FNGD Q4 - MONEY, SO THEY SAY

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etaoin22
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FNGD Q4 - MONEY, SO THEY SAY

#1 Post by etaoin22 » Fri May 09, 2008 9:20 pm

I dont know where I put the question, so I have to write it again...

B - In the thirties and forties, a solid well-salaried upper middle class earner (perhaps even a bit too solid...), would have been called

1 - A five-thousand-dollar-a-year man
2 - A ten-thousand-dollar-a-year man
3 - A fifteen-thousand-dollar-a-year man
4 - A twenty-thousand-dollar-a-year man

G - Queen Elizabeth distributes Maundy Money symbolically to the poor on the Thursday before

1 - Easter Weekedn
2 - Queen's Official Birthday
3 - New Year's
4 - Remembrance Sunday

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christie1111
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#2 Post by christie1111 » Fri May 09, 2008 9:23 pm

WAG at 10K - b

1 - pretty sure
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SportsFan68
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Re: FNGD Q4 - MONEY, SO THEY SAY

#3 Post by SportsFan68 » Fri May 09, 2008 9:23 pm

etaoin22 wrote:I dont know where I put the question, so I have to write it again...

B - In the thirties and forties, a solid well-salaried upper middle class earner (perhaps even a bit too solid...), would have been called

1 - A five-thousand-dollar-a-year man
2 - A ten-thousand-dollar-a-year man
3 - A fifteen-thousand-dollar-a-year man
4 - A twenty-thousand-dollar-a-year man

G - Queen Elizabeth distributes Maundy Money symbolically to the poor on the Thursday before

1 - Easter Weekedn
2 - Queen's Official Birthday
3 - New Year's
4 - Remembrance Sunday
I'll guess 1.

Easter.
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-- America would be a better place if leaders would do more long-term thinking. -- Wilma Mankiller

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#4 Post by silvercamaro » Fri May 09, 2008 9:23 pm

2 (a complete guess)
1 (also a guess, but not so complete.)

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ontellen
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#5 Post by ontellen » Fri May 09, 2008 9:25 pm

1 - I still remember my boss in 1970 having a fit that the police were now making $10,000. a year. Our office was near the police station and he would often stand at the window and say "there goes another $10,000. a year guy".

3

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Re: FNGD Q4 - MONEY, SO THEY SAY

#6 Post by T_Bone0806 » Fri May 09, 2008 9:26 pm

etaoin22 wrote:I dont know where I put the question, so I have to write it again...

B - In the thirties and forties, a solid well-salaried upper middle class earner (perhaps even a bit too solid...), would have been called

1 - A five-thousand-dollar-a-year man
2 - A ten-thousand-dollar-a-year man
3 - A fifteen-thousand-dollar-a-year man
4 - A twenty-thousand-dollar-a-year man

G - Queen Elizabeth distributes Maundy Money symbolically to the poor on the Thursday before

1 - Easter Weekedn
2 - Queen's Official Birthday
3 - New Year's
4 - Remembrance Sunday
B-2

G-1
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#7 Post by kayrharris » Fri May 09, 2008 9:27 pm

I wasn't employed then, so I haven't a clue. I'm going with....

$15K - C

I hope this isn't a trick question, but Maundy Thursday is around Easter, so I'll guess that.
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#8 Post by mellytu74 » Fri May 09, 2008 9:27 pm

A big butter-and-egg man

OK. Real answer - 3

Easter weekend

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etaoin22
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#9 Post by etaoin22 » Fri May 09, 2008 9:31 pm

Yeah, well.

Big butter-and-egg-man is another good old-fashioned phrase, for a businessman from the hicks who would come to NY to spend his money, not wisely, usually.

10000 a year man is the phrase. Ron Paul and those who howl at fiat money would have something to say...


Maundy Money is for Maundy Thursday.

G up by 2.

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#10 Post by mellytu74 » Fri May 09, 2008 9:40 pm

"Big butter and egg man" was one of my Irish grandfather's favorite phrases.

First time I ever heard it, I had to be about 9 or 10 and we were on the porch. He referred to one of the sports of the neighborhood as a big butter and egg man.

Because my grandfather spoke in a thick brogue, it just tickled me the way he said it.

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Re: FNGD Q4 - MONEY, SO THEY SAY

#11 Post by ulysses5019 » Fri May 09, 2008 10:53 pm

etaoin22 wrote:I dont know where I put the question, so I have to write it again...

B - In the thirties and forties, a solid well-salaried upper middle class earner (perhaps even a bit too solid...), would have been called

1 - A five-thousand-dollar-a-year man
2 - A ten-thousand-dollar-a-year man
3 - A fifteen-thousand-dollar-a-year man
4 - A twenty-thousand-dollar-a-year man

G - Queen Elizabeth distributes Maundy Money symbolically to the poor on the Thursday before

1 - Easter Weekedn
2 - Queen's Official Birthday
3 - New Year's
4 - Remembrance Sunday


2?

1
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Re: FNGD Q4 - MONEY, SO THEY SAY

#12 Post by peacock2121 » Sat May 10, 2008 6:39 am

etaoin22 wrote:I dont know where I put the question, so I have to write it again...

B - In the thirties and forties, a solid well-salaried upper middle class earner (perhaps even a bit too solid...), would have been called

1 - A five-thousand-dollar-a-year man
2 - A ten-thousand-dollar-a-year man
3 - A fifteen-thousand-dollar-a-year man
4 - A twenty-thousand-dollar-a-year man

G - Queen Elizabeth distributes Maundy Money symbolically to the poor on the Thursday before

1 - Easter Weekedn
2 - Queen's Official Birthday
3 - New Year's
4 - Remembrance Sunday
1 - my dad made $40 a week in 1952 - it couldn't have been more than 5K.

1 - Maudy is around Mardi Gras, I think.

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#13 Post by peacock2121 » Sat May 10, 2008 6:40 am

etaoin22 wrote:Yeah, well.

Big butter-and-egg-man is another good old-fashioned phrase, for a businessman from the hicks who would come to NY to spend his money, not wisely, usually.

10000 a year man is the phrase. Ron Paul and those who howl at fiat money would have something to say...


Maundy Money is for Maundy Thursday.

G up by 2.
Holy crap - that was a whole lot of money back then.

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