• I am back.

    From Denis Mosko@2:5064/54.1315 to All on Fri Nov 20 04:08:02 2020
    I left Nagatino Thursday morning, flew to University campus via Voroncovskie Lakes and drove on down to Moscow-River. Now I acomputer running again. Whew what a couple of days...

    A kindly Universities gifted me with a tad over 3lbs of milk 3.2%, rump I'm guessing. Now I am waiting recommendations on how to cook it.

    So, if You were to cook it...what would You do?

    ... 200 degrees F = 100 degrees C
    --- GoldED+/W32-MINGW 1.1.5-b20120519 (Kubik 3.0)
    * Origin: Используйте посудомоечную машину при full загрузке. (2:5064/54.1315)
  • From Dallas Hinton@1:153/7715 to Denis Mosko on Thu Nov 19 21:18:04 2020
    Hi, Denis -- on Nov 20 2020 at 04:08, you wrote:

    ... 200 degrees F = 100 degrees C

    Um, no. 212 degrees F = 100 degrees C



    Cheers... Dallas

    --- timEd/NT 1.30+
    * Origin: The BandMaster, Vancouver, CANADA (1:153/7715)
  • From Alexander Koryagin@2:221/6 to Denis Mosko on Fri Nov 20 09:50:46 2020
    Hi, Denis Mosko - All!
    I read your message from 20.11.2020 05:08

    I left Nagatino Thursday morning, flew to University campus
    via Voroncovskie Lakes and drove on down to Moscow-River. Now I
    acomputer running again. Whew what a couple of days... A
    kindly Universities gifted me with a tad over 3lbs of milk
    3.2%, rump I'm ??guessing. Now I am waiting recommendations on
    how to cook it. So, if You were to cook it...what would You
    do? .. 200 degrees F = 100 degrees C

    Try sonapax. ;-)

    Bye, Denis Mosko -!
    Alexander Koryagin

    english_tutor 2020

    ---
    * Origin: nntp://news.fidonet.fi (2:221/6.0)
  • From Denis Mosko@2:5064/54.1315 to Dallas Hinton on Fri Nov 20 11:39:34 2020
    Um, no. 212 degrees F = 100 degrees C
    What is "Um", Dallas?

    --- GoldED+/W32-MINGW 1.1.5-b20120519 (Kubik 3.0)
    * Origin: Используйте посудомоечную машину при full загрузке. (2:5064/54.1315)
  • From Dallas Hinton@1:153/7715 to Denis Mosko on Fri Nov 20 08:11:59 2020
    Hi, Denis -- on Nov 20 2020 at 11:39, you wrote:

    Um, no. 212 degrees F = 100 degrees C
    What is "Um", Dallas?

    Technically, an interjection - a noise having no useful information. In this context, a polite way of saying "Hey, wait a minute!"


    Cheers... Dallas

    --- timEd/NT 1.30+
    * Origin: The BandMaster, Vancouver, CANADA (1:153/7715)
  • From Ardith Hinton@1:153/716 to Denis Mosko on Fri Nov 20 23:52:10 2020
    Hi, Denis! Recently you wrote in a message to All:

    A kindly Universities gifted me with a tad over
    3lbs of milk 3.2%, rump I'm guessing. Now I am
    waiting recommendations on how to cook it.

    So, if You were to cook it...what would You do?


    First, I wondered why Denis was measuring milk in pounds & why... since he seems to be reasonably knowledgeable about cooking... he'd be asking how to cook milk without saying how he was planning to use it.

    Second, I read the kludge lines. I saw that Denis was apparently practising English by rewording a message from another echo.

    Third, I consulted the source & saw that the original enquiry was about moose meat. That would explain the use of the word "rump".

    If Denis wants to know how to cook moose meat, that's a different question. There are deer in Eurasia which some authorities consider to be of the same species. But unless I hear he has been offered meat he doesn't know what to do with I'll regard this data as solely of academic interest.... :-Q




    --- timEd/386 1.10.y2k+
    * Origin: Wits' End, Vancouver CANADA (1:153/716)
  • From Denis Mosko@2:5064/54.1315 to Ardith Hinton on Sat Nov 21 14:35:12 2020
    Ardith!

    A kindly Universities gifted me with a tad over 3lbs of milk 3.2%,
    rump I am guessing. Now I'm waiting recommendations on how to cook
    it. So, if You were to cook it..what would You do?
    First, I wondered why Denis was measuring milk in pounds&why..since he seems to be reasonably knowledgeable about cooking..he'd be asking how
    to cook milk without saying how he was planning to use it.
    Very nice.

    Second, I read the kludge lines. I saw that Denis was apparently practising English by rewording a message from another echo.
    I'll give You a try next time I am feeling a big breakfast /& for dinner.

    Third, I consulted the source&saw that the original enquiry was about moose meat. That would explain the use of the word "rump".
    :-Й

    If Denis wants to know how to cook moose meat, that's a different question. There are deer in Eurasia which some authorities consider to
    be of the same species. But unless I hear he has been offered meat he doesn't know what to do with I'll regard this data as solely of
    academic interest.. :-Q
    Thanks!

    Denis

    ... If Barbie is so popular, why do You have to buy Her Friends?
    --- GoldED+/W32-MINGW 1.1.5-b20120519 (Kubik 3.0)
    * Origin: Используйте посудомоечную машину при full загрузке. (2:5064/54.1315)
  • From Ardith Hinton@1:153/716 to Denis Mosko on Sat Nov 28 13:56:45 2020
    Hi, Denis! Recently you wrote in a message to Ardith Hinton:

    I saw that Denis was apparently practising English
    by rewording a message from another echo.

    I'll give You a try next time

    I am feeling a big breakfast /& for dinner.
    | I am feeling I'd like a big breakfast &/or dinner.


    As long as you clearly identify what somebody else wrote... and keep it well separated from your own words... I don't have a problem with that. One difficulty I'm having here is that I'm not always sure which is which. Another is that if you change too many things the meaning is lost.

    You've been asking good questions in the COOKING echo & getting good answers. I would encourage you to keep doing that, because the folks there are undoubtedly more knowledgeable about cooking than I am. OTOH you will get more assistance with spelling & grammar in E_T because that's our specialty.... :-)




    --- timEd/386 1.10.y2k+
    * Origin: Wits' End, Vancouver CANADA (1:153/716)