Posted on 08/22/2014 5:56:00 AM PDT by tioga
In order that we might all raise the level of discourse and expand our language abilities, here is the daily post of Word for the Day.
Bricolage
Noun
Rules: Everyone must leave a post using the Word for the Day in a sentence.
The sentence must, in some way, relate to the news of the day.
The Review threads are linked for your edification. ;-)
Practice makes perfect.....post on....
Review Threads:
Review Thread One: Word For The Day, Thursday 11/14/02: Raffish (Be SURE to check out posts #92 and #111 on this thread!)
Review Thread Two: Word For The Day, Tuesday 1/14/03: Roister
A+++ Excellent!
Your family is in our prayers.
Thanks.
There must be chickens elsewhere on that island where non-tourists get eggs-two-fifty an egg is robbery unless it is filled with caviar-a dozen fresh-today ones from one of the neighbors costs me a fresh baked loaf of wholegrain or baguette of French bread, or a medium sized plastic bowl full of fresh-picked 2-to-three-inch okra. Free-range brown eggs at the grocery store 20 miles away are $1.50-$1.75 per dozen, depending on the season...
I pray he listens to you now, ti, and that the solution is fast and simple...
One of the neighbors has bantam chickens-I love the little eggs-they are not only tasty, but the shells are faintly tinged rose, brown and even green-I suppose it has to do with what they are fed-hope I don’t start glowing in the dark...
I think all chickens are kind of noisy, but out here, so many people have them that it is just sort of background noise, like the donkeys braying. I doubt I will even notice the chickens and guineas cackling when I get them...
That was $2.50 served hard boiled in an eatery. Not for a raw egg.
Feed doesn’t affect a hen’s egg color. It just is. The “easter egger “chickens I have have been bred to make green or blue eggs.
The reds make brown eggs. The leghorns make white eggs.
That’s a good deal. They charge $5/dozen for brown eggs around here. My two lay medium brown and pinkish brown eggs. We’re planning to go get 2 pullets tomorrow afternoon.
You shouldn’t have told me, then you’d have a pullet surprise.
???
Pulitzer Prize
White and brown laying chickens we had on the ranch, but I was not aware that there were chickens bred to lay colored eggs-they are cute as a novelty, but I don’t see any other reason to do that-it isn’t going to make a difference in the nutritional value, is it?
That is awfully expensive-no one out here would charge that much for free range eggs, but then chickens are all over the place, too-the neighbor a couple acres over was bringing home 5 new chickens yesterday when I was walking by-one is a young rooster with beautiful iridescent tailfeathers-she has only had hens until now.
You are correct. There is no nutritional difference.
Artful, brah...
Good Luck TI. I will keep you in my prayers.
More yolk, less white...better egg.
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