Quizzes & Puzzles15 mins ago
Drinking Beer Directly From The Bottle
84 Answers
Isn't it a disgusting, ugly & filthy habit? It seems to be now the norm now, even with women, in American movies.
Surely no AnswerBankers would do such a thing .... err, would they?
Where did it come from? I recently saw a clip from "Cheers" & 'Norm' & his friend the postman were definitely drinking from large glass steins there at the end of the bar.
Surely no AnswerBankers would do such a thing .... err, would they?
Where did it come from? I recently saw a clip from "Cheers" & 'Norm' & his friend the postman were definitely drinking from large glass steins there at the end of the bar.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ./// The good old days of rickets and polio ///
What a silly comment. Rickets and polio were well on the way out towards the end of the free milk scheme. Furthermore the free milk was to make sure that all children got enough calcium, protein, and fat to help nourish them, thereby improving their health.
What a silly comment. Rickets and polio were well on the way out towards the end of the free milk scheme. Furthermore the free milk was to make sure that all children got enough calcium, protein, and fat to help nourish them, thereby improving their health.
OG, rather than go without, & in the state of need, even "over-sensitive" I, would drink from a bottle, I have certainly drank wine from a bottle - in circumstances I won't elaborate on, but a wine bottle has in any case a foil or plastic cork cover on the top 2 inches.
Alcohol is a disinfectant so even at the weak strength of beer a good policy would be to wipe the top of the bottle before sticking it in your gob. :0)
Alcohol is a disinfectant so even at the weak strength of beer a good policy would be to wipe the top of the bottle before sticking it in your gob. :0)
//That’s impossible, could happen in literally any pub, bar or hostelry in the world.//
Indeed it could. But you can lessen the likelihood if you’re a bit choosy.
//In the good old days of free school milk, all children drank it out of the bottle if I remember right.//
You remember wrong. When I was at primary school our daily one third of a pint of milk came in glass bottles with a foil top. Teacher had a device which made a straw-sized hole in the foil top and we were supplied with straws with which to drink the milk. When I went to “big” school the supply was provided in waxed paper cartons (similar in size and shape to a “Jubbly” or “Jungle Juice). These had a small hole, covered with transparent plastic, which could be pierced by the straw that was attached to the carton.
//Furthermore the free milk was to make sure that all children got enough calcium, protein, and fat to help nourish them, thereby improving their health.//
Which of course was, and still is, the responsibility of the child’s parents, not the school or the government. Hence the cessation of free school milk for (IIRC) over sevens by one M. Thatcher when she was Secretary of State for Education, earning her the soubriquet “Milk Snatcher Thatcher.”
Indeed it could. But you can lessen the likelihood if you’re a bit choosy.
//In the good old days of free school milk, all children drank it out of the bottle if I remember right.//
You remember wrong. When I was at primary school our daily one third of a pint of milk came in glass bottles with a foil top. Teacher had a device which made a straw-sized hole in the foil top and we were supplied with straws with which to drink the milk. When I went to “big” school the supply was provided in waxed paper cartons (similar in size and shape to a “Jubbly” or “Jungle Juice). These had a small hole, covered with transparent plastic, which could be pierced by the straw that was attached to the carton.
//Furthermore the free milk was to make sure that all children got enough calcium, protein, and fat to help nourish them, thereby improving their health.//
Which of course was, and still is, the responsibility of the child’s parents, not the school or the government. Hence the cessation of free school milk for (IIRC) over sevens by one M. Thatcher when she was Secretary of State for Education, earning her the soubriquet “Milk Snatcher Thatcher.”
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