Javbw
> On Feb 9, 2016, at 12:33 PM, Dave Swarthout wrote:
>
> AFAIK, Ace Hardware stores do not carry a wide enough assortment of items to
> qualify. Lowes and Home Depot do.
+1
A hardware store sells tools and consumables (screws, glue, paint, etc) as the
main focus of the store.
A DIY
Are we writing our own dictionary? What's wrong with the OED? If
everybody just says what they understand to be the definition, what are
we going to do, have a vote on it? Then the US English speakers will
probably win because there are more of them. Why not just save time by
killing the discussion
I think bicycle=private + access=permissive would be the right choice.
private means, that the path is owned by someone and you are not allowed to
use it unless the owner gives you a permission. Permissive if the path is
owned by a private person but you don't have to ask for permission.
That's wha
Richard Fairhurst wrote:
> An important part of the Pacific Coast Bicycle Route now requires cyclists
> to get a permit:
> It's not quite 'bicycle=permissive' - that's generally used to imply that
> bikes are allowed in by goodwill of the landowner but don't have to book,
If we could stick to the
In my view tou cannot put private and permissive access at the same time -
they are mutually exclusive.
Anyway in the specific case the situation is more complicated: From 01-03
2016 the access situation for cyclists at Camp Pendleton will change.
If you are a US citizen with a clean criminal rec
On Wed, 10 Feb 2016 10:12:06 -0700
Christian Pietzsch wrote:
> I think bicycle=private + access=permissive would be the right choice.
It would mean that everything except cyclists have free entry and in
case of bicycles individual permission is required.
Is there really free entry for everybody
On Wed, 10 Feb 2016 19:30:39 +0200
Lauri Kytömaa wrote:
> Richard Fairhurst wrote:
> > An important part of the Pacific Coast Bicycle Route now requires
> > cyclists to get a permit:
> > It's not quite 'bicycle=permissive' - that's generally used to
> > imply that bikes are allowed in by goodwill
John Eldredge writes:
> There is a large art museum in Washington, DC, named the National Gallery.
Yes, but it's a museum that happens to have gallery in the name :-)
We have to separate words that appear in names from tag definitions that
happen to use the same words.
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