It just occurred to me that I've never seen any actual pie recipe that involves pineapple, either savoury or sweet.
Even the cakes using it are upside down...
It just occurred to me that I've never seen any actual pie recipe that involves pineapple, either savoury or sweet.
Now i want it to say "had to blow twice" instead of "Legend" under your nameThe one time I got pulled over was on the way back from a game in a nearby town, with some friends I'd given a lift. We were laughing very animatedly about the evening's events, and some lack of clarity as to which turning off the motorway I should use to get back to one friend's neighbourhood led to some somewhat erratic driving.
I hadn't been drinking that night (I don't drink) but my friends had, so it was a rather merry group that the officers found. I got out, answered some questions, failed to get a reading on the breathalyser the first time as I'd never used one before, and after finally providing a negative reading was allowed to move on, with a warning to be more careful.
"How did it go?" my friends asked as I drove off.
"It was a bit tricky. I had to blow twice."
I've never quite lived down that line.
Sorry, the English Teacher in me just has to comment here.I just realized that I say it "PIE-napple" rather than "PINE-apple."
It's all just so complicated!![]()
And a lot of (most?) native English speakers* put glottal stops at the front of words starting with vowels (eg, 'apple). Sometimes this also happens between vowels (eg, the 'apple versus the yapple), though that's pretty dependent on dialect, iirc.Sorry, the English Teacher in me just has to comment here.
Of course this is how you pronounce it. Vowels for volume, consonants for clarity. But, in English words, you always begin a syllable with a consonant sound. It's never Pot -ayt - o after all. It's Poh -Tay - To . Or Poh -Tah -To if you like. In words where you have two vowel sounds together, we add either a y (as in piano) or a w (as in going) between the two vowels.
/end pedantry.![]()