Stuart Dren
Active Member
No, it isn't. Pincer attack from her work and exams.That's... not good.
No, it isn't. Pincer attack from her work and exams.That's... not good.
There's a probably apocryphal story about a New Mexican woman in a line at a bank speaking on her cell phone. The guy behind her says "You ought to speak English or go back to Mexico, where you came from." The woman replies, "Actually I was talking in Navaho. Why don't you Englishmen go back to where you came from?"
Don't see how anyone could mistake Navajo for Spanish, but anything is possible.
I'm sorry to hear this. For the record, I was commenting on linguistic distinctions and not permissibility of racism.I've been a victim of racist comments many times, and doing it to other people doesn't make it right.
Well, the point is that the boor not only didn't know the difference, but didn't care. Anything that wasn't English was wrong.Don't see how anyone could mistake Navajo for Spanish, but anything is possible.
When Mohandas Gandhi was asked by a journalist what he thought of Western civilization, he is reported to have replied, "It would be a good thing."I've always remembered a story told by Isaac Asimov. In the 1920s, a member of the Oneida tribe leaves the reservation and comes to see New York for the first time. He is struck by what he sees, and gazes in wonder at the tall skyscrapers, the many shops, and the motor cars.
A local notices the Oneida man's astonishment, and says in amusement, "How do you like our city?"
The Oneida man nods and says "It is remarkable, remarkable. But tell me, sir, how do you like our country?"![]()
Good grief, guys, I get it. I got it. I have it.Well, the point is that the boor not only didn't know the difference, but didn't care. Anything that wasn't English was wrong.
My first consulting job came when I was 21 and an exhibit firm in Pasadena, CA hired me as their cotton expert for an exhibit they were building for a county fair. The head of the firm told me about generonyms, but he called them "frigidaires." This is the first time I've heard generonyms- thanks.generonym
Sent to me by a friend who is also a writer:
Latibulate: to hide away in a quiet, safe space to seek solitude, escape reality, or recover from the stress of the world.
Use was limited to the writings of a single 17th century writer, but it deserves to be brought out of obscurity and used with abandon.
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Why do parachutists yell "Geronimo!" when jumping from an airplane?
www.straightdope.com
I enjoyed the Geronimo story, too. Had the movie been A Streetcar called Desire, paratroopers would be yelling, "Stellaaaaaaa!"
where my co-workers had a great deal of difficulty understanding them. "They talk so fast!" they said.
Killjoy.If the Geronimo story is true, then I'm sorry to say that's impossible. The story apparently happened in 1940, and A Streetcar called Desire came out in 1951.
If the Geronimo story is true, then I'm sorry to say that's impossible. The story apparently happened in 1940, and A Streetcar called Desire came out in 1951.
Stories of cows being led away for the fairies to use as their own include the tale of a cow named Cooby belonging to a farmer named Tom Connors. Tom had noticed that his livestock was in the habit of wandering into the secluded lands and up on to the rath that belonged to the folk.
Is that one aimed at me?rath - a usually circular earthwork serving as stronghold and residence of an ancient Irish chief
~ fairy denizens of rath and hill—O. S. J. Gogarty
I read this word today in something that came in my inbox - from The National Leprechaun Museum's Monthly Newsletter -
Is that one aimed at me?