Methinks Bombay is not a city in Pakistan....LOL
Yup.
But technically it’s not a city in India either - Bombay’s name changed to Mumbai in the 90’s. Definitely a place to check out. All the flavours of India in a place home to 12-million. Then go to Goa as soon as you can.
But in sweetiepie’s defence, the food at Bombay Bhel is more Northern Indian, than Southern Indian. Tons of veg and (Halal) meat options with lots of heat if you want. So, I imagine both Indians and Pakistanis (and maybe Bangladeshi and Sinhalese and Tamils...) would find some tastes of home there. We used to cater from them at work, and I still get takeout from them if I’m in the area. Never been to this location.
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Here I go supporting Smallcock again... he didn’t call her out for being a racist. He called her out for using a “racial epithet” (he said this in #40 about her #39). If he implied she was intending to be offensive, that’s your read on it.
She then (seemingly mistakenly) tried to correct his English (“Methinks”) in #40, which though stale was entirely valid. In that post, she seemed to miss her own punctuation error, which I then tried to correct, in addition to defending Smallcock’s use of ‘methinks’ and his correct identification of the offensive word from her #39. I haven’t implied she was
trying to cause offence, but I absolutely assure everyone here ‘that P-word’ is not the harmless/neutral contraction to “Pakistani,” or at-least not in Canada or the UK anyways. Even the definition sweetiepie posted in #67 reminds us that it is indeed “offensive.”
We all make mistakes. Only some of us admit to them, it would seem.
There is no “context” in which the term wouldn’t be a pejorative term, a racial epithet and/or offensive, obviously unless you were literally talking about the offensive term itself.
Global News anchor Farrah Nasser explains the impact this word had on her as a child.
Or “
Why the term ‘Paki’ is and Always Will Be an Offensive.”
Back to the English lesson that nobody needs, “just deserts,” “eke out a living, “sleight of hand,” “to and fro,” and “in the lurch” are all pretty old-timey (read: archaic/of middle-English origin), but generally understood by most adults who attended high school English in this country. For a fun article on other ‘turns of phrase’ you probably use and don’t realize that you’re actually quoting Shakespeare,
check this Mentalfloss article out.
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Also, very glad to hear all 15 injured in the blast have now been released from hospital. No updates on the suspects, but the owners say they’ll be opening up again in the next few days.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/bombay-bhel-bomb-saturday-1.4679510
It seems a little strange to me that police still haven’t identified/released a possible motive for this one. It’s entirely speculative at this point, but I’m with whoever here hinted at organized crime.