None of the USians until that very instant had had any inkling that "fancy" meant "fanciful" and not "swank."
This is why everyone should adopt my philosophy of reading many mysteries set in a country before you go there.
I want to see the wolves in the walls costume. Badly.
I'm wondering whether there's anyone who has kept track of when the Christmas decorations have gone on sale each year. I think the first week in October is the earliest I've seen them. The stores are all Halloween decorations next to Christmas decorations, making me consider a Nightmare Before Christmas approach to outdoor decorating. I was rather taken with the animated lighted vulture at Michael's. I think arranging bits of one of the plastic human skeletons around it would be a nice touch. For Christmas, I could stick a Santa hat in its mouth.
Yes, fancy dress = costumes. Heh. Oh, English, English, why are you so variable?
I haven't the heart to retype my whole gigantic post, so key points:
- I'm basing the Year 8 & 9 curriculum around this. Should be fun.
- This week, my class were basing their literacy activities around
Inkheart,
because it's Made Of Win. (See also: shirtless Paul Bettany.
Guh.)
- Meanwhile, this kid is not in my class, thank God. He's in my friend's class, two doors down from mine. His father is an Elvis Impersonator. Evidently he's planning to follow in his father's footsteps. Only with Michael Jackson. Um. Yeah. Not sure if this is quite as horrifyingly funny if you don't actually see the kid on a daily basis, but, dear heaven, this amused the crap out of me. (Although, props to him, he's put A LOT of effort into this. And there are stacks of other ones he's done. And he has costumes and everything. And he's choreographed the crap out of it all. But, but, but...it's uncanny how like Michael Jackson he isn't. Um. Also, the camera appears to be operated by a small child, or possibly the family dog. And has a disquieting tendency to drift right, to what I presume is his father's torso. And I presume that the anonymous and rather disquieting sliver of flesh jutting out in an unfortunate location is his father's thumb. But...yes. Quite unfortunate.)
Really-o, truly-o Happy Birthday, omnis!!!
Michael's has an animated lighted vulture? Oh, I could mess with that all year long. Wonder if there's a Michael's around here.
if I ask you to help bury the body and we're not married, you're not gonna be *less* likely to tell
I just want it to always be my choice, not yours. Would you take that choice away from someone you deemed friend?
ita, I'm with you on the weirdness of the marital privilege. I guess I can see some of the arguments but it's still kind of odd. The part about not being able to force a spouse to testify makes more sense to me than the spouse actually being prevented from it.
And it's also kind of unfair - I don't get to have a heart-to-heart with someone after my hit-and-run. At least not with someone I'm not paying.
Not at all! Certainly it's your choice whether or not you rat on me. Even if we're married. I just think this should be part of the pre-nup, or something.
Heh. I never thought before that 'fancy dress' might be a I am aware that Americans call them 'costume parties', though, and that this is a far more logical name.
Oh, and I've fallen in love with tiny cuteness. We just went to the pet shop to see if we feel like getting a new small animal. (We're only allowed a caged creature, on account of renting, and living in a tiny flat.) The Girl likes rats, but the rats in the shop just weren't doing anything for me. But there was a little girl dwarf hamster! Teeny tiny and so adorable! I'm not impulse-buying a pet, but if I still want her tomorrow, we're going back to get her.
We're probably going to call her Hamish. (Yes, we know.)
ETA 'cos my html killed the post. Trying again
I don't think it's legal to buy a little girl in a cage, Seska. No matter how cute.