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Orange
Nov 6, 2007 18:49:26 GMT
Post by Hayley on Nov 6, 2007 18:49:26 GMT
Has anybody else in the UK got orange broadband? i have it and a few friends have it and its rubbish!!!!! It cuts out all the time and about once a month you lose all connections for a couple of days.
So if your thinking of getting it DONT.
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Orange
Mar 27, 2009 16:54:58 GMT
Post by Rebecca on Mar 27, 2009 16:54:58 GMT
This could maybe be a little off-topic but, when I saw the title "Orange" I thought about this; Do you know that nothing rimes with "Orange" in English? ...but if you do find something, please let me know, okay? =) ;D
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Orange
Mar 27, 2009 23:32:37 GMT
Post by The Animal on Mar 27, 2009 23:32:37 GMT
I've never even heard of that.
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Orange
Mar 28, 2009 14:54:28 GMT
Post by Rebecca on Mar 28, 2009 14:54:28 GMT
^ You mean about that nothing rhymes with "Orange" in English? I just noticed that I spelled the word "rhymes" wrong in the first reply.
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Orange
Mar 28, 2009 16:18:15 GMT
Post by The Animal on Mar 28, 2009 16:18:15 GMT
No. The service.
You can edit your post to make any changes neccessary. Just click the "Modify" button at the top right corner of the box your post appears in.
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Orange
Mar 28, 2009 18:03:19 GMT
Post by OnLineGenie on Mar 28, 2009 18:03:19 GMT
^ You mean about that nothing rhymes with "Orange" in English? I just noticed that I spelled the word "rhymes" wrong in the first reply. And did you know that rhythm is the longest English word that doesn't have a vowel? Someone once suggested "door hinge" for a rhyme with orange, but I don't accept that.
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Orange
Mar 28, 2009 18:06:53 GMT
Post by slowcheetah9 on Mar 28, 2009 18:06:53 GMT
Nah Mark, I agree. "Door hinge" doesn't count. that's 2 words.
And Hayley, Orange sounds EXACTLY like our Comcast. My family switched when we moved and it's horrible.
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Orange
Mar 28, 2009 21:55:14 GMT
Post by The Animal on Mar 28, 2009 21:55:14 GMT
Maybe if "door hinge" was one word, like..."dooringe"... I could think, maybe,..."forage", but that's kind of like rhyming "go" with "fo'" (instead of "for"). It kind of works, but not exactly.
Porridge?
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