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CherryB

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Posts posted by CherryB

  1. [quote user="Sunday Driver"]

    Go to the top of the screen where it says Welcome back CherryB and click on your name to bring up your user profile settings.

    Scroll down to Enable Post Mouse-Over Popup and select Yes.

    Save changes.

     

    [/quote]

    Thank you, have done that now and it works!

    I was logged in but about the only place I hadn't thought to look at was my name... never even knew I had user profile settings so most appreciative.

  2. I have no idea what what I want is really called so I have been unable to do a search and apologise for the title of this thread. Basically what I would like to be able to do is hover the cursor over a post and see a little bit of the text come up for a while so I can see if I want to actually click on it. I can do this on other forums but despite looking everywhere I can think of on the site I seem unable to facilitate this. Is there a way I am overlooking?
  3. Be very, very wary of the Orange scheme for residences secondaires. We signed up for this through the English speaking line but were never told that although you can ring and cancel the actual phone line, you have to pay continuously for the broadband. What is the point of the broadband if you have no phone line to use it with? It made what had seemed a realistic option completely unsound financially and as I said none of that was explained when we asked about it so we wrongly assumed that both services were suspended at the same time. Once we started getting bills for periods we had suspended alarm bells went off and suddenly although Orange had been more than happy to sign us up in English, they were completely unable to understand now things had gone wrong.

    We persisted and eventually (after about 18 months I think) sorted it out but it was very stressful at the time and we are with SFR now who at least are up-front about their service.
  4. Well yes, I agree except that we have sent a card each Christmas for the last 15 years and (to a separate address) to her daughter and family and they have all sent us New Year cards in the New Year. Having got ourselves, rightly or wrongly, into the routine of respecting our own country's "norm" it might seem strange to change now. What do you think? 
  5. What would you write in a Christmas card to an elderly French neighbour and friend who has lost her husband recently? We have already written a condolences card and seen her in person once but we are aware that this first Christmas without her husband will be a difficult time for her and we want to send our love in a sympathetic way. Just saying “Joyeux Noel” doesn’t seem appropriate.

    In fact I always find it difficult to send an ordinary, “have a great time, lots of love from…” sort of ending in Christmas and birthday cards without sounding formal anyway so suggestions there too please.

  6. Thanks for the suggestions. The context I am thinking of is usually when asking a favour of some kind, rather along the lines of, "I was wondering if you could water my plants" or tentatively suggesting somethiong as in,  "I was just wondering whether you would like to come with me..." - that sort of thing. Is there a difference in phrasing when including the "just"?
  7. On the plus side for public loos, I love those no-touch flushing buttons - anyone ever seen one in a domstic setting? And I like the entrances to the loos to be around a corner so to speak so there is no need for an entrance door (and handle that other, un hygeinic, people may have touched). Now all they need to invent are non-touch cubicle door locks. Also love the newer, fast drying, Dyson hand dryers but our Hyper U has set it so high it is impossible for children to use and even I have to contort my arms at a very awkward angle with elbows skywards in order to insert my hands.Must have been a very tall man wo installed it.
  8. Wow! I've only just got back to this thread and what a tremendously enlightening and entertaining heap of replies. Thank you to everyone, I feel quite honoured after “lurking” on this forum for a while to get such a response to my first post.

    Erm, no… it hadn’t occurred to us to either ask permission or declare the fact that we had added a basin to the “room” housing our downstairs loo (more like my husband’s tool shed actually). As you had to walk from this room through the utility room and to the far end of the living room/kitchen to reach a sink it had seemed like the first necessity on the long list of must-dos.

    Upstairs the bathroom was a very long room with a bath at one end, a basin in the middle (between two windows) and a loo tightly enclosed in a brickwork cabinet… and a clear glass door, at the other end. Needless to say the brickwork and door came down early on too. Would the totally un-private enclosure have been a tax dodge too? There was no ventilation so it held no advantage that way.

    I feel I have hi-jacked my own thread now as it has moved on to new levels!

  9. So many times when visiting various friends' houses I have used the downstairs loo and then had to come through to the kitchen, often with the sink full of washing up, to wash my hands. Our own house had no basin in with the loo downstairs and we had to fit one - why? It is quite disgusting in my opinion not to have hand washing facilities with a loo and makes me doubt that many people do in fact wash their hands.
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