Doohickie
Cyburbian
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Not me. Normal work day.Enjoy Your President's Day holiday off.
Not me. Normal work day.Enjoy Your President's Day holiday off.
We have sizable feral colonies around here. There is a cluster of houses in my hood that feed the ferals but they don't bother to get them spayed/neutered so there's always a sizable colony. A friend of mine a few miles away is a crazy cat lady; she has 3 or 4 indoor cats but feeds all the ferals that come around. She's been trapping them and getting them fixed lately, mostly because she has a quasi-feral indoor/outdoor cat that came of age and he is quite the horny devil. (This is the same crazy cat lady I got Iggy from. Iggy was a feral but really wanted to be indoors, but her indoor cats didn't like him.)So last night I was driving across town and as I drove down a hilly road a cat darted out into the street and I didn't even have time to hit the brakes. The cat was killed instantly. There were apartment buildings on either side of the street so I ended up just pulling the cat's corpse off to the side of the road. No collar or tags. I felt terrible and still do, but I find myself asking, who would let their cat roam free? I'm assuming the cat was a pet, but have no actual proof of that. This morning I drove past the place and saw the corpse had been removed, so maybe so. But, again, if you're going to have a pet why let them outside unless you want this fate for them?
My friend had a picture of Bill Clinton in his house.Has anyone here ever been in someone's home where you saw a portrait of some President hung on the wall? Maybe FDR or Kennedy (maybe next to the portrait of the Pope)? People used to accord a certain reverence to the President that you haven't seen since Nixon flew the coop.
That's surprisingly recent. I had a great uncle who reverently kept a picture of Jimmy Carter on top of his bookcase.My friend had a picture of Bill Clinton in his house.
Kennedy + Pope on the wall was a nod to the fact that Kennedy was the first Roman Catholic president; it was a big deal at the time.Has anyone here ever been in someone's home where you saw a portrait of some President hung on the wall? Maybe FDR or Kennedy (maybe next to the portrait of the Pope)? People used to accord a certain reverence to the President that you haven't seen since Nixon flew the coop.
Ms Fringe hung a copy of New Yorker cover image showing a full moon honoring the big O, Obama.Has anyone here ever been in someone's home where you saw a portrait of some President hung on the wall? Maybe FDR or Kennedy (maybe next to the portrait of the Pope)? People used to accord a certain reverence to the President that you haven't seen since Nixon flew the coop.
Ms Fringe hung a copy of New Yorker cover image showing a full moon honoring the big O, Obama.
None. Public school. Ninth grade English teacher spelled in full page prints a Bible verse Ye shall know the truth etc. which malefactors had to write x times in notebook paper.Was a portrait of the President hung on the wall a thing years ago in school classrooms ?
Has anyone here ever been in someone's home where you saw a portrait of some President hung on the wall? Maybe FDR or Kennedy (maybe next to the portrait of the Pope)? People used to accord a certain reverence to the President that you haven't seen since Nixon flew the coop.
I had two maternal great-aunts that lived in the house that their father, my great-grandfather built. One never married and never left and the other was widowed twice and came back to the farm. All that to say is that the house was their parents home and was a time capsule, maintained like their parents decorated it. In the front foyer was a printed portrait of a Caucasian Jesus, a print of George Washington crossing the Delaware, a portrait of my great-grandfather's parents, and a portrait of my great-grandmother's parents. In the back hallway, there was a framed 1976 Bicentennial Poster that had all the US Presidents.Has anyone here ever been in someone's home where you saw a portrait of some President hung on the wall? Maybe FDR or Kennedy (maybe next to the portrait of the Pope)? People used to accord a certain reverence to the President that you haven't seen since Nixon flew the coop.
So last night I was driving across town and as I drove down a hilly road a cat darted out into the street and I didn't even have time to hit the brakes. The cat was killed instantly. There were apartment buildings on either side of the street so I ended up just pulling the cat's corpse off to the side of the road. No collar or tags. I felt terrible and still do, but I find myself asking, who would let their cat roam free? I'm assuming the cat was a pet, but have no actual proof of that. This morning I drove past the place and saw the corpse had been removed, so maybe so. But, again, if you're going to have a pet why let them outside unless you want this fate for them?
We have a picture of the President, Vice President, and HUD Secretary in our entrance foyer at work. I was told that during Cheetolini’s era that a decorative item was strategically placed above the three photos and the part that hung down somewhat obscured Cheetolini’s face.Was a portrait of the President hung on the wall a thing years ago in school classrooms ?
Has anyone here ever been in someone's home where you saw a portrait of some President hung on the wall? Maybe FDR or Kennedy (maybe next to the portrait of the Pope)? People used to accord a certain reverence to the President that you haven't seen since Nixon flew the coop.
I have a vintage watch with Jimmy Carter on the dial, like this one:That's surprisingly recent. I had a great uncle who reverently kept a picture of Jimmy Carter on top of his bookcase.
Has anyone here ever been in someone's home where you saw a portrait of some President hung on the wall? Maybe FDR or Kennedy (maybe next to the portrait of the Pope)? People used to accord a certain reverence to the President that you haven't seen since Nixon flew the coop.
Pictures of JFK and FDR seem to have been popular in people's homes. That's my perception anyways.My Great Aunt had a picture of JFK next to the Pope.
I could easily stuff a dozen cats in it to make it extra cozy! And a puppy in the pocket.Hi dandy!
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Is there a moon in pluto or whatever because I am feeling quite impatient with everything today
We also have some Ruth Bader Ginsburg tall votive candles like they have for saints in some homes.Pictures of JFK and FDR seem to have been popular in people's homes. That's my perception anyways.
I used to coach accents back when I directed radio shows. One of the most challenging aspects to doing an English accent is making a non-rhotic 'r' sound natural. The temptation when initially learning it is to lean into it way too hard, almost as if emphasizing the r at the end of the word ending in a vowel, as opposed to merely trailing off with it or making it serve as a form of liaison that it often serves as.I think we're all aware of rhotic (pronouncing trailing r's) English as commonly spoken in North America versus non-rhotic (leaving off trailing r's) in British English (and some American east coast accents). Another feature of rhotic English that is the intrusive r, like in the song A Day In The Life by the Beatles when John Lennon says, "I sawr a film today, oh boy."
This speech coach noticed a "tell" when British actors try to speak in an American accent. They will get the trailing r's right, except that they tend to insert the intrusive r.
In this video he discusses it. Kind of interesting, at least to me. I was aware of rhotic and non-rhotic, and that sometimes people add the intrusive r, but I didn't realize the two were linked.
Not: 'I have some idee-err why you're visiting.' But rather, 'I have some idear why you're visiting.'
Trick question. Patrick McManus (who I highly recommend reading) is the authority on this. When a person says "creek", they are referring to a simple type of stream, probably of a smaller flow than a river. A crick will have half-submerged cars, possibly a dead cow, will be a place where you as a child may have done unseemly things. In short, according to Mr. McManus, "...a creek has none of the raucous, vulgar, freewheeling character of a crick."crick or creek?
wash or warsh?
Creek and wash.
When I worked in MT nothing outed me as an easterner like saying "creek."
It's a perfectly adequate example. Yes, if the next word began with a vowel it would, however, better demonstrate how the r can (but does not have to) function as a liaison consonant.Poor example actually.