us..you know you don't need to own one to be here. Your experiance and knowledge is invaluable here. We are few don't leave us... So what you been up to Mr. Orange..??
Gene and Ilana De Laney Mt. Helix, California
2012 RS sm5
2012 RS sm5 , 998cc V-Twin 106hp DIY brake and park brake Classic Black
Sorry to hear that your selling your Spyder. I took a test ride the other day and the new one I don't like any of them. I'm getting to old to work on them and the dealers service is not reliable near me. I only had one guy that was good and he left the state. My warranty will be over in about 2 years and then I'll sell it. I hope that there will be another reverse trike on the market that's more dependable and have well trained mechanics. BRP will soon learn, If you don't have good service and you don't have parts for product it will not sell. That's IMHO.
I'd crack a joke, but can't think of anything that rhymes with orange?
Orange has almost no perfect rhymes. The only word in the 20-volume historical Oxford English Dictionary that rhymes with orange is sporange, a very rare alternative form of sporangium (a botanical term for a part of a fern or similar plant). Silver is another word for which it is almost impossible to find a perfect rhyme: the only candidate is the rare word chilver, which the 20-volume Oxford English Dictionary defines as 'a ewe-lamb' (i.e. a female lamb). Both orange and silver do have half-rhymes, though: the Oxford Rhyming Dictionary gives lozenge as a half-rhyme for orange, for example, and salver as a half-rhyme for silver.
What's the difference between a full rhyme and a half-rhyme? A full and stressed rhyme (e.g. hand / stand) or even an unstressed rhyme (such as handing / standing) contain vowels that are common to both words, while a half-rhyme like orange / lozenge or silver / salver has obvious differences between the vowels in certain syllables. The technical term for a half-rhyme is 'pararhyme'.
Prince, His Purple Majesty, His Royal Badness, Jamie Starr, Alexander Nevermind, The Artist Formerly Known As Prince, The Symbol, Christopher Tracy. All of them are names or nicknames Prince Rogers Nelson chose for himself during his career which spawned more than three decades. A chameleonic, very influential, very prolific, versatile and always surprising artist. The creator of the Minneapolis Sound. “To whom it may concern”, this is a story about Prince Rogers Nelson. http://www.historia.ro/exclusiv_web/...purple-majesty
I wrote Mr.Orange a PM last week, as his email link here, is gone. As of yet, No reply...