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Commentary on TNT and other WB brands

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And now for a couple of phrases which - when taken literally - could be misunderstood.

First - from Scheldeprijs - "It's falling with sprinter" ("Det vælter med sprintere", which means something like "there are a lot of sprinters", but for that particular race it certainly was an odd choice of words.)

Then "Almeida is kissing a spectator" (Meaning "he was really close", I don't think he was actually kissing a spectator...)
 
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I don't know about you, but a new year of cycling wouldn't be complete without Chris Horner chiming in with his analysis and making up words to describe things like bonus seconds. It's "bonification" time, baby! Let's go!
Sean Kelly has been using that for years and it's a word more widely used in French than English.
Just did and search and the Oxford English Dictionary reckons it has "Fewer than 0.01 occurrences per million words in modern written English"
Let;'s get it up to 0.02 before the end of the season!
 
Sean Kelly has been using that for years and it's a word more widely used in French than English.
Just did and search and the Oxford English Dictionary reckons it has "Fewer than 0.01 occurrences per million words in modern written English"
Let;'s get it up to 0.02 before the end of the season!
Kelly's other great import to the language from French is "support" in the sense of "cope with": We may have to change our opinions about whether Evenepoel can support the cobbles.
 
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But the Merriam-Webster definition (and I strongly suspect the usage dating back to 1650s attested by OED) is "betterment of housing conditions and farming practices in a particular area"; was the cycling application of it in existence pre-Kelly?
Back in Sean's day the winnings went back into running family farms around Flanders, Ireland and France.
Winning a stage of the Tour = new roof on the barn.
 
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