Here's my take on apologies from customer service representatives. These are the front-line workers who have to deal with me when the company they work for has done me a dis-service. I think their training requires them to apologize to the wronged customer, me.
First, there isn't even a remote...
I've seen any number of women in "yoga pants" who don't, apparently, have any friends with enough compassion to tell them not to wear them in public. Just because they make something in your size doesn't mean that it's a good idea to wear it.
I have more books than I have room for. I'm tempted to go "anti-shoplifting". That is, take a bag of books to a used book store, duck behind a tall bookcase, and leave them there before scampering off.
I grew up in a small town with its own school system. There were perhaps 10,000 residents at its peak. The main employer was a steel mill specializing in railroad car wheels and other ring fabrication. My father worked there as machinist. All this by way of background to establish that it wasn't...
Using "gift" instead of "give" is the kind of locution that a person who says, "Please contact myself or one of my associates ..." would use. Such a person would know better by junior high school if he or she had paid even a little attention in class instead of goofing off. Now these people want...
Once upon a time, "pizza" may have been an adjective used mainly in New York City (and may be still is), but anywhere else in the English-speaking world, "pizza" has become a substantive adjective with the noun "pie" being omitted.
"gift" ... this is a noun
"give" ... this is a verb
Sometime in the past few years, someone has been trying to replace "give" with "gift". It sounds pretentious and I don't like it.
In my town, these were like the Tony model, but always of cheap vinyl or canvas construction. We called them "book bags" and if you still carried one by the time you got to the eighth grade (age 13 mostly, in the U.S.) you were clearly a nerd and most probably had eyeglasses with black...
Once we had distinct versions and somehow the singular version disappeared. We English speakers have been stubbornly reintroducing new words for the plural on a regional basis ever since.
Give that driver a medal for reducing his carbon footprint and forward the story to the jet-setting environmental advocates using private jets to cross the Atlantic to talk with others of the ilk about the dangers of carbon dioxide pollution!
Bob Barker was much younger when I watched him on TV (Truth or Consequences, not The Price Is Right), and some of those toys belonged to a friend's younger brother or sister. I was too old to play with them. Now, the carousel whipping around at 100 mph, that I remember.
George Harrison had this to say:
"One, two, three, four
One, two (one, two, three, four)
Let me tell you how it will be
There's one for you, nineteen for me
'Cause I'm the taxman
Yeah, I'm the taxman
Should five percent appear too small
Be thankful I don't take it all
'Cause I'm the taxman
Yeah...
English had singular and plural pronouns for the second person. "Thee, thou, and thine" were singular forms. Then beginning about the time British settlers came to North America, those forms fell out of favor. North American Quakers retained their use longer than the general population. Here's a...
Back on the topic of waiters, I find it irritating when a waiter asks, "What are we having to drink?" I sometimes mutter under my breath, "I don't know about you, but I'll have iced tea." My first name is Charles. My father's name was the same as was his father's. That makes me Charles III, but...
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