More you might like
- Reaper: -dropping guns on the ground- I wonder what happens to my old guns after i reload.
- Junkrat: -aggressively pointing to Reaper from afar- THIS FUCKER IS GIVIN' OUT FREE GUNS HOLY FUCK!!!
Alternity: Gamma World ~ Wizards of the Coast (2000)
This is an unfair way to go about a day of upland hunting: the pure-strain in front has two Ancient guns, and his Menarl friend is making do with a broken baseball bat. Uncool.
spoilers for zarya vs sombra
Sombra hacks Zarya’s canon and she just shrugs, drops it, and punches her in the face. “Too bad you can’t hack THESE GUNS!” Zarya laughs. She flexes over Sombra’s stunned body. Russia is saved.
THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT I COME TO THIS WEBSITE FOR.
US Politics Post
you know how i bug you to register to vote and then vote and it’s really super-annoying? well the republican party platform is rolling out and it includes a 100% ban on abortions and revocation of same-sex marriage and no background check for guns and oh yes also conversion therapy for LGBTQ+ people so yeah me bugging you is not going to change sorry not sorry please register to vote and then vote?
Other “highlights”, per the New York Times:
- military women barred from combat
- coal considered “clean” energy
- pornography declared public menace
- religion (read: Christianity) must be used as guide for legislation
- teaching the bible in public schools
- building a wall along the Mexican border like Trump wants
Reblogging for the NYT article link, and also this one from OccupyDemocrats. Your vote matters so much.
Please vote and please don’t be complacent. So very not good polling numbers for Clinton came out this morning, and in general I think polling is going to consistently undercount support for Trump (hi, I look at data regarding the election as part of my day job, I am not just talking out of my ass). Vote. Even if you think your state is “safe.” And please learn about your local down-ticket races, because that’s where the policy that affects your daily life happens.
I love….. adding unnecessary e’s to words like spicey or babey. ……. it makes the words pop
Unnecessary, redundant, sloppy, visually displeasing, and a sign of not understanding the English language. But yeah, they “pop” I guess. Just like my assumption that you arent average.
oooo!!! buzzkill syndrome, i see. a true example, what a case study.
someone is angery!!!
what a bitche
And apparently lacking in a historical knowledge of English, which included, more E’s than it does now. Why? Because words were pronounced a bit differently, there was no standardized written form, and oh yes, dialectical differences were highly localized–which meant a word could be spelled differently just a few miles distant. Remember that English is not one language, but an amalgam of about seven different tongues and their written forms, which often were injected more than once over the course of time. Which is why English bears traces of both Norman French and Medieval French. After all, French was the court language at different times in England for some four hundred years. Notice that English has the odd -OUGH spelling on words that sound like -OO? That is a French form of an ancient Germanic letter no longer used. It existed in England due to Proto-Germanic migrations (Viking invasions). Over centuries, Vikings came and went, while their own language evolved, and injected several versions into the linguistic incubator that was Britain. Then other invaders (Anglos, Saxons, and so on) came and modified, back and forth, switching hands back and forth as the original tongues shifted and then impacted, shifted then impacted. Rather like a sea swell. Because of this constant flux, about every century, one could count upwards of two major linguistic shifts in any one region of the island we now call the UK.
A list: just for a laugh.
- “atte” = “at”
- “Brenne” = “burn”
- “eek” = “also”
- “eald” or “olde” = “old”
- “glorie” = “glory”
- “hadde” = “had”
- “here” = “her”
- “Lasse” = “less”
- “morewe” = “morrow”
- “sonne” = “sun”
- “thinlke” = “this or that”
- “widuwe” = “widow”
- “wonne” = “won”
- And here’s some funny ones…to which, modern English adds an E to obtain the AI vowel.
- “wif” = “wife”
- “win” = “wine”
This is but a tiny list of words from the history of English that make heavy use of the E. In fact, in the Early Modern period, the one closest to contemporary English (when Shakespeare was writing) It was common for any word to suddenly end in an E, depending on the author. Because again, the first dictionary had only just come out, and only some of the people ever got their hands on it. Do keep in mind that any word containing an E sound, no matter what the origin, was often spelled with two E’s or with an IE or an EYE. Words that ended with an -ILL sound, often found an E attached. Words that to this day retain a silent end E, were originally not silent, and that E was indeed vocalized, depending on region…which is of course how that E ever appeared in the first place. Go on…pick up any book written in 1600 or earlier.
The letter E isn’t even always just an E.
The “ash”, or AE combination, is a one of 12 letters that no longer exist in English. In Old English/Latin versions of the alphabet which again, were not standardized, it replaced a local Anglo Saxon rune “ ᚫ“ (Looks a bit like an E, doesn’t it?) which made a similar sound. Of a sudden, words that had never contained an E, suddenly began to contain them. A good example of this is the Greek word “aion” which became “aeon” and now is simply written in English as “eon”. Due to pronunciation drift, away from the fascinating French vowels during extensive periods of war, and the inevitable shift toward simpler text forms, the ash fell away, becoming either an A or an E. This transition is lengthy and in fact, was only recently completed, largely because of an American push to simplify printing processes. Because of this, even the word “ medieval”–notice that E in the middle– is no longer spelled as it used you be only two hundred years ago: “mediaeval”.
So… @a-sadist-at-play-45…What was that about being average? The word “Average” comes from Old French “avarie“ which means damage, as in the damage done to cargo in transit. English added the “-AGE” to turn the word from a noun to a descriptor, in order to discuss the tax, payable to the owner of the property, that was levied against any courier who damaged goods while shipping them. Notice that English also shifted that there spelling from “avarage” to “average”. The dialect said ER, so the writers began spelling it ER instead of using the French vowel AR.
Funny how that works.
We have a word for people like you, @a-sadist-at-play-45. Snoutband. Someone who butts their snout into the business of others just to cause a ruckus. It has no E’s, you’ll notice, but since the people of the north often said “Snout” as “Snoot” and were notorious for dragging out words (particularly insults)… let’s just go ahead and drop some E’s in there and call you a “Snutebande”
Boy…those E’s just really pop.
Such Brenne.
One endeavors to do one’s best.
I’ll never understand some humans. The need to correct spelling and grammar is like a ad hominem compulsion for some.
Nowe thatte ys a Hell ov a Take-downe.
You see…
Any language that includes an alphabet of sounds, is easily shifted, because the concept of phonetic spelling exists. It’s basic patterning.
youcantakeoutallspacesandstilread.
vwls rnt tht imprtnt.
Language is transmission of information, and so long as meaning isn’t lost, the communication is complete. What’s the odd letter here or there? So learn your meanings people and decide what the real battle requires.
I’d rather read misspelled poetry that illuminates my life in the capturing of a feeling, than suffer villainy transcribed in perfect modern English.
fckffwththtstpdty.
You dno’t eevn hvae to wtire the lrttees in pcrfeet oeder so lnog sa the greneal ahspe of the aencsdres, dseendcres, adn msot of hte fisrt adn lsat lettrse aer clsoe euongh.
And because you’re completely right, you can’t do this at all in a purely phonetic writing system like Japanese or Korean. You’d just get completely different words, some unintentional, some nonsense. But then, “spelling” is hardly a concept there, since if you know how to write, and you know how to say a word, there’s basically no guesswork. (Not counting Chinese characters, ideograms are a whole other can of worms with their own peculiarities and fun ways to break them.)
I used to be one of those bores who liked to go on about how spelling and grammar were ALWAYS IMPORTANT and fortunately for everyone around me I’ve gotten over it. There’s any number of reasons someone might not get it right, and they’re all fine, because life isn’t a crappy textbook quiz anyway, so we all might as well chill and play with language. It’s fun.
etiuQ
siht dais netfo ev’I
hsilgnE esoohc I yhw si sihT
niarb namuh eht ot sgniht euqinu seod tI
reblogging for the lingustics lesson, and for the takedown of that æhole
Impressive use of the ash!
Now lets try the Thorn or þ
Lette hyme beareð þat uppe þe æhole
Sharing for posterity.
This is my favorite post you’ve made in “Simon take down” mode.
That’s a “mode” now, is it?


