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brought floods of mail from readers

with a school case packed with handwritten notes and scribbles on napkins.”Language comes from the world around you and today it’s TV or social media,” he said.”The language around you used to be a hell of a lot of language about horses and snakes and the weather and the world around you.”A forgetful person might say, “I’ve got a head like Cheap ADIDAS PREDATOR LZ a peewee’s nest: mud on the outside and straw on the inside.” A silly person might be called “a great galah” (parrot) and “shark bait” was a small dog.Lund’s first book about Australian language, “Lost for Words,” brought floods of mail from readers who bombarded him with words and phrases from their childhood, making pulling together his latest book an easy task.”Publishers have Soccer Cleats Clearance told me my books will be a great resource in the future, because you put them (the words) in context so younger people know exactly how they are to be used,” he said.But the real stamp of approval came from readers, he noted.”The recurring theme in all the letters I received after my last book… was ‘that’s how my parents/brothers/aunts spoke.'”(Editing by Elaine Lies)Shark kills surfer off France’s Reunion islandSAINT-DENIS EN REUNION, France (Reuters) – A shark

A former wire and newspaper journalist

and the internet.”American television has basically taken over our lives,” Lunn told Reuters.”While we’re getting their shows we’re losing our language — we never said ’24/7,’ ‘OMG’ and ‘whatever.'”In his fight to save the words and phrases of yore, such as when an Aussie bloke would stand back to let a lady walk in front of him and NIKE MERCURIAL VAPOR IX say “ladies first…in case of snakes,” Lunn has collected many unique Aussie-isms into a book, “Words Fail Me.”Recalling a time when television’s role in life was smaller, Lunn takes readers on a nostalgic journey from the 1950s to the 1970s, when “the blower” was a phone and a bachelor might be described as a “man who never finds out how many faults he has.”A former wire and newspaper journalist, Lunn has written several non-fiction tales of life in Australia’s northeastern Queensland state and his time as a correspondent covering the Vietnam War.He says he learned early in his writing career that the secret to capturing somebody’s character was not to describe how they looked, but what they said — and how.”To recapture other people and the time, I learned the best way to Soccer Cleats do that was describing how they talked,” he said.During the course of research into other books, Lunn would often wake up in the middle of the night and scribble a saying down in his bedside notepad, or raise a hand to stop someone in mid sentence because they had reminded him of a word from the past. He ended up

there were three attacks in just two

times. The shark then disappeared very quickly,” Australian Fleet Commander Rear Admiral Nigel Coates told reporters.”It was all over, I’m told, in a few seconds.”There have been at least four other shark attacks in Australia this summer, one of them fatal, sparking a global media frenzy of “Jaws” proportions. Last month, there were three attacks in just two days.In the latest case, the diver was swimming on the water surface when the attack happened. He was treated on a navy boat, Adidas Nitrocharge 1.0 TRX FG before being rushed ashore and to a nearby hospital for surgery.Coates said the man was in a serious condition.”The patient said he saw something big and grey underneath him just before the attack,” an ambulance spokesman said, adding the man had severe injuries to his right hand, buttocks and down to his knee on one leg.(Reporting by James Grubel; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)Shark bait to OMG: a fight to save Aussie EnglishSYDNEY (Reuters Life!) – Australian author Hugh Lunn remembers a time when a red-haired man was called Bluey, a silly person was compared to a parrot and “mooning” over a woman was something romantic.But Lunn Cheap Nike Soccer Cleats now fears all local color is vanishing and the Australian language is dying, giving way to the “in your dreams” and “get real” of U.S. television