Comments by "dixon pinfold" (@dixonpinfold2582) on "Mark Felton Productions"
channel.
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A plot twist which will surprise most people: His eyebrows outlasted the rest of his person and survive to this day. Initially they were revived, which was reportedly not difficult, and maintained on life support by the notably odd — and more oddly yet, Jewish — Sir Keith Joseph. This was a year after he left Mrs. Thatcher's cabinet. (He was Minister of State for Education and Science, which in this story is the sole unsurprising element.)
Later they dwelt in the spare bedroom of an obscure rich woman in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, widow of a onetime successful skier and owner of petrol stations. Rumours have Michael Jackson, David Cameron and Boris Johnson as later owners, but these appear to be entirely speculative, defamatory, or meant to be funny.
No one knows who has the brows now.
But if one is to believe specialists in video identification who have certified its authenticity, on a Dark Web site you can observe 24-hour streaming video of Deputy Führer Hess's last chapter, still without an ending.
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@John_1_0 It has never meant 'lady', that much is sure, but it has certainly not been "always somewhat discourteous." It almost always is now, but well within living memory it has ranged all the way up to merely informal, as well as affectionate. Social class had a lot of bearing on its use. People much above lower-middle class, meaning the 'top' half or third of society, used it more rarely.
Period movies and other depictions don't properly indicate its onetime popularity and versatility (not that I've seen many thousands of movies). Its main purpose, I daresay, was to indicate a certain freedom from sentimentality. Women, of course, used it too. ("I'm at the bowling alley with the rest of the broads from work. We're havin' a great time, Marilyn, you should come down.")
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