We had red-light cameras in much of the DC area, and I got a ticket once. It made me paranoid for ages, so much that now, up north where the yellow lights seem to be much longer, I am always annoying my passengers (well, especially husband) by stopping too soon.
We also don't have the red-light ticket cameras up here in most places, that I know of, but I still have the reflex. It's stupid, because I'm probably likely to get rear-ended now.
@Cerberus Well, it was my parents' car I was still borrowing at the time - when I was first working down DC-ways, I think - so, doubly embarrassing. (Our tickets were all automatic - the notification goes in the mail to the car's registered owner.)
It was just before dinner, she said she didn't want to talk about it then. I imagine that she supposed it would be a nice, quick "Oh hey, can you book Sunday mornings off? Great, thanks."
You could say that person is understated or not obvious. Phrases would include easy to underestimate, easily undervalued, flies under the radar or even "There's more to her than meets the eye."
@Cerberus I don't know. Maybe it's cheaper for you guys because your countries are so much smaller and you require fewer cell towers while maintaining a large population.
@Cerberus Sometimes. I hear it in my head with a strong Boston accent and I think I remember a coworker who actually did use it, but I think it's way more likely to be used in jest than seriously.
@EdGuiness Ones like this drive me nuts because I don't understand the particular drive for a single word. When what you mean to say is "They weren't actually airheaded" why does that need to be reduced?
I treat it like any other website, except one that gets unusually bloated with comments for some reason and makes it hard to find the other posts near an entry that is interesting