![]() |
April 25, 2009: Spelling Nazis Win
After years of pissing and moaning, the spelling Nazis have won.
As reported by the far flung China Daily, 3news New Zealand, England's Mail Online, NPR, and numerous web sites, the town of Webster Massachusetts will finally correct the spelling on two signs for the local lake. http://cellar.org/2009/webster-lake.jpg For years many people, myself included, thought it meant, "I fish on my side, you fish on your side, and nobody fishes in the middle". But now that the correct spelling has been brought forward, it clearly means, "The fishing place at the boundaries, the neutral meeting ground". I'm glad that's been cleared up. :blush: |
Drunks two nights in a row?!
|
The Japanese are laughing at us for having silly names?
|
that video is awesome
chagagoo mu gaggago mu gaggagoo gamong over and over and over again in a translated japanese |
Quote:
Shagogagog Man-Chogagog Shubungagungamog based on the pronunciation from the NPR story. Now if the R is silent, why bother including it? |
<Desperately seeking some kind of witty nexus between this and drunken gorillas>
Nothing. I got nothing, man. :headshake |
MA turnpike authorty sign painters and drunken gorillas perhaps? :haha:
|
See what I mean?
Impossible.... |
:smack::mad2::p:lol2:
|
How did the sign come to be misspelt in the first place? I suspect someone's penmanship wasn't up to scratch.
"It's an aitch." "No, looks like an en to me." "But ens don't have long ascenders." "Hmm, maybe you're right. Perhaps it IS an aitch. Hey, nobody's gonna notice anyway." peels backing off H<schlup!> and attaches it to sign <splut!> |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:32 AM. |
Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.