Entry tags:
Friday's Unscientific Poll: Lego
Poll #17906 Lego
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 40
How likely are you to sort your Lego?
View Answers
Mean: 4.45 Median: 4 Std. Dev 2.75
Mean: 4.45 Median: 4 Std. Dev 2.75
All jumbled up in a big box 1 | 10 (26.3%) | |
---|---|---|
2 | 2 (5.3%) | |
3 | 4 (10.5%) | |
4 | 4 (10.5%) | |
5 | 2 (5.3%) | |
6 | 4 (10.5%) | |
7 | 5 (13.2%) | |
8 | 5 (13.2%) | |
9 | 2 (5.3%) | |
Sealed in a cabinet by The Kragle 10 | 0 (0.0%) |
If you do sort your Lego, which criteria do you employ for compartmentalising it?
Instructions?
View Answers
Chuck 'em immediately
4 (10.3%)
Follow them, then chuck 'em
6 (15.4%)
Save them, just in case
22 (56.4%)
Filed in labelled folder
6 (15.4%)
Preserved in the glass cabinet with The Kragle
1 (2.6%)
no subject
no subject
no subject
Am pretty sure Legos is an Americanism? I've never heard it here, where "Lego" is the plural of Lego.
no subject
no subject
We used to talk about "lego bricks", because when I was kid almost all the pieces *were* bricks. Then "lego pieces", as they started to get more specialised. By the time I was old enough to buy any of my own lego with my own Christmas money, they'd invented the first lego motors (they were huge, but they worked!) and I had a lego trainset! Large biscuit tins were the storage format of choice: One for all the bricks and sloping roof-pieces, one for all the rails and sleepers and other specialised pieces.
My lego lunar module was huge, and blue, and cost *THREE WHOLE POUNDS*! Mum thought this was more than any sensible child should ever spend on one toy, but I begged and wheedled and convinced her I wanted nothing else in the world that January. And ah, the sense of wonder on realising that not only could I build an entire lunar module, but I now had more bricks of the same colour, *with* matching 2*2 roof-pieces (for the lander legs), than ever before! I could big build things with coherent colour schemes! =:o>
Happy days...
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
A world where we design new camouflage patterns with Lego.
no subject
Legos seem to be the only thing exempt from sorting rules in my head.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Funnily enough, that was all yellow pieces, too... I wonder if that's why I chose that colour this time?
OK, now someone should write a paper on the value of Lego as a tool for uncovering buried childhood memories. =:o}