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Not a bad thing.
I just love to have my normal time back!!
I just love to have my normal time back!!
Our local drivers all know me from the theatre, and will often stop me if they see me on the street to give me my packages
Give that driver a medal for reducing his carbon footprint and forward the story to the jet-setting environmental advocates using private jets to cross the Atlantic to talk with others of the ilk about the dangers of carbon dioxide pollution!I was expecting a UPS delivery to our rural PO Box yesterday (which is about four miles away from our house). The drivers know to leave it at the house where the three mail boxes are. I guess one of the UPS drivers didn't want to drive the 10 highway miles and 5 dirt road miles to deliver my hat, so left it with the "lady of the house" at the insurance office in town where she works. "Since this was the only thing I had to take out there and it was going to end up at your house anyway ... do you mind?" Seems like she should have got a cut of the shipping charges.
Folks driving „large“ cars, in a European scale, who think their vehicles are five meters longer than they actually are. Standing in front of an on-demand-traffic-light, about five meters away from the stop line and wondering why they don’t get green light, standing also about two meters away from the contact loop that triggers green light that way.
Since English lacks a distinction between second person singular and second person plural, I think y'all is a perfectly good grammatical construct.My wife (definitely a Yankee) occasionally uses “y’all”. We’ve Often wondered where she got it from. Never suspected that the internet might be to blame. Yes, come to think of it, I have seen people use it in their text messages.
Once we had distinct versions and somehow the singular version disappeared. We English speakers have been stubbornly reintroducing new words for the plural on a regional basis ever since.Since English lacks a distinction between second person singular and second person plural, I think y'all is a perfectly good grammatical construct.
If was declared "non-standard" by grammarians who were guilty of some degree of snobbery.
(yust my opinion)
There must be something wrong with me, because the whole point of this eludes me.Coal miner rushes straight from work to take his kid to the big game. This photo struck me as a Norman Rockwell painting waiting to happen. Old school.
https://www.cnn.com/2022/10/26/us/k...-john-calipari-coal-miner-son-game/index.html
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Bingo, and amen to this.Sometimes it seems idiots have taken over the operation of everything on this planet, and nothing goes as it should.
I noticed younger drivers here in the U.S. doing this starting about ten, or maybe fifteen, years ago. Someone told me they're teaching new drivers to do this, because "That way, if there's an accident in the intersection it will lessen the chances of your car getting hit by one of the cars in the accident."Folks driving „large“ cars, in a European scale, who think their vehicles are five meters longer than they actually are. Standing in front of an on-demand-traffic-light, about five meters away from the stop line and wondering why they don’t get green light, standing also about two meters away from the contact loop that triggers green light that way.
Not particularly bright drivers either.It's just further evidence that people are not only sheep willing to follow along with anything they're told, but they aren't particularly bright sheep if they believe this load of sheep dip.
Since English lacks a distinction between second person singular and second person plural, I think y'all is a perfectly good grammatical construct.
It was declared "non-standard" by grammarians who were guilty of some degree of snobbery.
(yust my opinion)
I've always preferred "yez" "yuz," "yiz," or "youse" to "y'all" from anyone who isn't an actual Southerner. All of those Irish-sourced variants were once common in the Northeast US before the great homogenization of dialects in the second half of the 20th Century. The adoption of "y'all" by the internet generation as the universal option for second person plural rankles my Northeastern soul beyond measure.In Northern Ireland in my experience, we had "ye" and "yiz" in the Belfast suburbs, and towards the Larne end it was more "you" and "youse". I have a feeling it probably echoed Gaelic grammar, as much spoken English in that part of the world does.
I've always preferred "yez" "yuz," "yiz," or "youse" to "y'all" from anyone who isn't an actual Southerner. All of those Irish-sourced variants were once common in the Northeast US before the great homogenization of dialects in the second half of the 20th Century. The adoption of "y'all" by the internet generation as the universal option for second person plural rankles my Northeastern soul beyond measure.