Man, I need to pace myself better when I get a ton of tasks thrown at me all at once, or else my bosses will realize exactly how much work they could be getting out of me.
Oz ,'First Date'
Natter 53: We could just avoid making tortured puns
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.
Random hivemind question of the day, inspired by learning on another loop that not everyone uses the terms in question the way I do:
What's the difference between a calico and a tortoiseshell cat?
Calico is splotchy colors, tortise shell has kind of a color with veiny color throughout
ETA: I'm wrong. Here's what I found
A "tortoiseshell" or "tortie" is randomly patched all over with red, black, and cream. The patches may be very mingled, or they may be more distinct.
A "blue-cream" (also called "blue tortie" or or "dilute tortie") is randomly patched all over with blue and cream. This is a soft, pastel color.
A "calico" has more white. As a rule, the more white there is on the cat, the larger and more distinct the red and black patches will be. You'll notice that the large black patches are solid black, and the large red patches are actually red tabby.
A "dilute calico" has the same amount of white as a calico, but instead of red and black patches, it has blue and cream patches. The blue patches are solid blue, and the cream patches are cream tabby.
Wild guess...distinct tri-color patches (calico), vs. tweedy mix of two colors.
I'm probably too old to build a pillow fort and hang a sign on it telling people to go away, aren't I?
I'd always used calico for parti-colored cats with significant amounts of white and tortie for ones with little or no white. But if y'all and my Regency writers loop are to be believed, apparently I'm in the minority. Of course, the part-white ones usually are splotchy while the brown-black-gold ones are generally more tweedy.
I'm probably too old to build a pillow fort and hang a sign on it telling people to go away, aren't I?
If all of us do it, maybe we can make it grown-up behavior.
I'm probably too old to build a pillow fort and hang a sign on it telling people to go away, aren't I?
Yes.
You should build your fort out of bricks, and tie your sign to rocks that you lob at those who dare approach.
Calico vs tortie: I've always used the terms the way Susan does. The mostly-dark with veiny color, I always heard called brindle.
What's the difference between a calico and a tortoiseshell cat?
Generally, I think of a calico as white with patches of color, and tortoiseshell as darker with the colors all smushed together.