It's because you climb with your limbs, although limb rhymes with rim, unlike climb, which rhymes with...well...rhyme.
'Touched'
Natter 32 Flavors and Then Some
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
You start worrying about that now, you'll never be done.
I wonder why I ever started. Stupid brain.
Also, what is the correct way to say "Arkansas"? I always say "are-can-saw".
I was the annoying friendless pedantic second-grader who RAILED against my classmates' pronunciation of "PUH-sketti" and "crown" (for "crayon").
When everyone knows the correct pronunciation is "puh-SKE-ti."
I wonder this too. And yet obviously they don't.
Of course, I spent a good twelve years playing the viola, which means I was playing offbeats half of the time. When I did a capella in grad school my voice wasn't the best, but damn if I couldn't pick up rhythms quickly.
I played saxophone for six years, but I already had good rhythm when I started. Of course, I went to a Baptist church, albeit a white one, from the cradle up, and used to have the run of the sanctuary as a very little girl while my parents were in choir practice, and I'm sure being thoroughly exposed to music at such a young age helped both my rhythm and ear for pitch.
When I was in first or second grade, I was really annoyed at the way "comb" is spelled.
Does anyone else have the thing where you know a word is spelled correctly, but the more you write it, the more wrong it looks? "Choir" and "sergeant" both have that effect on me, and since I'm in a choir and am writing a novel whose male protagonist is a sergeant, I have to write them all the time.
Does anyone else have the thing where you know a word is spelled correctly, but the more you write it, the more wrong it looks?
Yes. I blame that on brain-enfeeblement....
Also, what is the correct way to say "Arkansas"? I always say "are-can-saw".
That is correct. Except when it is correct to say "our-KAN-zass", which it apparently is occasionally, ie. the river in Kansas?
Does anyone else have the thing where you know a word is spelled correctly, but the more you write it, the more wrong it looks?
"Tartlets. Tartlets. The word has lost all meaning."
Yes. I blame that on brain-enfeeblement....Brought on by the blood sugar wonkiness caused by too much puh-SKE-ti.
When I was in first or second grade, I was really annoyed at the way "comb" is spelled.
I used to be really annoyed as "scissors" for that damned silent 'c'. Also, the store "Hechinger's" for sounding like a disease.