" in modern French) - I'm quite happy to distance myself from that by altering its pronounciation.
by Dubya - Thu 20th Oct 2005, 8:13pm
jpd said: Using your own argument from previous language debates - common usage dictates that the word is pronounced "boi" in this country; since everybody here understands that it's part of our language (which is called English).
I don't think the English should have control of the English language any more. Clearly a UN agency should take over. Kofi could employ more of his family!
by Wood is good - Thu 20th Oct 2005, 10:50pm
BP3 [Karlische]: 18%
Clearly 82% of you never had the privilege of rowing in her before she was allowed to fall into her current state of disrepair.
by James - Fri 21st Oct 2005, 12:29am
Wood is good said: Clearly 82% of you never had the privilege of rowing in her before she was allowed to fall into her current state of disrepair.
This member of the 82% got to row in her for all of four strokes before she crashed into a houseboat... so if by disrepair you mean "state of totally crapitude due to bow's nonexistence" then perhaps you are correct.
by Simon - Mon 24th Oct 2005, 11:23pm
James said: "due to bow's nonexistence"
Ah, but you only knocked off an earlier repair. Apparently the boat's never been the same since, although I struggle to believe that it's entirely due to the repairs to a part of the boat which is not normally in the water.
by Richard - Tue 25th Oct 2005, 12:11am
Simon, do you mean repairs due to this incident?

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