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Ahhhhhhh. *sigh*
Got any room for some Mustangs on your place? I'm out of room...
9.2 acres. There'd be more usable room if someone with a trailer and winch showed up to haul off the auto carcasses the last owner left. ;) No sweet clover though.
Re: less/low/no carbs
Sick of it. Especially ads for "low carb" desserts and beer. Desserts and beer are nothing but recreational carbs. If you want to eat them, pick a different diet plan. Yeesh. I won't eat margarine, I won't drink "low carb beer" and I'm damn well not going near a sugar-free dessert. Ugh. If you're not eating real food, why bother eating? Set up a low-carb sugar-free IV drip instead.
Having been diagnosed with an insulin problem last year and now having to stick to a very low carb diet for life.... those less/low/no carb ads do a hell of a lot to make some of us feel like we can live a somewhat normal lifestyle foodwise. It isn't always just about a diet fad.
We've had low fat/low cholesterol/low salt ads for years now. It's no different.
*puts away soapbox and wanders off.. mumbling an apology for getting offtrack*
Ok you can barbecue with propane it just requires a little morse discipline, and you can grill with hardwood but then you don't give the food a chane to absorb any of those smokey flavors.
the media who, being largely illiterate, ignorant college graduates
iamlost> I resemble that remark!
Re: Marquis de Sade...
E's French, innit?!
If you want to call him the "Markwis of Sade", fair enough.
But lots of people call him the "Markee de Sade", parce qu'il est le Marquis de Sade...
The one that gets me is people using "anticipate" to mean "expect".
And something I've always wondered about Lawman, when someone pleads "nolo contendere", is it the facts in the case they aren't contesting, or the charges? I've always assumed that the facts weren't being contested.
For example, Joe Public tosses a brick through Mrs. Johnson's window at 3 a.m. Mrs. Johnson is struck by a brick. Mrs. Johnson dies from a heart attack. Joe Public is charged with murder and pleads no contest. Joe Public is simply stating that he doesn't contest the facts in the case, but is hoping for a different verdict than "guilty of murder" due to extenuating circmumstances.
Oh, and stationary / stationery although I can only pick that one up when it is written... ;)
>>auto carcasses
Definitely have to get rid of the carcasses, Mustangs can't eat Fords or Toyotas...
Definitely have to get rid of the carcasses, Mustangs can't eat Fords or Toyotas...
Yeah, mineral salt licks are a much more effective was to get iron in the diet. ;) Too bad they don't eat mosquitoes either. That would be incredibly useful up here.
lawman/lawyer
hehehe... The one that always gets me: lawyer/attorney
I didn't even realize there was a difference, but I've been told it's got to do with whether or not one can practice in court. And I can never remember which is which.
It drives me absolutely batty when people use words they've heard but never read... usually a relatively big or 'intellectual' sounding word, chosen primarily to make themselves look smart. They spell it incorrectly, and generally mis-use it slightly as well, and end up making themselves look not-at-all clever.
Examples:
(i) Since I'm not lying, it follows that I'm telling the truth.
(ii) We know that God exists, since the Bible says God exists.
What the Bible says must be true, since God wrote it and
God never lies. (Here, we must agree that God exists in order
to believe that God wrote the Bible.)
Proof:
Show that in order to believe that the premises are true we
must already agree that the conclusion is true.
References:
Barker: 159, Cedarblom and Paulsen: 144, Copi and Cohen: 102, Davis: 33
From Stephen's Guide to the Logical Fallacies (you can google it), a site I have used often. See also, irrelevant conclusion and Straw Man. These fallacies have in common a general failure to prove that the conclusion is true.
WBF
Thats an awful lot of people who forgot that English is a living language.
If enough people use a word or phrase "incorrectly", then it eventually becomes correct. Sure, it might take years, decades or even centuries - but thats what happens.
I enjoy being in a 'correct' minority, but have given up fighting futile battles with the bloke on the Clapham omnibus.
I once had an argument with a Lancashire chap about the use of double negatives ("don't know nothing" ...etc).
He proved that the double negative had been used in normal English for hundreds of years prior to the invention of the 'rules' of English. In his opinion, the local dialect wasn't 'bad' English - it was correct English that had been preserved in the face of upper class attempts to dominate his local culture. Furthermore, he suggested that if I didn't like it I could bog off back to Cheshire.
I also used to enjoy a chuckle at some of the 'Americanisms' that are so clearly incorrect. That was until I found out that some (but not all) are close to the usage common in Shakespeare's time.
Rulez Shmoolz. - keep English alive.
To quote Humpty Dumpty:
"When I use a word," Humpty Dumpty said in a rather scornful tone, "it means just what I chose it to mean—nothing less, and nothing more."
And Alice
"The question is," said Alice, "whether you can make words mean so many different things."
Languages are fluid, that's how they grow and develop. All good writers know this perfectly well, all poets too, and create what they need when they need it, sometimes it catches on, sometimes it doesn't.
as Celine says... you can't fall into those traps.. makes for boring reading... stiff... you know, cart before the horse and all that...
...and if you don't like that I'm sorry!
which is usually quite the opposite to an apology.
I also like IMHO in forums such as WebmasterWorld. Who ever expresses a humble opinion in WebmasterWorld?
märkwis damnit, märkwis! ;) Okay, so maybe I still feel compelled to mention it... ;)
desolé mon garçon... mais on dit marquis comme "mahkee"..je sais car ..**Cest Français**...et j'habite ici depuis des bails et je parle assez bien le "lingo" ..mais en plus j'en ai 2 dans ma famille..
Only the English say.. märkwis...
We have them in Ireland too .."mahkee's" that is since the time of "Guillaume le conquerant" who was actually second generation Viking ...but gave us the Anglo Norman Aristocracy ...which means some of us get a "de" in the name just like the French use ...
"usually signifies that ones ancestor was a bigger crook than average for their time or had a more fetching colour of woad"...
or did SEO in Heraldics ..;)
Problem is Americans and Brits think we're French when they see the "de"...
BTW ...hope the diversion into dialect above can be understood ...
for the linguistically challenged ...translation follows ..
"Sorry kid ..but yer say it like Mahkee..I know cos its French 'n' I live 'ere since donkey's''n speak it pretty good ..'sides which I got 2 Mahkees in me fambly .."
...
Clear? ...Good! ....
Ps. Yes I know there are some grammatical errors in my foregoing French ..if it was exact you wouldn't get the sense of it at all ...and only the Quebecois speak "real" French anyway ..
which is usually quite the opposite to an apology.
Rather far afield from the original post now, but I'll bite on this. Other "non"-apologies that get my goat:
"I am sorry if you were offended" (How can you apologize for my feelings? Conditional apology!= real apology)
"I didn't mean to upset you, but..." (The "but" is an eraser that wipes out the beginning of the sentence - virtually always)
WBF