To: Bernard
Question? How do you eat a "doorstep"? Even smothered in butter it must be kinda hard to go down.
10 posted on
02/23/2003 7:28:07 AM PST by
dvan
To: dvan; MadIvan
Question? How do you eat a "doorstep"? Even smothered in butter it must be kinda hard to go down.
All references I have found call it a type of a large sandwich, made with a long loaf of bread. In their parlance, it seems to connote something large:
"The (reports) that cross my desk are certainly as big a doorstep sandwich, and must consume a lot of planning officers' time and council tax payers' money."
"It is important not to be intimidated by such terms, especially if you view 'theology' as a subject which is beyond you, something only done by people who can read books thicker than a doorstep sandwich!"
To: dvan
Question? How do you eat a "doorstep"?
The same way you eat "$h*t on a shingle". One bite at a time!
To: dvan
Question? How do you eat a "doorstep"? Even smothered in butter it must be kinda hard to go down
and they are a real b*tch going out i would imagine :-)
73 posted on
02/23/2003 9:41:58 PM PST by
freepatriot32
(Under a government which imprisons any unjustly, the true place for a just man is also in prison.")
To: dvan
From my reading of the "The Broons" and "Oor Wullie", a doorstep is a piece of thickly sliced bread, as in "sliced thick as a doorstep". Ach noo, ye didnae ken that?
79 posted on
02/24/2003 7:45:51 AM PST by
-YYZ-
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