I never heard that.
I think we are having cake for our meeting today and not pie. Hm.
'Sleeper'
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.
I never heard that.
I think we are having cake for our meeting today and not pie. Hm.
I never heard of that rule, but maybe it's a Midwestern thing?
Randomly, I'm wondering if the transitory pain I've had right in the gallbladder region might actually be a mild gallbladder stone. It's been happening on and off after meals for a week now. OTOH, it's not like it's agonizing or anything, just a cramp I can power through. (This compared to my Actual Kidney Stone or Actual Broken Toe.)
That seems like the kind of wackado "rule" some teacher comes up with and insists is real.
Oh, thank goodness -- there will be pie here this afternoon!
I never heard of that rule, but maybe it's a Midwestern thing?
Huh. I dunno. But I don't think I've heard any references to that rule since I was in 2nd grade.
Bon Bon now I want rhubarb pie! Yum. When are you due??
I've never heard of that.
The done/finished thing, I mean. I have heard of rhubarb pie. And now I want some.
When I was in kindergarten-2nd grade-ish I remember teachers and my parents telling us that you only use the word "done" when referring to food that's baking (or cooking?). Otherwise you were supposed to use the word "finished".
I've been told that, possibly up through high school. And it still sticks in my mind occasionally when I'm about to reply "I'm done!" and I wonder if I'll be shamed for saying that and I should say "I'm finished." And then I don't give a shit, because people misuse "literally" and think that "aw" is spelled "awe" (which mean 2 TOTALLY different things).
t /bitter and tetchy
I feel better now that I'm not the only one to have heard that rule.
eta: Because I was all set to travel back in time to when a teacher of mine corrected a student on the use of "done" and say to the teacher, "You're just making shit up, aren't you?" Who knows what that could have done to the time stream.
My 6th grade teacher told us you should only use "a lot" if you were saying "a lot of land". I break that rule a lot.
Okay, now that's insane.