Jump to content

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 100
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted
this is the "buzz" word characterised by being inane, and frequently drifts out of use quicklyCool Cat

 

Hep

 

Hassle

 

Hey Man

What about "sick" and "wicked"?

 

kaz

 

 

  • Like 1
Posted

...and we have "bone" and "debone", which mean the same, "ravel" and unravel" which mean the same, "flammable" and "inflammable" which mean the same. No wonder people who don't have English as their first language get confused.....

 

Also I like these :-

 

through

 

trough

 

thorough

 

thought

 

tough

 

throughout

 

Cheers

 

Neil

 

 

Posted

A wonderful bird is the Elephant, it flits from bough to bough.

 

It makes its nest in a rhubarb tree, and whistles like a cough.

 

 

Posted
Weren't there 12 Apostrophes?OME

There were but a big wave came along and one collapsed into the sea

 

 

Posted

Yes I see what you mean David. My pet peeve is the use of "on the rise" instead of increasing. To me "on the rise" means on a small hill. Today I saw in a paper something that could be more unique.

 

 

Posted
Just checked my emails and found this... There is a two-letter word that perhaps has more meanings than any other two-letter word, and that is up...

Isn't it funny that I can use my chainsaw to chop a tree down, and then afterwards, I can use the same chainsaw to chop that tree up?

 

 

Posted

One of the most illuminating books I've read is "Breaking the Maya Code by Michael D. Coe (Amazon.com $13.57 new, used from $3.93)

 

From memory it took about a hundred years to crack - much harder than Egyptian hyeroglyphs because it was a logo language.

 

Coe completely breaks down communication structures - a lot more useful than a year or two of Latin.

 

He explains glottalixed and unglottalized, and compares historic languages:

 

Logographic: Egyptian 800 logos, Chinese 5000+

 

"Pure" Syllabic: Persian 40 letters, Cherokee 85

 

Alphabetic or consonantal: English 26, Anglo-Saxon 31, Russian 36, Hebrew 22

 

etc

 

 

  • 2 months later...
Posted

Someone in Bendigo finally had a gutful of the neighbours' cats killing the native birds, so he started trapping and killing them.

 

When word got around that cats were missing, he put a notice at the local supermarket that they'd probably been trapped and killed, and any loose cats would be next.

 

When that drew some outrage he put another, bigger warning up.

 

This made the Herald Sun, and drew a big list of comments, most suggesting that cats be kept on the owners properties.

 

One person was concerned at what cats were doing to the Blue rens.

 

One person suggested you shouldn't let your cat wonder off your property. That seemed to spark some supporting comments all about wondering cats.

 

 

Posted
Someone in Bendigo finally had a gutful of the neighbours' cats killing the native birds, so he started trapping and killing them.When word got around that cats were missing, he put a notice at the local supermarket that they'd probably been trapped and killed, and any loose cats would be next.

When that drew some outrage he put another, bigger warning up.

 

This made the Herald Sun, and drew a big list of comments, most suggesting that cats be kept on the owners properties.

 

One person was concerned at what cats were doing to the Blue rens.

 

One person suggested you shouldn't let your cat wonder off your property. That seemed to spark some supporting comments all about wondering cats.

Rens or Wrens?

 

 

Guest davidh10
Posted

My cat wonders why people like this are let out at weekends!

 

 

Posted
...and if you are American why use one word when many will do , eg "ongoing emergency situation" an emergency to the rest of us...., or "at this point in time" ie now, and the (non)word burglarize , ie burgle. I could go on.....

What about "incentivize"??? Even a "z" in it!!!

 

kaz

 

 

Posted
Mmmm, I have a sense of deja vu. I was involved in a similar discussion a little while ago. I must admit if is one of my hobby horses, just one of many.../

My middle name is PEDANT

 

kaz

 

 

Posted
What about "incentivize"??? Even a "z" in it!!!kaz

Yuk

 

 

Posted
My middle name is PEDANTkaz

....so do you also get annoyed at the signs at supermarket checkouts saying "9 items or less" instead of "9 items or fewer" ? Pedants rule OK 026_cheers.gif.2a721e51b64009ae39ad1a09d8bf764e.gif

 

 

Guest davidh10
Posted

I have been pleasantly surprised to see elevator warning signs in recent years that say "Do Not Use Lift In Event of Fire". This is an example where in earlier years they all said "Do not use Lift in Case of fire", in which case you shouldn't ever use the lift, particularly on days of high fire danger!

 

 

Posted
What about "incentivize"??? Even a "z" in it!!!

Neil_S said:

 

...and if you are American why use one word when many will do , eg "ongoing emergency situation" an emergency to the rest of us...., or "at this point in time" ie now, and the (non)word burglarize , ie burgle. I could go on.....

 

What about "incentivize"??? Even a "z" in it!!!

 

kaz kaz

In the United States, credit cards have an Expiration Date whilst anywhere else in the English-speaking world it is simply an Expiry Date

 

 

Posted

The French gave us "metric". Now I can't read a friggin tape measure !, even if "metric" means "Measure". Wait till you see metrisized time, even the froggys refused to use it.

 

Cheers to all, spacesailor

 

 

  • Like 1
Posted
I have been pleasantly surprised to see elevator warning signs in recent years that say "Do Not Use Lift In Event of Fire". This is an example where in earlier years they all said "Do not use Lift in Case of fire", in which case you shouldn't ever use the lift, particularly on days of high fire danger!

I used to see a sign on a Victorian highway "Lyrebirds Cross" and always wondered what upset them.

 

 

  • Like 1
Guest davidh10
Posted

Near schools in Tasmania... "Slow Children"!

 

 

Posted
Near schools in Tasmania... "Slow Children"!

Used to be lots of signs saying: "Bill Posters Will Be Prosecuted"

 

I never heard of a trial being conducted but the signs seem to have gone. Poor Bill must have been innocent!

 

 

  • Like 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

×
×
  • Create New...