;-)
T Tdol Editor, UsingEnglish.com Staff member Joined Nov 13, 2002 Member Type English Teacher Native Language British English Home Country UK Current Location Japan Jan 2, 2004 #1 ;-)
R RonBee Moderator Joined Feb 9, 2003 Member Type Other Native Language American English Home Country United States Current Location United States Jan 3, 2004 #2 He keeps going on and on about it, does he? :wink:
T Tdol Editor, UsingEnglish.com Staff member Joined Nov 13, 2002 Member Type English Teacher Native Language British English Home Country UK Current Location Japan Jan 3, 2004 #3 That he does. ;-(
R RonBee Moderator Joined Feb 9, 2003 Member Type Other Native Language American English Home Country United States Current Location United States Jan 4, 2004 #4 Do you think that one comes from harping on one note? :?:
T Tdol Editor, UsingEnglish.com Staff member Joined Nov 13, 2002 Member Type English Teacher Native Language British English Home Country UK Current Location Japan Jan 4, 2004 #5 It could do- maybe the harp is an instrument seen to lack variety. ;-)
R RonBee Moderator Joined Feb 9, 2003 Member Type Other Native Language American English Home Country United States Current Location United States Jan 4, 2004 #6 I think I made up a new expression. It's supposed to be harping on one string.