Did I say breetches? I meant breeches
sorry that was probably just my misspelling what you wrote! And was too lazy to go back and check.
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Did I say breetches? I meant breeches
sorry that was probably just my misspelling what you wrote! And was too lazy to go back and check.
So "vest" in the American sense (as in a 3-piece suit) - would that be waistcoat?
IIRC, yes, but it's pronounced 'weskit' if you're being authenticlike.
But you don't have to write it like that. . . ever, right?
Because either way, I would think that Sirius, James, and Remus would think it suspicious that Peter becomes a rat.
I thought it was supposed to be a bit foreshadowy for the reader, but at the time the boys wouldn't really think much of it. I think the animals they became (Remus notwithstanding) were very reflective of their personalities.
(Note: this may be a conclusion based more on fanfic than canon.)
IIRC, yes, but it's pronounced 'weskit' if you're being authenticlike.
???
t puzzled
IIRC, yes, but it's pronounced 'weskit' if you're being authenticlike.
But you don't have to write it like that. . . ever, right?
Only in American catalogues.
But St. John is pronounced sin-jun, right?
It is, yes. I was at school with a boy called St.John, and he was most startled that I happened to know how to spell it.
...it struck me the other day, on that basis, that Sinclair is presumably a derivation of St Clare.
...it struck me the other day, on that basis, that Sinclair is presumably a derivation of St Clare.
In the second Anne of Green Gables book, there's a little boy named St. Clare. His mother is very insistant on the "proper" pronunciation of their last name, Donnell -- it's Don-NELL, not DON-nell -- and I always wondered whether St. Clare was meant to be pronounced Sinclair, but it's never mentioned in the text.