Wash: I didn't think you were one for rituals and such. Mal: I'm not, but it'll keep the others busy for a while. No reason to concern them with what's to be done.

'Bushwhacked'


We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good  

There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."


deborah grabien - Mar 18, 2004 6:50:23 am PST #1502 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Years in the UK left me with the tooth-grindy reaction to mispronounciations of Leicester and Worcester.

More common than those, even, is the mangling of "-shire" at the end of a place name. That, and the mangling of "Edinborough" and "Glasgow". Brrr.


Steph L. - Mar 18, 2004 6:53:48 am PST #1503 of 10002
I look more rad than Lutheranism

Do you say "Mis-UR-ee" or "Mis-UR-uh"?

I get violent when people say "Mis-UR-uh" and, particularly, "Cin-cin-AT-uh."

There's an "I" on the end, people! Not an "A"!


Katerina Bee - Mar 18, 2004 7:02:56 am PST #1504 of 10002
Herding cats for fun

I think Anne's book organization stuff is golden. Mine is much like hers, except for the idea about turning pretty covers face-out, which I have to do now. I have a couch placed in front of the Wall of Books, so the ones I don't access often are on the bottom 2 tiers, because I have to move the couch to get at them. Obviously I could probably get rid of all those books, but you never know what you might need someday. The Human Anatomy book is useful sometimes, but the Introduction to Physics book: no.


Anne W. - Mar 18, 2004 7:03:46 am PST #1505 of 10002
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

Do you say "Mis-UR-ee" or "Mis-UR-uh"?

The former, as I spent my formative years in St. Louis.

More common than those, even, is the mangling of "-shire" at the end of a place name.

Is it supposed to be pronounced "-shr," almost as if there's no vowel? That's how I've always pronouced it.

What's really fun is listening to the way natives pronounce "Baltimore, Maryland."


Strix - Mar 18, 2004 7:06:49 am PST #1506 of 10002
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

I say MissourE, unless I'm at a family reunion or likewise, and then I revert back to childhood MissourAH.

Someone a while back asked it there was a term for when the Amry slapped two word together, like "humint" and there is. It's called "blending."

Hey, I learned something this semester! Whoda thunk it?


Vortex - Mar 18, 2004 7:12:27 am PST #1507 of 10002
"Cry havoc and let slip the boobs of war!" -- Miracleman

Someone a while back asked it there was a term for when the Amry slapped two word together, like "humint" and there is. It's called "blending."

like "sitrep" (situation report)


Ginger - Mar 18, 2004 7:27:14 am PST #1508 of 10002
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I get violent when people say "Mis-UR-uh" and, particularly, "Cin-cin-AT-uh."

There's an "I" on the end, people! Not an "A"!

So what's your feeling about the S at the end of Illinois? (I say "Mis-UR-uh." I lived in St. Joe in the fifth grade, and I assume that's where I picked it up.)

You can spot a non-Georgians by the pronounciation of Albany. The town in Georgia is pronounced "ALL Benny." There's also the pronounciation of Taliaferro County (Tolliver). Native Atlantans kind of slide over the second T in Atlanta.


Fred Pete - Mar 18, 2004 7:35:11 am PST #1509 of 10002
Ann, that's a ferret.

Native Atlantans kind of slide over the second T in Atlanta.

And Midwesterners transplanted to the south slide over both.

Mark of a true Wisconsinite -- can pronounce "Mukwanago" without pausing.


JohnSweden - Mar 18, 2004 7:40:15 am PST #1510 of 10002
I can't even.

The water version is "Slew" most certainly. Slew, in fact, is an alternate spelling, and is the "Slew" in question in the name "Seattle Slew".

Yet, in literature, it is the watery "Sl-ow [like ow!] of Despair" (Pilgrim's Progress)

I offen say ofTen. Nope, on thinking, just ofTen.

Edinburgh, Deb. I'm weeping at a true believer "borough"-ing us.

t winks

Big ass Guy Kay post coming up in a minute. I should probably hack it in bits to avoid dingoes.


JohnSweden - Mar 18, 2004 7:41:21 am PST #1511 of 10002
I can't even.

I had the good fortune to be at Guy Kay's Harbourfront reading last night. There have to be benefits of living in a place like Toronto and one of the best for me has been that one of my favourite authors lives here. I've been lucky to hear Guy speak and read over the years, often at Ad Astra, but memorably also in the Byzantine section of the Royal Ontario Museum for Lord of Emperors.

Last night was a good night, like that evening at the ROM. I headed down early and bumped into some friends, headed that way. Like-minded folk, and it is always added enjoyment to share fun unexpectedly. I got to make a friend there from a mutual acquaintance and that's something else to thank Guy for. I saw Martin Springett on the way in and said hello. He plans to play at Ad Astra (in two weeks) so I'll see him again there. The Bakka-Phoenix folks had a table with copies of Martin's new CD, Bright Weavings (a shout-out? Couldn't be). I got one and will give it a listen this week.

We got seats near the front. It was a good-sized room, the Brigantine. I don't know what the number at stake was in the bet between Debby dG and Guy, but the seats were as close to full as I could tell and there must have been around a hundred people (roughly, I didn't count). I'm guessing Debby wins again.The lights dimmed. The candles on each table was a very nice touch by the Harbourfront people. After an introduction, Guy and Mark Askwith took the stage in a very Masterpiece theatre-like setting. Mark has been a major contributor to the Toronto and Canadian SF scene with his work on Prisoners of Gravity and Space: The Imagination Station and could be counted on to have done his homework. Mark got Guy talking about some of his key themes and inspirations. GGK talked about his view on "identity theft", privacy incursions of authors writing about real people and how writing about characters and places that are inspired by historical events frees him delve into the details of his fictional characters' lives and relationships, rather than being pinned to what we don't know about historical figures. Mark asked his long-awaited "how cool was it?" question about Guy's work on the Silmarillion and Guy said that the greatest asset he took away from that experience was the demystifying nature of the work. He said that the awe seeps away after working, elbows-deep, with the many drafts and rewrites, and that experience freed him from any intimidation of working in the professor's field when other eminent fantasists (like Charles deLint and Jane Yolen, for example) of GGK's generation went in other directions and stepped away from high fantasy to avoid being in the shadow of Tolkien, or just as much, caught up with the imitators who followed. I thought that was a very illuminating comment.

Mark then said that he had always been confused that Guy had followed the Silmarillion work, not by launching into his writing career, but rather, law school. Guy said that it had been a pragmatic choice while waiting for his thinking about what he was going to write to coalesce in his mind. He said that if you launch a career as a Canadian writer of fantasy fiction while planning to raise and feed a family, without a backup plan, then you aren't ... from Winnepeg. Mark commented that it was an odd experience attending at the old Queen street location of Bakka for a Fionavar signing and finding the place full of lawyers. Not the usual crowd there, for certain (in spite of the old Street Legal location next door).

(continued in Nilly/Firefly-like fashion)