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I know what you're thinking, but you probably could find more people in S.F. who utterly despise gay people than you could find people who didn't want Knoller to rot in prison for the rest of her life. It was the right call to make, IMHO, and I imagine his house was egged for it. |
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BTW, is there no procedure for consolidating two closely related cases, so that the two judges don't have to play, "After you, Alphonse" with this political hot potato? |
Judge Slashes Lawyer's Rate for Typos, Careless Writing
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If these 100 Most Commonly Mispronounced Words and Phrases are indeed commonly mispronounced as advertised, people are commonly pretty fuckin' stoopid.
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card shark (incorrect) vs. cardsharp (correct) when popular usage of the correct pronunciation is a relatively rare occurrence. For example, Google reports about 20,200 hits for "card shark" compared to about 3,750 for "cardsharp." |
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English Sentences Without Overt Grammatical Subjects
This article by one Quang Phuc Dong at the South Hanoi Institute of Technology (S.H.I.T.) (a/k/a Prof. James McCawley (deceased)) postulates that the word fuck gives rise to two distinct homophonous lexical items. For comparative analysis, the word damn and the expression shit on, among others, are also considered.
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The New Yale Typeface
Yale has a new official typeface.
The Yale typeface is available to Yale employees, students, and authorized contractors for use in Yale publications and communications. It may not be used for personal or business purposes, and it may not be distributed to non-Yale personnel. The typeface looks pretty unremarkable overall, except for the fact that the tail of the capital Q, in its various sub-flavors, as seen here, seems to go out of control. Also, the heavy bottom loop of the non-italic ampersand lends a stout, teapot-esque feel to it; I wouldn't be surprised if the ampersand had been modeled after the physique of some notable Yalie -- like William Howard Taft. Edited for spelling |
Twaddle! {Court opinion in PDF.}
Warning: Also contains a flagrant use of Britishism ("sacked") by an American. We fought a war, people! |
Need a Ruling Please
Fortune magazine published an article about Suzanne Somers and her thighmaster riches. My question is: is "Somers's" really the preferred possessive for her last name? I would have gone with "Somers'" but maybe I've been wrong all this time.
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Need a Ruling Please
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This is a pet peeve. So many lawyers think the "ess apostrophe" goes with any word ending in "s" and not just plurals. The rule says "plurals ending in 's'," and words have meaning, people! |
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