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#21
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‘Multiple children’ hit by car after it mounted pavement outside school
On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 7:19:02 PM UTC, Tosspot wrote:
On 02/12/2019 20:08, Bod wrote: ‘Multiple children’ have reportedly been hit by a car outside a secondary school in Loughton, Essex. Emergency services were called to Willingale Road, close to Debden Park High School, at around 3.30pm on December 2. Essex Police have described the incident as a ‘serious collision’ and emphasised that road closures are now in place. https://metro.co.uk/2019/12/02/multi...9/?ito=cbshare Nobody died, just breathe in, relax. Named as Harley Watson, 12. |
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#22
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‘Multiple children’ hit by car after it mounted pavement outside school
On 03/12/2019 13:56, Bod wrote:
On 03/12/2019 13:41, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:55, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:52, MrCheerful wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:16, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:02, Simon Mason wrote: On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 7:19:02 PM UTC, Tosspot wrote: On 02/12/2019 20:08, Bod wrote: ‘Multiple children’ have reportedly been hit by a car outside a secondary school in Loughton, Essex. Emergency services were called to Willingale Road, close to Debden Park High School, at around 3.30pm on December 2. Essex Police have described the incident as a ‘serious collision’ and emphasised that road closures are now in place. https://metro.co.uk/2019/12/02/multi...9/?ito=cbshare Nobody died, just breathe in, relax. There is now a murder enguiry after the driver killed a child. There are FIVE injured as well. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ex-school.html Indeed. And this takes the matter rather outside the scope of being a road traffic accident. how many bicycles were involved? Â* Â* Any chance of you learning that sentences begin with a capital letter. ...or that questions end with a question mark? It was rhetorical. .... or (even) that rhetorical questions end with a question mark? |
#23
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‘Multiple children’ hit by car after it mounted pavement outside school
On 03/12/2019 14:22, JNugent wrote:
On 03/12/2019 13:56, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:41, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:55, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:52, MrCheerful wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:16, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:02, Simon Mason wrote: On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 7:19:02 PM UTC, Tosspot wrote: On 02/12/2019 20:08, Bod wrote: ‘Multiple children’ have reportedly been hit by a car outside a secondary school in Loughton, Essex. Emergency services were called to Willingale Road, close to Debden Park High School, at around 3.30pm on December 2. Essex Police have described the incident as a ‘serious collision’ and emphasised that road closures are now in place. https://metro.co.uk/2019/12/02/multi...9/?ito=cbshare Nobody died, just breathe in, relax. There is now a murder enguiry after the driver killed a child. There are FIVE injured as well. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ex-school.html Indeed. And this takes the matter rather outside the scope of being a road traffic accident. how many bicycles were involved? Â* Â* Any chance of you learning that sentences begin with a capital letter. ...or that questions end with a question mark? Â* Â*It was rhetorical. ... or (even) that rhetorical questions end with a question mark? A rhetorical question can end with ? or ! or a period. It seems counterintuitive, but that's the way English works. It's called a rhetorical question, and it can end in either a question mark or an exclamation point, and in dialogue you can sometimes even have a speaker's rhetorical question end in a period (1). ... No question about that.10 Jul 2009 Do Rhetorical Questions Need a Question Mark? | Grammar Girl https://www.quickanddirtytips.com › education › do-rhetorical-questions-nee... -- Bod |
#24
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‘Multiple children’ hit by car after it mounted pavement outside school
On 03/12/2019 14:26, Bod wrote:
On 03/12/2019 14:22, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:56, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:41, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:55, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:52, MrCheerful wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:16, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:02, Simon Mason wrote: On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 7:19:02 PM UTC, Tosspot wrote: On 02/12/2019 20:08, Bod wrote: ‘Multiple children’ have reportedly been hit by a car outside a secondary school in Loughton, Essex. Emergency services were called to Willingale Road, close to Debden Park High School, at around 3.30pm on December 2. Essex Police have described the incident as a ‘serious collision’ and emphasised that road closures are now in place. https://metro.co.uk/2019/12/02/multi...9/?ito=cbshare Nobody died, just breathe in, relax. There is now a murder enguiry after the driver killed a child. There are FIVE injured as well. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ex-school.html Indeed. And this takes the matter rather outside the scope of being a road traffic accident. how many bicycles were involved? Â* Â* Any chance of you learning that sentences begin with a capital letter. ...or that questions end with a question mark? Â* Â*It was rhetorical. ... or (even) that rhetorical questions end with a question mark? A rhetorical question can end with ?Â*Â* or !Â*Â*Â* or a period. It seems counterintuitive, but that's the way English works. It's called a rhetorical question, and it can end in either a question mark or an exclamation point, and in dialogue you can sometimes even have a speaker's rhetorical question end in a period (1). ... No question about that.10 Jul 2009 Do Rhetorical Questions Need a Question Mark? | Grammar Girl https://www.quickanddirtytips.com › education › do-rhetorical-questions-nee... A passage which ends with an exclamation mark is an exclamation*. Not that it matters all that much because your "rhetorical question" [sic] ended with a full stop. [* As I remember it, people were always "exclaiming" things in the Billy Bunter books. it seems to have fallen out of fashion now.] |
#25
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‘Multiple children’ hit by car after it mounted pavement outside school
On 03/12/2019 14:39, JNugent wrote:
On 03/12/2019 14:26, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:22, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:56, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:41, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:55, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:52, MrCheerful wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:16, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:02, Simon Mason wrote: On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 7:19:02 PM UTC, Tosspot wrote: On 02/12/2019 20:08, Bod wrote: ‘Multiple children’ have reportedly been hit by a car outside a secondary school in Loughton, Essex. Emergency services were called to Willingale Road, close to Debden Park High School, at around 3.30pm on December 2. Essex Police have described the incident as a ‘serious collision’ and emphasised that road closures are now in place. https://metro.co.uk/2019/12/02/multi...9/?ito=cbshare Nobody died, just breathe in, relax. There is now a murder enguiry after the driver killed a child. There are FIVE injured as well. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ex-school.html Indeed. And this takes the matter rather outside the scope of being a road traffic accident. how many bicycles were involved? Â* Â* Any chance of you learning that sentences begin with a capital letter. ...or that questions end with a question mark? Â* Â*It was rhetorical. ... or (even) that rhetorical questions end with a question mark? Â* Â* A rhetorical question can end with ?Â*Â* or !Â*Â*Â* or a period. It seems counterintuitive, but that's the way English works. It's called a rhetorical question, and it can end in either a question mark or an exclamation point, and in dialogue you can sometimes even have a speaker's rhetorical question end in a period (1). ... No question about that.10 Jul 2009 Do Rhetorical Questions Need a Question Mark? | Grammar Girl https://www.quickanddirtytips.com › education › do-rhetorical-questions-nee... A passage which ends with an exclamation mark is an exclamation*. Not that it matters all that much because your "rhetorical question" [sic] ended with a full stop. [* As I remember it, people were always "exclaiming" things in the Billy Bunter books. it seems to have fallen out of fashion now.] Anyway, it would be pointless inserting a question mark when conversing with Cheerless, because he never replies to me. -- Bod |
#26
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‘Multiple children’ hit by car after it mounted pavement outside school
On 03/12/2019 14:42, Bod wrote:
On 03/12/2019 14:39, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:26, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:22, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:56, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:41, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:55, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:52, MrCheerful wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:16, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:02, Simon Mason wrote: On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 7:19:02 PM UTC, Tosspot wrote: On 02/12/2019 20:08, Bod wrote: ‘Multiple children’ have reportedly been hit by a car outside a secondary school in Loughton, Essex. Emergency services were called to Willingale Road, close to Debden Park High School, at around 3.30pm on December 2. Essex Police have described the incident as a ‘serious collision’ and emphasised that road closures are now in place. https://metro.co.uk/2019/12/02/multi...9/?ito=cbshare Nobody died, just breathe in, relax. There is now a murder enguiry after the driver killed a child. There are FIVE injured as well. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ex-school.html Indeed. And this takes the matter rather outside the scope of being a road traffic accident. how many bicycles were involved? Â* Â* Any chance of you learning that sentences begin with a capital letter. ...or that questions end with a question mark? Â* Â*It was rhetorical. ... or (even) that rhetorical questions end with a question mark? Â* Â* A rhetorical question can end with ?Â*Â* or !Â*Â*Â* or a period. It seems counterintuitive, but that's the way English works. It's called a rhetorical question, and it can end in either a question mark or an exclamation point, and in dialogue you can sometimes even have a speaker's rhetorical question end in a period (1). ... No question about that.10 Jul 2009 Do Rhetorical Questions Need a Question Mark? | Grammar Girl https://www.quickanddirtytips.com › education › do-rhetorical-questions-nee... A passage which ends with an exclamation mark is an exclamation*. Not that it matters all that much because your "rhetorical question" [sic] ended with a full stop. [* As I remember it, people were always "exclaiming" things in the Billy Bunter books. it seems to have fallen out of fashion now.] Anyway, it would be pointless inserting a question mark when conversing with Cheerless, because he never replies to me. :-) |
#27
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‘Multiple children’ hit by car after it mounted pavement outside school
On 03/12/2019 14:44, JNugent wrote:
On 03/12/2019 14:42, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:39, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:26, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:22, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:56, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:41, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:55, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:52, MrCheerful wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:16, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:02, Simon Mason wrote: On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 7:19:02 PM UTC, Tosspot wrote: On 02/12/2019 20:08, Bod wrote: ‘Multiple children’ have reportedly been hit by a car outside a secondary school in Loughton, Essex. Emergency services were called to Willingale Road, close to Debden Park High School, at around 3.30pm on December 2. Essex Police have described the incident as a ‘serious collision’ and emphasised that road closures are now in place. https://metro.co.uk/2019/12/02/multi...9/?ito=cbshare Nobody died, just breathe in, relax. There is now a murder enguiry after the driver killed a child. There are FIVE injured as well. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ex-school.html Indeed. And this takes the matter rather outside the scope of being a road traffic accident. how many bicycles were involved? Â* Â* Any chance of you learning that sentences begin with a capital letter. ...or that questions end with a question mark? Â* Â*It was rhetorical. ... or (even) that rhetorical questions end with a question mark? Â* Â* A rhetorical question can end with ?Â*Â* or !Â*Â*Â* or a period. It seems counterintuitive, but that's the way English works. It's called a rhetorical question, and it can end in either a question mark or an exclamation point, and in dialogue you can sometimes even have a speaker's rhetorical question end in a period (1). ... No question about that.10 Jul 2009 Do Rhetorical Questions Need a Question Mark? | Grammar Girl https://www.quickanddirtytips.com › education › do-rhetorical-questions-nee... A passage which ends with an exclamation mark is an exclamation*. Not that it matters all that much because your "rhetorical question" [sic] ended with a full stop. [* As I remember it, people were always "exclaiming" things in the Billy Bunter books. it seems to have fallen out of fashion now.] Â* Â* Anyway, it would be pointless inserting a question mark when conversing with Cheerless, because he never replies to me. :-) I've just remembered: the other thing characters in the Billy Bunter books (and in the other school stories Pemberton wrote) were always doing was "ejaculating". If you haven't read them, you may think I'm kidding. But I'm not. [This post has been at least as on-topic as any reporting a motor-vehicle collision.] |
#28
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‘Multiple children’ hit by car after it mounted pavement outside school
On 03/12/2019 14:56, JNugent wrote:
On 03/12/2019 14:44, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:42, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:39, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:26, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:22, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:56, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:41, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:55, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:52, MrCheerful wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:16, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:02, Simon Mason wrote: On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 7:19:02 PM UTC, Tosspot wrote: On 02/12/2019 20:08, Bod wrote: ‘Multiple children’ have reportedly been hit by a car outside a secondary school in Loughton, Essex. Emergency services were called to Willingale Road, close to Debden Park High School, at around 3.30pm on December 2. Essex Police have described the incident as a ‘serious collision’ and emphasised that road closures are now in place. https://metro.co.uk/2019/12/02/multi...9/?ito=cbshare Nobody died, just breathe in, relax. There is now a murder enguiry after the driver killed a child. There are FIVE injured as well. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ex-school.html Indeed. And this takes the matter rather outside the scope of being a road traffic accident. how many bicycles were involved? Â* Â* Any chance of you learning that sentences begin with a capital letter. ...or that questions end with a question mark? Â* Â*It was rhetorical. ... or (even) that rhetorical questions end with a question mark? Â* Â* A rhetorical question can end with ?Â*Â* or !Â*Â*Â* or a period. It seems counterintuitive, but that's the way English works. It's called a rhetorical question, and it can end in either a question mark or an exclamation point, and in dialogue you can sometimes even have a speaker's rhetorical question end in a period (1). ... No question about that.10 Jul 2009 Do Rhetorical Questions Need a Question Mark? | Grammar Girl https://www.quickanddirtytips.com › education › do-rhetorical-questions-nee... A passage which ends with an exclamation mark is an exclamation*. Not that it matters all that much because your "rhetorical question" [sic] ended with a full stop. [* As I remember it, people were always "exclaiming" things in the Billy Bunter books. it seems to have fallen out of fashion now.] Â* Â* Anyway, it would be pointless inserting a question mark when conversing with Cheerless, because he never replies to me. :-) I've just remembered: the other thing characters in the Billy Bunter books (and in the other school stories Pemberton wrote) were always doing was "ejaculating". If you haven't read them, you may think I'm kidding. But I'm not. [This post has been at least as on-topic as any reporting a motor-vehicle collision.] Was he ejaculating during social intercourse? :-) -- Bod |
#29
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‘Multiple children’ hit by car after it mounted pavement outside school
On 03/12/2019 15:09, Bod wrote:
On 03/12/2019 14:56, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:44, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:42, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:39, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:26, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:22, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:56, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:41, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:55, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:52, MrCheerful wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:16, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:02, Simon Mason wrote: On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 7:19:02 PM UTC, Tosspot wrote: On 02/12/2019 20:08, Bod wrote: ‘Multiple children’ have reportedly been hit by a car outside a secondary school in Loughton, Essex. Emergency services were called to Willingale Road, close to Debden Park High School, at around 3.30pm on December 2. Essex Police have described the incident as a ‘serious collision’ and emphasised that road closures are now in place. https://metro.co.uk/2019/12/02/multi...9/?ito=cbshare Nobody died, just breathe in, relax. There is now a murder enguiry after the driver killed a child. There are FIVE injured as well. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ex-school.html Indeed. And this takes the matter rather outside the scope of being a road traffic accident. how many bicycles were involved? Â* Â* Any chance of you learning that sentences begin with a capital letter. ...or that questions end with a question mark? Â* Â*It was rhetorical. ... or (even) that rhetorical questions end with a question mark? Â* Â* A rhetorical question can end with ?Â*Â* or !Â*Â*Â* or a period. It seems counterintuitive, but that's the way English works. It's called a rhetorical question, and it can end in either a question mark or an exclamation point, and in dialogue you can sometimes even have a speaker's rhetorical question end in a period (1). ... No question about that.10 Jul 2009 Do Rhetorical Questions Need a Question Mark? | Grammar Girl https://www.quickanddirtytips.com › education › do-rhetorical-questions-nee... A passage which ends with an exclamation mark is an exclamation*. Not that it matters all that much because your "rhetorical question" [sic] ended with a full stop. [* As I remember it, people were always "exclaiming" things in the Billy Bunter books. it seems to have fallen out of fashion now.] Â* Â* Anyway, it would be pointless inserting a question mark when conversing with Cheerless, because he never replies to me. :-) I've just remembered: the other thing characters in the Billy Bunter books (and in the other school stories Pemberton wrote) were always doing was "ejaculating". If you haven't read them, you may think I'm kidding. But I'm not. [This post has been at least as on-topic as any reporting a motor-vehicle collision.] Was he ejaculating during social intercourse? :-) As I recall, they always were (there were more than one at it). |
#30
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‘Multiple children’ hit by car after it mounted pavement outside school
On 03/12/2019 15:12, JNugent wrote:
On 03/12/2019 15:09, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:56, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:44, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:42, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:39, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:26, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 14:22, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:56, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 13:41, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:55, Bod wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:52, MrCheerful wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:16, JNugent wrote: On 03/12/2019 12:02, Simon Mason wrote: On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 7:19:02 PM UTC, Tosspot wrote: On 02/12/2019 20:08, Bod wrote: ‘Multiple children’ have reportedly been hit by a car outside a secondary school in Loughton, Essex. Emergency services were called to Willingale Road, close to Debden Park High School, at around 3.30pm on December 2. Essex Police have described the incident as a ‘serious collision’ and emphasised that road closures are now in place. https://metro.co.uk/2019/12/02/multi...9/?ito=cbshare Nobody died, just breathe in, relax. There is now a murder enguiry after the driver killed a child. There are FIVE injured as well. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ex-school.html Indeed. And this takes the matter rather outside the scope of being a road traffic accident. how many bicycles were involved? Â* Â* Any chance of you learning that sentences begin with a capital letter. ...or that questions end with a question mark? Â* Â*It was rhetorical. ... or (even) that rhetorical questions end with a question mark? Â* Â* A rhetorical question can end with ?Â*Â* or !Â*Â*Â* or a period. It seems counterintuitive, but that's the way English works. It's called a rhetorical question, and it can end in either a question mark or an exclamation point, and in dialogue you can sometimes even have a speaker's rhetorical question end in a period (1). ... No question about that.10 Jul 2009 Do Rhetorical Questions Need a Question Mark? | Grammar Girl https://www.quickanddirtytips.com › education › do-rhetorical-questions-nee... A passage which ends with an exclamation mark is an exclamation*. Not that it matters all that much because your "rhetorical question" [sic] ended with a full stop. [* As I remember it, people were always "exclaiming" things in the Billy Bunter books. it seems to have fallen out of fashion now.] Â* Â* Anyway, it would be pointless inserting a question mark when conversing with Cheerless, because he never replies to me. :-) I've just remembered: the other thing characters in the Billy Bunter books (and in the other school stories Pemberton wrote) were always doing was "ejaculating". If you haven't read them, you may think I'm kidding. But I'm not. [This post has been at least as on-topic as any reporting a motor-vehicle collision.] Â* Â* Was he ejaculating during social intercourse? :-) As I recall, they always were (there were more than one at it). Ooh-er! -- Bod |
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