| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 983.1 |  | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Thu Jul 02 1992 03:26 | 12 | 
|  |     G'day,
     I've certainly heard such phraseology....
    
    If Sir would care to walk this way......
    
    
    (reply under breath - If I could walk that way I wouldn't need the talcum
    powder")
    
    
    
    dj
 | 
| 983.2 | dated | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Thu Jul 02 1992 04:38 | 8 | 
|  |     That form is dated, almost obsolete. It was current (in the
    English upper classes)  when P. G. Wodehouse was writing.
    As PGW live and wrote a lot in the US, I suspect he may
    have made a big thing of it - just for comic/social effect.
    
    I still hear it in some situations, but I think it's fossilized.
    
    b
 | 
| 983.3 | still in use | VANINE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Fri Jul 03 1992 06:53 | 4 | 
|  |     Depends on where you shop.  I treated myself to an up-market suit in
    Savile Row and found tat this format is "de rigeur" in the tailoring
    trade.
    
 | 
| 983.4 | Gone for a Burton | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Mon Jul 06 1992 06:11 | 8 | 
|  |     Yes - but chiefly the up-market end of that trade (shops that say they're
    Gentlemen's Outfitters) and people in lowlier shops who hope to get
    jobs further up the pecking order. They don't say `sir' _at_all_
    in Top Shop for Men, not even when they're addressing you for the first
    time.
    
    b
    
 | 
| 983.5 | re; Base Note | SNOC02::MASCALL | "Tiddley quid?" dixit Porcellus. | Wed Aug 12 1992 23:53 | 8 | 
|  | Douglas Adams where? Quote your source please. I've read it but can't 
remember which one.
Thanks,
Sheridan
(Johnny-Come-Lately)
:^)
 | 
| 983.6 |  | HLFS00::STEENWINKEL | R80ST | Thu Aug 13 1992 10:21 | 8 | 
|  |     RE:.0,.5
    
    Quote is from The Restaurant at the End of the Universe, near the end
    of chapter 14 (in my edition it's page 78).
                                                 - Rik -
    
 |