squatting dog
We don't have as far to go, as we've already been
- Location
- Arkansas, and also Florida
could be "no can Dew".Good example to give, Mur.... Sorry Dave....No Can-do!
(Or is it, "No Can Due?")
could be "no can Dew".Good example to give, Mur.... Sorry Dave....No Can-do!
(Or is it, "No Can Due?")
I have a very savvy friend who once told me that "I could care less" is short for...No we don't, unless we're the type who couldn't care less.
Ain't that sumthin'I belonged to an online editors' group. If it had been a face-to-face gathering, we would have come to blows over whether it's "You've got another thing coming" or "You've got another think coming."
I really don't care how people write or talk, unless I'm being paid to correct them.
Sooooooo, it's not hollow weenieIf you're talking to me, I knew that. I was going for clarity of pronunciation, like, say O'ween like you would O'Brien.
Well, only if the clerk says:But the one that really gets under my skin? When a clerk says...
"Have a good one!"
It almost feels like I'm being encouraged to have a successful bowel movement or something.
It has a long and interesting history, going back to the Celtic Samhain. Then after the Romans took over they replaced it with Feralia and Pomona. In 609 Pope Gregory declared it All Martyrs Day, late expanded to All Saints, in England called All-hallows or All-hallowmas (from Middle English Alholowmesse meaning All Saintsā Day). That eventually became our Halloween. So there are a lot of historically correct ways to say it.Hollo een?
It's All Hallow's Eve. Hallowe'en. The day/night before All Saints' Day.
Repeat after me: Hallowe'en. Practice it. It's easy. Hallowe'en.
Another one: for all intensive purposes. Um, nope! That's all intents and purposes.
Or how about this written one? in do time. What???? In due time!
I forget that one quite often, I don't always catch it in the proof read, probably because when I proof, I focus on the sound in my head, and while its and it's are entirely different words, they still sound the same.What a minefield that is. It's is a contraction and should be used where a sentence would normally read "it is." The apostrophe indicates that part of a word has been removed. Its with no apostrophe, on the other hand, is the possessive word, like "his" and "her," for nouns without gender.
Well at least you proof read, I always proof read, yet when doing a final check after posting, I will see something like "buy" when it should have been "but." That's qwerty keyboards for you, thankfully there's time to correct it.I forget that one quite often, I don't always catch it in the proof read, probably because when I proof, I focus on the sound in my head, and while its and it's are entirely different words, they still sound the same.
Is that what individuals around the U.S. are doing- trying to sound British???I don't understand... we call it Hallow 'een ... are you saying you all call it Hollow 'een ?
we also say Due (D'yew ) Time.. not Do..time ( the last one is when you serve a prison sentence![]()
who says Americans are trying to sound British ?... Halloween.. is pronounced HA..Low.. een... simple as that..anyone pronouncing it as Hollow.. is wrong...Is that what individuals around the U.S. are doing- trying to sound British???
I first started hearing it a few years ago locally, and then on t.v.- individuals dragging out the vowels, and sometimes seeming like they're adding more. Example: 'too' comes out like 'teeee- yeeew.'
Re: the OP- I've been all around the U.S., and the only person I've ever known who pronounced it "HALLO" (instead of "HOLLO") was my mother. But she did have a way of mispronouncing words, so I never paid much attention.
In that part, I was referring to where you were talking about Due vs. Do.who says Americans are trying to sound British ?... Halloween.. is pronounced HA..Low.. een... simple as that..anyone pronouncing it as Hollow.. is wrong...
Amazing! I had no trouble at all posting that read!Don't stress people - read this
Aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosnāt mttaer in waht oredr the ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit pclae. The rset can be a toatl mses and you can sitll raed it wouthit porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe.
..but Due... pronounced D-yew... is the proper pronunciation.. No Do....In that part, I was referring to where you were talking about Due vs. Do.