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Re: [Spridgets] [midgetsprite]

To: <midgetsprite@yahoogroups.com>, <spridgets@autox.team.net>
Subject: Re: [Spridgets] [midgetsprite]
From: "Paul Herder" <george.brokaw@cox.net>
Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 18:46:33 -0600
Who's on first???



-----Original Message-----

Oh dear,  trust the ex-colonials to start to muddle things up......  <smile>
The nearside of a car is the side nearest the kerb.  (A curb is something 
you do to slow down immoderate excess.)  Except when you are driving round 
the inside lane of a roundabout in which case the other side of the car or 
the offside will be nearest OR, when you are overtaking it is possible the 
offside could quite well be closest to a kerb especially when you are on the

offside of the road.
Surely this is simple?
Now, the nearside lane is that lane immediately to the left of the offside 
lane unless there is a centre lane which means the nearside lane is that one

immediately to the left of the centre or middle lane and is still, in any 
event to the left of the offside lane which could be an oncoming lane if the

road is not a dual carriageway.  If it is a four or more lane road then the 
nomenclature of the lanes other than the nearside and offside lanes will 
change but they will remain in place.  In the event the road is a dual 
carriageway with four or more lanes there must be two nearside lanes and two

offside lanes each in their respective positions abutting the nearside and 
offside kerb or road edges as appropriate.
What could be easier?

Hope this clarifies the subject.

Guy R Day

ps  In the UK when facing forwards in the normal direction of travel the 
left of the car is the nearside, the right or driver's side (NO - I 'm not 
going to start again) is on the offside.  When facing the car from the 
front, the left and right sides change but the nearside and offside remain 
as they were.


----- Original Message ----- 

> IIRC, "offside" is if the ball is passed to you when there is no-one
> between you and the goalie (in soccer)
> It's something else in American 'football'  ;-))
> On a LBC it's the side closest to the curb, Yes?
>
> On 1 Nov 2009 at 19:31, cclabaw@juno.com wrote:
>
>>> And what about 'near side' and 'off side'
> --
> Dave G.   KK7SS  Richland, WA
> '06 Honda Civic Hybrid
> '65 MK III A-H Sprite
> '76 MKIV 1500 Midget
>
> Age is just another number... !
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