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#1
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I need to fill it for some work,and I dunno what it's for.
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#2
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If you don't know what it's for, why do you need to fill it in?
"chenley1132" wrote in message ... :I need to fill it for some work,and I dunno what it's for. |
#3
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chenley1132 wrote:
I need to fill it for some work,and I dunno what it's for. "CC" is an acronym for "carbon copy". If you're young enough, you may never have seen carbon paper (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_paper) or, for that matter, the typewriter (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typewriter) that it was used with. The CC field is where you put the names of people who are getting copies of the memo but aren't the direct recipients (those go in the To field). Next up on the Old Timers' Hit Parade: Do you know the difference between a 45 and an LP? ;-) -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
#4
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![]() : Next up on the Old Timers' Hit Parade: Do you know the difference between a : 45 and an LP? ;-) : Around 11.7 ;-) |
#5
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Use the search engine of your choice -- Google or Bing, for examples -- with
this as your search term... what does CC: mean ....and all will be revealed. As a bonus, you'll gain experience with search engines that could be very useful going forward. Daddy "chenley1132" wrote in message ... I need to fill it for some work,and I dunno what it's for. |
#6
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On Nov 3, 9:43*am, "Jay Freedman" wrote:
....snip... Next up on the Old Timers' Hit Parade: Do you know the difference between a 45 and an LP? ;-) -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP * * * *FAQ:http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. And, how many grooves in a standard LP? |
#7
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Two (one each side).
tf "Robert Macy" wrote in message ... On Nov 3, 9:43 am, "Jay Freedman" wrote: ...snip... Next up on the Old Timers' Hit Parade: Do you know the difference between a 45 and an LP? ;-) -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ:http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. And, how many grooves in a standard LP? |
#8
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cc used to stand for "Carbon Copy" back in the day when typists had to use a
piece of carbon paper to make a copy of a document. Some use a more modern abbreviation of pc which stands for photo copy. It essentially means you are going to give a copy of your document to the person/company specified. "chenley1132" wrote: I need to fill it for some work,and I dunno what it's for. |
#9
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#10
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On Sat, 07 Nov 2009 09:23:08 -0500, CyberTaz
wrote: Hi Jay; snip On 11/3/09 12:43 PM, in article , "Jay Freedman" wrote: Next up on the Old Timers' Hit Parade: Do you know the difference between a 45 and an LP? ;-) snip By "LP" do you mean 78 RPM or 33-1/3 RPM?... And I won't even quiz you on 16-2/3 RPM ;-) Regards |:) Bob Jones [MVP] Office:Mac AFAIK, "LP" always referred to 33-1/3 RPM. And the 16-2/3 RPM was only for voice recordings because the warble would have been too much for music. -- Jay |
#11
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![]() "CyberTaz" wrote in message .. . By "LP" do you mean 78 RPM We had a record that was 80 RPM..... |
#12
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And wasn't Alvin and the Chipmunks created by playing a 45 RPM record at 78
RPM? -- Hope this helps, Doug Robbins - Word MVP Please reply only to the newsgroups unless you wish to obtain my services on a paid professional basis. "Gordon" wrote in message ... "CyberTaz" wrote in message .. . By "LP" do you mean 78 RPM We had a record that was 80 RPM..... |
#14
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![]() "Bomb dowser" wrote in message om... In article , says... chenley1132 wrote: I need to fill it for some work,and I dunno what it's for. "CC" is an acronym for "carbon copy". If you're young enough, you may never have seen carbon paper (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_paper) or, for that matter, the typewriter (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typewriter) that it was used with. The CC field is where you put the names of people who are getting copies of the memo but aren't the direct recipients (those go in the To field). i.e. CC = complimentary copy. No it isn't. It's short for 'carbon copy'. Next up on the Old Timers' Hit Parade: Do you know the difference between a 45 and an LP? ;-) |
#15
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And for those that don't know, the BCC field is
Blind Carbon Copy where you put recipients' email addresses to keep the addresses confidential from other recipients of the email (recipients of the cannot see the addresses in the BBC field). Some users need to use it! -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "Bomb dowser" wrote in message om... In article , says... chenley1132 wrote: I need to fill it for some work,and I dunno what it's for. "CC" is an acronym for "carbon copy". If you're young enough, you may never have seen carbon paper (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_paper) or, for that matter, the typewriter (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typewriter) that it was used with. The CC field is where you put the names of people who are getting copies of the memo but aren't the direct recipients (those go in the To field). i.e. CC = complimentary copy. Next up on the Old Timers' Hit Parade: Do you know the difference between a 45 and an LP? ;-) |
#16
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Do I win a prize if I know the difference between a 45 and an LP? I still
remember the plastic insert you could use to put a 45 on an LP stalk. "Bomb dowser" wrote in message om... In article , says... chenley1132 wrote: I need to fill it for some work,and I dunno what it's for. "CC" is an acronym for "carbon copy". If you're young enough, you may never have seen carbon paper (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_paper) or, for that matter, the typewriter (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typewriter) that it was used with. The CC field is where you put the names of people who are getting copies of the memo but aren't the direct recipients (those go in the To field). i.e. CC = complimentary copy. Next up on the Old Timers' Hit Parade: Do you know the difference between a 45 and an LP? ;-) |
#17
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snort You don't win the prize until you owned a record player that had 4
speeds and can name them. I didn't use the slowest speed much but I owned records that needs the other three. We still have a player at home but the stylus is probably shot at this point. None of the spindle adapters tho. -- JoAnn Paules MVP Microsoft [Publisher] Tech Editor for "Microsoft Publisher 2007 For Dummies" "BK" wrote in message ... Do I win a prize if I know the difference between a 45 and an LP? I still remember the plastic insert you could use to put a 45 on an LP stalk. "Bomb dowser" wrote in message om... In article , says... chenley1132 wrote: I need to fill it for some work,and I dunno what it's for. "CC" is an acronym for "carbon copy". If you're young enough, you may never have seen carbon paper (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_paper) or, for that matter, the typewriter (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typewriter) that it was used with. The CC field is where you put the names of people who are getting copies of the memo but aren't the direct recipients (those go in the To field). i.e. CC = complimentary copy. Next up on the Old Timers' Hit Parade: Do you know the difference between a 45 and an LP? ;-) |
#18
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The slowest speed was 16 2/3, and it was used for what were then called
"talking books" (for the blind). The speed was too slow for high-fidelity music reproduction but adequate for the spoken word (in the same way that telephone sound quality in those days was just adequate for comprehension). -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "JoAnn Paules [MVP]" wrote in message ... snort You don't win the prize until you owned a record player that had 4 speeds and can name them. I didn't use the slowest speed much but I owned records that needs the other three. We still have a player at home but the stylus is probably shot at this point. None of the spindle adapters tho. -- JoAnn Paules MVP Microsoft [Publisher] Tech Editor for "Microsoft Publisher 2007 For Dummies" "BK" wrote in message ... Do I win a prize if I know the difference between a 45 and an LP? I still remember the plastic insert you could use to put a 45 on an LP stalk. "Bomb dowser" wrote in message om... In article , says... chenley1132 wrote: I need to fill it for some work,and I dunno what it's for. "CC" is an acronym for "carbon copy". If you're young enough, you may never have seen carbon paper (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_paper) or, for that matter, the typewriter (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typewriter) that it was used with. The CC field is where you put the names of people who are getting copies of the memo but aren't the direct recipients (those go in the To field). i.e. CC = complimentary copy. Next up on the Old Timers' Hit Parade: Do you know the difference between a 45 and an LP? ;-) |
#19
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![]() "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The slowest speed was 16 2/3, and it was used for what were then called "talking books" (for the blind). The speed was too slow for high-fidelity music reproduction but adequate for the spoken word (in the same way that telephone sound quality in those days was just adequate for comprehension). And the fastest wasn't 78 - it was 80! Yes, we had a record that played at speed 80 AND we had a "radiogram" that would play at speed 80... |
#20
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The BBC used to distribute series to various overseas broadcaster around the
World on 12" LPs running at 16 2/3. I remember playing a few of them when I was in Singapore and I wish I had hung on to them as there were some real classics like Round the Horne and The Navy Lark. Terry Farrell "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... The slowest speed was 16 2/3, and it was used for what were then called "talking books" (for the blind). The speed was too slow for high-fidelity music reproduction but adequate for the spoken word (in the same way that telephone sound quality in those days was just adequate for comprehension). -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "JoAnn Paules [MVP]" wrote in message ... snort You don't win the prize until you owned a record player that had 4 speeds and can name them. I didn't use the slowest speed much but I owned records that needs the other three. We still have a player at home but the stylus is probably shot at this point. None of the spindle adapters tho. -- JoAnn Paules MVP Microsoft [Publisher] Tech Editor for "Microsoft Publisher 2007 For Dummies" "BK" wrote in message ... Do I win a prize if I know the difference between a 45 and an LP? I still remember the plastic insert you could use to put a 45 on an LP stalk. "Bomb dowser" wrote in message om... In article , says... chenley1132 wrote: I need to fill it for some work,and I dunno what it's for. "CC" is an acronym for "carbon copy". If you're young enough, you may never have seen carbon paper (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_paper) or, for that matter, the typewriter (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typewriter) that it was used with. The CC field is where you put the names of people who are getting copies of the memo but aren't the direct recipients (those go in the To field). i.e. CC = complimentary copy. Next up on the Old Timers' Hit Parade: Do you know the difference between a 45 and an LP? ;-) |
#21
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![]() "Terry Farrell" wrote in message ... The BBC used to distribute series to various overseas broadcaster around the World on 12" LPs running at 16 2/3. I remember playing a few of them when I was in Singapore and I wish I had hung on to them as there were some real classics like Round the Horne and The Navy Lark. "Starboard Lookout 'ere sir!" |
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