to two empty seats if there is space available.If, however, the airplane is full, they will be bumped from the flight and may have to purchase a second ticket, at the same price as the original fare http://tomsshoesoutlet02.webs.com/ - Toms shoes outlet , Urbanski said.If the bumped passenger chooses to cancel the trip, the ticket will be refunded with no additional charge.The policy is effective immediately.Vocabulary:full flight: SEX、 ASSBARUSABAD、NUTSaudi Arabia has banned auto licence tags whose Arabic characters spell out offensive words when romanised, with the list of banned combinations including USA.Saudi Arabia has banned auto licence tags whose Arabic characters spell out offensive words when romanised http://tomsshoesoutlet01.webs.com/ - toms shoes on sale , with the list of banned combinations including USA, Al-Watan newspaper reported Sunday.Saudi plates normally have three Arabic characters and three numbers, but the growing fashion is for auto owners also to display a version using the Latin alphabet and some buyers of personalised vanity plates deliberately choose Arabic letters which turn into words like SEX, ASS and NUT.The authorities in charge of issuing vanity plates have released a list of nine prohibited three-letter combinations, and ordered all branches to stop renewing plates that include them, according to Watan http://tomsshoesoutlet01.webs.com/ - toms shoes sale .On the list are combinations like BUT, BAD and BAR -- the latter presumably a problem because it suggests alcohol, which is strictly prohibited in the conservative Islamic kingdom.But first on the list, for unexplained reasons, is the combination USA.Some 90,000 plates with the prohibited letter combinations are being replaced, Watan said.Vanity plates are fashionable with wealthy and young Saudis, and auctions of special combinations have brought in as much a six million riyals (1.6 million dollars) for one plate, the newspaper reported.Vocabulary:vanity plates: ;、、700199380Britons are increasingly living in fear with record numbers suffering from anxiety and Government attempts to address the problem may be making it worse, new research suggests.In one of the most wide-ran
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