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Uh-huh, and up north, we understand different people have different definitions for the word "proper."
Wikipedia agrees with the capitalization so
It's not just Wikipedia, Dave. It's pretty much every grammar guide and spelling/punctuation book ever. And they generally give the exact application of the American South as needing capitalization. Some of us Yankees know it's the South, just like it's the North. But don't go south on a Northerner without their permission.
We're all a mess of paradoxes. Believing in things we know can't be true. We walk around carrying feelings too complicated and contradictory to express. But when it all becomes too big, and words aren't enough to help get it all out, there's always music.
We're all a mess of paradoxes. Believing in things we know can't be true. We walk around carrying feelings too complicated and contradictory to express. But when it all becomes too big, and words aren't enough to help get it all out, there's always music.
We're all a mess of paradoxes. Believing in things we know can't be true. We walk around carrying feelings too complicated and contradictory to express. But when it all becomes too big, and words aren't enough to help get it all out, there's always music.
Post by chicojuarz on Feb 26, 2013 20:25:45 GMT -5
NastyGal.com is one of my clients. It turned a few heads when we started having meetings about them. All the men immediately googled and were disappointed.
I have no problem with yankee cooking. Just hate on your inability to comprehend greatness.
I never liked the term "Yankee", that people in the south call people in the north.
I'm a Red Sox fan, therefore I don't want the Yankee label. Quacker is a Yankee, I'm a New Englander.
I presume this is only due to the baseball team names. Because by definition a Yankee is, most specifically, a New Englander. In fact, I believe Yankee Doodle is the state song of Connecticut.
I never liked the term "Yankee", that people in the south call people in the north.
I'm a Red Sox fan, therefore I don't want the Yankee label. Quacker is a Yankee, I'm a New Englander.
I presume this is only due to the baseball team names. Because by definition a Yankee is, most specifically, a New Englander. In fact, I believe Yankee Doodle is the state song of Connecticut.
It is. The state song and because of the baseball rivalry.
It's not just Wikipedia, Dave. It's pretty much every grammar guide and spelling/punctuation book ever. And they generally give the exact application of the American South as needing capitalization. Some of us Yankees know it's the South, just like it's the North. But don't go south on a Northerner without their permission.
We're all a mess of paradoxes. Believing in things we know can't be true. We walk around carrying feelings too complicated and contradictory to express. But when it all becomes too big, and words aren't enough to help get it all out, there's always music.
We're all a mess of paradoxes. Believing in things we know can't be true. We walk around carrying feelings too complicated and contradictory to express. But when it all becomes too big, and words aren't enough to help get it all out, there's always music.
I have a craving for some waffle house this morning.
I had me some waffle house a little over a week ago. Strawberry waffle, chili cheese hashbrown, bacon, and cheesy eggs. Oh and of course coffee and OJ.
And Big Kahuna Burger. The cornerstone of every nutritional breakfast.
It's not just Wikipedia, Dave. It's pretty much every grammar guide and spelling/punctuation book ever. And they generally give the exact application of the American South as needing capitalization. Some of us Yankees know it's the South, just like it's the North. But don't go south on a Northerner without their permission.
Most grammar guides will also tell you not to end a sentence with a preposition, leaving out the fact that that rule was created by one single gent who had used "dangling prepositions" his entire life until, practically on his deathbed and in an understandably grumpy mood, he decided to lash out at something entirely random. Similar to how so many instructors teach their students to use either he, she, or he/she when referring to an ambiguous figure, completely oblivious to the more appropriate singular they.
Mainstream status quo tends to be as bunk in grammar as in everything else.