Five Things Make a Post
Wednesday, March 27th, 2013 09:24 pm1. I grew up in an area where the construction "might could" was allowable -- as was "youse" and "y'all" (but not "all y'all") -- these are the benefits of growing up in a border state. In any case, I needed clarity on whether "might could" was a Maine eccentricity, and of course, I turned to the internet, where I found this fascinating (if you like that kind of thing) discussion.
2. Barnes & Noble and Simon & Schuster are having an argument. So, of course, it seems like a swell idea for B&N to take it out on S&S's writers. Who can do nothing about any of it; who are not part of the problem; and who will lose money and perhaps readers while existing fans write to them asking if they know that Barnes and Noble refuses to carry their book. I've lost count, but this? Is another reason why writers drink.*
2a. Here's the Wall Street Journal article
2b. Here's the blog of one author caught in the middle
2c. Here's another blog of another affected author, who has decided to Do Something
3. In another news, Harper-Collins is the latest in a series of publishers to adopt the Humpty Dumpty Theory of Language ("When I use a word, it means what I want it to mean"). Here's that link.
4. I very much doubt that I'm going to list the songs to which I know the lyrics. It just seems that my time could be more profitably spent doing something else. You are certainly free to use your imaginations.
5. I'm working on a short story, so there is no Carousel Seas snippet tonight. Maybe tomorrow. Though I sorta hope to finish the short story tomorrow.
Good-night Wesley; sleep well. I'll most likely kill you in the morning.
Rachel Adds again to my vocabulary
Date: 2013-03-29 06:18 am (UTC)Tonight Rachel used the word "Kerfuffle" to refer to a big explosion in TX which happened because of a natural gas fracking operation went really wrong and exploded. Luckily no one was killed. I hadn't understood the word which is used by a British gent who I know. So I just looked it up. It comes from the Scottish Gaelic "curfuffle" ....to twist and disarray...and is used in general in the UK. This fracking incident was defininitely a kerfuffle.
Now...the author could if she wishes do a short explanation on cat language. I'd imagine that the Maine Coons have a large vocabulary. How different from other cats like Scrabble?, and so on.
Thank you very much.