Cajun comes from 'Acadian', spoken with a cajun accent. Which is, of course, recursive, but that's what they told us in school up in Acadia (i.e. the western east coast of Canada.)
The point being that Corporate Limits are standard in Alberta, at least (I haven't really looked, other places -- Ontario seems to have City Limits), and in New Brunswick, parishes are subunits of counties.
The ways and means to New Orleans are obviously a desire to do something interesting and some sort of motorized box with seats in it. Or something.
no subject
Cajun comes from 'Acadian', spoken with a cajun accent. Which is, of course, recursive, but that's what they told us in school up in Acadia (i.e. the western east coast of Canada.)
The point being that Corporate Limits are standard in Alberta, at least (I haven't really looked, other places -- Ontario seems to have City Limits), and in New Brunswick, parishes are subunits of counties.
The ways and means to New Orleans are obviously a desire to do something interesting and some sort of motorized box with seats in it. Or something.
Just seeing 'I-10' is weird.