When people say "Prior-ize" instead of "PrioriTize" it drives me crazy!
I'll sometimes say "prior-ize." Usually when I want something done several days ago. Preferably by Richard Pryor.
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."
When people say "Prior-ize" instead of "PrioriTize" it drives me crazy!
I'll sometimes say "prior-ize." Usually when I want something done several days ago. Preferably by Richard Pryor.
Usually when I want something done several days ago. Preferably by Richard Pryor.
So, you want it flambéd?
(rassenfrassen html. I can't even joke in cyberspace!)
I read her Tess mysteries out of order so I am pretty confused about where things were left.
This is a fabulous site to aid in getting the books in order. You can search by author or by character. Handy, that.
And look! Deb Grabien's in there!
www.stopyourekillingme.com PS it's timing out without connecting but I expect that's a temporary thing.
100 most mispronounced words/phrases. There were a few I use that I hadn't known were wrong, most notably "spitting image."
This is why that 100 words list is crap.
This is why that 100 words list is crap.
Yeah, I was reading the list and I was thinking that some of these pronunciations were perfectly acceptable in any dictionary you look.
Great example: often. I say "offen", but I know it's correct to say "often" (even if it irritates me). The list says the former is the only correct way.
The list is absolutely right where it agrees with me:
barbituRate, RRRRRate
. . . and absolutely wrong where it doesn't. Yeah, you shouldn't say "card shark" when you mean "cardsharp", but "card shark" has a perfectly valid meaning (to me, at least) of "person who is very good at some card game or another". Note the lack of trickiness in definition.
(And, hey, look, that other link agrees with me. Cool. I didn't read it first, honest.)
Side note: people have been saying "aks" for 1000 years? Huh. Well, 1000 years ago, "ask" and "ax" might've been synonyms.
I always liked the origin of the word "nickname"--it started out as "an ekename" in Middle English ("eke" meaning "also"), and then the consonant drifted from the article to the noun. Very cool.
"Pernickety" surprised me. No idea that extra "s" (as in persnickety) was not supposed to be there.
Oh no! I refuse. This is where I draw the line. I love the "s". The "s" makes it all snarky. The "s" allows you to relish saying that word -- "You're so per-SNICK-itey!"
In fact, that's what I'm being right now in refusing to accept this change. Persnickitey. Definitely not pernickitey.
Pernickitey is NOT a word. Persnickitey is. I have spoken, and so it shall be. Bleah t sticks tongue at stupid rule-making people
sits with Kathy