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| subject: | Rules... 1. |
How this happened; I'll launch a full investigation. I suspect the local weather dude was commenting on another town, or district, and all I heard were statistics about somebody else. We did not receive almost 500% of our monthly rainfall. Perhaps, for the first eight days of the month, we scored a 500, but... Our monthly rain totals about 400% of average as of June 19. (200.9mm vrs. 47.9mm AHHH... Month to date! That's where 497% must have come into play.) Anyway, Still wet as a happy fish here. The same forecaster told me yesterday, a West district of Calgary accumulated 1500mm in a four day period ending this Sunday. I'll wait 'til it's all over before I report any more dirt. Calgary is under a state of emergency, with mandatory water restrictions. Our first state of emergency ever! Kinda exciting... Ardith Hinton wrote to James Bradley, "Rules... 1." on 06-19-05 21:42 AH> Many linguists have a similar learning style.... :-) JB> Please tell me you're pulling my leg. AH> No... but I'm trying to avoid resorting to "psychobabble". AH> Would it help if I mentioned that Albert Einstein, who was AH> thought to be a dunce in his youth, probably did too? It's Resorted to psychobabble, or avoided it? Turns out, Al's genesis wasn't math or physics. He was great at imagination! AH> important to distinguish between making "rules" about what AH> "should" happen with observing & reporting on what does AH> happen. In this case I made a list, verified the AH> spellings, and found some more examples. Only then did I AH> consult Fowler, who'd collected even more examples & AH> organized them neatly into categories. I'm not just AH> copying what some expert said. I'm telling you that AH> Fowler's analysis is consistent with my own research.... :- AH> ) I can sleep well tonight. AH> Uh-huh. Looking at the situation from the other side of the AH> desk... that's where I often felt frustrated as a teacher AH> too! I'd have kids in grade eight who figured they knew AH> everything worth knowing about spelling & grammar, because AH> Miss Rule or their Dad or somebody else they worshipped AH> when they were in grade three had explained it *this* way. AH> I didn't see much alternative but to say "Now that you're AH> big boys & girls, you're ready to add to the concept." What OUCH... That dagger hurt! <-: AH> they'd been told may have worked fairly well as long as the AH> material they were using had a controlled vocabulary. It AH> doesn't work at secondary level... therefore I had to find AH> a patch which wouldn't offend anybody's sensibilities. Like I say, I found a level playing field peachy. When a pitch is askew, and undulates... I took advanced math classes when they were still experimenting with them in Elementary, and the English, I suppose was continually relegated to the back seat. I remember really trying to "get it" in grade ten. Alas, my shining star wasn't hung on that tree. AH> Language changes over time, and what's appropriate in one AH> particular style may not be in another... but I could say A pitch that shifts and undulates... (I SWEAR, I'm replying to this on the fly!) AH> the same about music! I've met plenty of musical snobs. I didn't even AH> realize I was interested in music when the only contacts I AH> had were with folks like my father... for whom it was just AH> another form of noise... or with those who made disparaging AH> comments about the error the French horn player made in the AH> second bar of the third movement just to prove they were AH> aware of such things where the peasantry (like me) weren't. L... Our premium music venue, has delay issues, SPECIFICALLY at the French horn's range, and especially, because they fire rearward. All the analysis, and harmonics matched the math, but that range shifts its timing off. It's funny, if a travelling band shows up with a tenor sax, it takes a few songs for him to get in step with the bass/alto. Poor folks. I can imagine the debriefing. Because it's a well known anomaly, I'm sure there's sign on the French horn/Tenor saxes dressing room door. AH> What aroused my interest was the piano version of PICTURES AH> AT AN EXHIBITION... it was unlike anything I'd heard AH> before. Later, when I had learned more about music AH> history, I understood that it was written during a time AH> when the Russian composers didn't really understand AH> European conventions. Okay... it's program music. But AH> Moussorgsky spoke to me, maybe because he was AH> unconventional. :-) Ok, we're drawing a bead on you now. I guess Rach, and Stravinsky can still float my boat. I have never listened to a massive amount orchestral music, contemporary or classic. Choir, even the discourse stuff rocks my world as long as it's done with passion, and verve. Sans the stuff written so us mere mortals can follow along in church, I think only three pieces have rubbed me the wrong was so far. AH> Yes, you've got the drift! Now... I regard this as a AH> generalization about a language which has grown like Topsy. AH> If there are some irregularities which as yet remain AH> unaccounted for, please don't shoot the messenger.... ;-) L!!! You've been following my posts on newsgroups? Just yesterday, I told a fellow, "Technically, there *is* something wrong with us. [RE: Chronic pain] It *is* all just in our heads. But, the head is only the messenger. Don't shoot the messenger!" AH> BTW... AH> I think we're on more or less the same wave length as far as More than I'd care to admit! AH> "rules" are concerned. You probably haven't seen my AH> diatribe about the sign at Nora's school saying "NO PICKUP AH> OR DROPOFF OF STUDENTS IN THIS AREA". The sign is in the AH> area where the school buses pick up & drop off handicapped AH> students... and when we complained, we were told everybody AH> knows that's okay. The taxi driver who refused to drop AH> Nora off there five years ago, because he assumed the sign AH> meant what it said, obviously didn't know. But nothing has AH> changed... (sigh). That's news to me. You'd think they could erect a handicapped zone. Heck, we have all sorts on my residential block alone. I told you about our greedy neighbours? If they can get a sign, I'm sure a school can! Mind you, that would be an invitation for all to use it. AH> Did I mention that humour is a great teaching tool? I had AH> some kids in learning assistance once who said "axed" in place AH> of "asked". No doubt the purists would insist I was wrong AH> to interfere with their dialect, but I made a comparison AH> using "Lizzy Borden took an axe" to show them the AH> difference. They found this doggerel so amusing they AH> recited it to everybody who would listen & it wasn't AH> necessary for me to say anything further about "asked"... AH> [chuckle]. Jimminy... You are good! Now, I'd be the kid that would start, "Lizzy Borden looked and axed me for a date..." I wish I had the rhyme in front of me, I'd cook something up to get a rise out-a you. <-|[ Thanks for the comic relief! ... Do one brave thing today... Then run like hell! ___ MultiMail/Linux v0.46 --- Maximus 3.01* Origin: -=-= Calgary Organization (403) 242-3221 (1:134/77) SEEN-BY: 633/267 270 5030/786 @PATH: 134/77 140/1 106/2000 633/267 |
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