An order was hastily placed with a local chippie for 55 haggis and chips and was almost met, falling just two suppers short. |
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That way you can visit the off licence, the sweet shop and the chippie without wasting energy. |
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Even the general store, which doubles as a chippie, is tastefully minimalist and the lady who owns it has a heart that glows in the dark. |
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I can still clearly remember getting a fish supper from the Philadelphia chippie around the corner. |
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We went out to find some dinner and of course the only thing open was the chippie. |
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This small sheltered port boasts its own wine museum and a staggering 35 restaurants for its 2,000-odd population, but there's not a greasy spoon or a chippie in sight. |
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The Truth: The chippie in Dagenham, east London, had previously offered batter scraps, which are a tradition in the North-East. |
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A SENIOR Labour councillor locked horns with a party activist on social media over the David v Goliath Lobster Pot chippie row. |
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The Etihad is a brisk 30-minute walk from Piccadilly, taking you through Ancoats and Beswick, where the streets are still perfumed by the unmistakable scent of Manchester's past, the chippie. |
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Bulimics generally don't go out and pay a lot of money for a nice meal – they'll go to a chippie and eat the chips when they're cold and horrible. |
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Candidates on the shortlist, one from each part of the country, will compete to be named the country's best chippie at a ceremony at the Lancaster House Hotel, London, on 19 January next year. |
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A chippie comes to batten down a floorboard, and they all go again. |
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Which is good news for William Thomas and wife Heather, who established the chippie as a diversification from their beef and sheep farming business. |
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The High Street chippie wins awards and Yau's does a mean beef chow mein. |
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Gordon S Hirst suggests it comes from fish and chop shops who offer either cod or haddock but its etymology suggests it is a lot older than the corner chippie. |
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