Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re going there, you might as well get the wines they suggest. They probably won’t be the cheapest or the most expensive, but I’d expect them to be a decent match. You’ll have to determine your own capacity, though. No sense in paying all that money and getting sick or hungry over.
PS: I haven’t looked it up but the use of the word “pour” as a noun sounds both ungrammatical and affected. I think “portion” is a better word.
NP. You clearly aren't in the restaurant industry, and have little experience with fine dining and fine wines.
Yeah, the restaurant industry doesn’t set grammar rules. If it did, we’d all pronounce the “l” in “salmon.”
And I promise that my experience of “fine dining” beggars yours.
“Nouning” verbs may be fashionable, but that doesn’t make it correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re going there, you might as well get the wines they suggest. They probably won’t be the cheapest or the most expensive, but I’d expect them to be a decent match. You’ll have to determine your own capacity, though. No sense in paying all that money and getting sick or hungry over.
PS: I haven’t looked it up but the use of the word “pour” as a noun sounds both ungrammatical and affected. I think “portion” is a better word.
NP. You clearly aren't in the restaurant industry, and have little experience with fine dining and fine wines.
Yeah, the restaurant industry doesn’t set grammar rules. If it did, we’d all pronounce the “l” in “salmon.”
And I promise that my experience of “fine dining” beggars yours.
“Nouning” verbs may be fashionable, but that doesn’t make it correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re going there, you might as well get the wines they suggest. They probably won’t be the cheapest or the most expensive, but I’d expect them to be a decent match. You’ll have to determine your own capacity, though. No sense in paying all that money and getting sick or hungry over.
PS: I haven’t looked it up but the use of the word “pour” as a noun sounds both ungrammatical and affected. I think “portion” is a better word.
NP. You clearly aren't in the restaurant industry, and have little experience with fine dining and fine wines.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re going there, you might as well get the wines they suggest. They probably won’t be the cheapest or the most expensive, but I’d expect them to be a decent match. You’ll have to determine your own capacity, though. No sense in paying all that money and getting sick or hungry over.
PS: I haven’t looked it up but the use of the word “pour” as a noun sounds both ungrammatical and affected. I think “portion” is a better word.
Pour as a noun is an acceptable way to refer to a glass of wine at a restaurant
Anonymous wrote:If you’re going there, you might as well get the wines they suggest. They probably won’t be the cheapest or the most expensive, but I’d expect them to be a decent match. You’ll have to determine your own capacity, though. No sense in paying all that money and getting sick or hungry over.
PS: I haven’t looked it up but the use of the word “pour” as a noun sounds both ungrammatical and affected. I think “portion” is a better word.
Anonymous wrote:If you’re going there, you might as well get the wines they suggest. They probably won’t be the cheapest or the most expensive, but I’d expect them to be a decent match. You’ll have to determine your own capacity, though. No sense in paying all that money and getting sick or hungry over.
PS: I haven’t looked it up but the use of the word “pour” as a noun sounds both ungrammatical and affected. I think “portion” is a better word.