The term comrade is used to mean "friend", "mate", "colleague", or "ally", and derives from the Iberian Romance language term camarada, literally meaning "chamber mate", from Latin camera "chamber" or "room". A political use of the term was inspired by the French Revolution, after which it grew into a form of address between socialists and workers. Ever since the Russian Revolution, popular media in the Western World have often associated it with Communism.
== Background ==
Upon abolishing the titles of nobility in France, and the terms monsieur and madame (literally, "my lord" and "my lady"),...
It is indeed on the starboard, roughly page 20 something
(176 pages of manual crawling is nothing compared to a typical search needed for a litrature review, where 200 pages are browsed daily when I don't procrastinate)
@Skyler See, that's what happens when you use that userXXXX name...I can't remember it was you who posted something and make the entire chat crawl the history for me :D
Also, something that pissed me off, Crosley sells a turntable that will do 78 RPM, but has a non-replaceable cartridge and the one it comes with cannot play shellacs. What the hell
Student: "Oh, are there still donuts left?" R: "There are approximately point nine donuts left." Student: "Do you mean the one in your hand with a bite missing?" R: (chomp) "point shebben five"