jarndice wrote:Toys, TOYS
Engineering Miniatures dear boy

And don't talk to me about German, people from foreign climes complain about the complexities of English as she is spoke,
No wonder, a lot of it came from German and just one example "Spiel" could easily fill a sheet of A4 with all its different sub meanings almost none of which appear to be related to each other.

English, when the English (Sachsen, Juten, Frieslanders) came here was anything other than complex, Shaun. It was the later Church and State that added all the ruling class additions and fancy trimmings. That was when 'Swine', for example, morphed into 'Pork' (Frogspeak) and so on. It's an interesting fact, though, that it's possible to write an entire (and meaningful) paragraph in words derived purely from Old English ( A West Germanic Tongue), where it would be impossible with other sources of loanwords such as Latin, Old French, and Norse ( a North Germanic Tongue).
'Spiel', incidentally, still appears in the English dictionary as a sub def. of 'Spell'. As an aside, Schweinfurt would be 'Swynford' etc., 'Tide' was time, and news was thus 'Tidings' (Zeitungen). Even plurals ended in -en, as in modern German..thus:
'Children' and 'Brethren' are relics of those days.
'Humpty Dumpty' is a playground song that came here 1500 years ago, and appears in most Germanic languages in one form or another. We all used to play the same games.. and into later life.
I liked to play around with word origins; but now that hobby has been crushed under the merciless tracks of 1/16 scale models.
I do like 'Engineering miniatures', by the way.

But, how would that definition, apply to a 1:6 Tiger tank?
"Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please"- Mark Twain.