Vixen
Penultimate Amazing
Agreed, which is why I didn't correct my relative. I just used it properly and she then questioned me about it.
Me, too. A debate is not always an argument.![]()
She saw what you were doing.
Agreed, which is why I didn't correct my relative. I just used it properly and she then questioned me about it.
Me, too. A debate is not always an argument.![]()
I agree. If I've got toilet paper stuck to my shoe, please tell me so I can be embarrassed for a short time rather than making a fool of myself all day long as it trails behind me.
I have a relative who constantly mispronounces "mischievous" as "mischeeveeous". Rather than correct her openly, I just agreed with her by saying "Oh, my. That really was mischievous!", only correctly pronouncing the word. She then tried to correct my pronunciation. I said no, that is correct. She disagreed again so I said to look it up in the dictionary. We did but even then, she said "mischeeveeous" is an accepted alternate pronunciation. I said to find me a dictionary that has that as an alternative and I'll agree. She couldn't. To this day she still says it incorrectly.
Yeah, that sounds like you. How incredibly rude to correct someone's pronunciation or grammar whilst they are speaking. What is it to you?
I have had ignoramuses correcting how I pronounce the word 'sauna'. You don't tell a Finn how to pronounce their own word, no matter what Merriam-Webster says.
No, I have a penchant for pronouncing words correctly.I think you have the American penchant for 'rules'
and this is because the US has so many different nationalities converging on it at different times, there was a demand for rules.
However, as acbytesla points out language is much more subtle than following strict rules.
Agreed, which is why I didn't correct my relative. I just used it properly and she then questioned me about it.
Me, too. A debate is not always an argument.![]()
She saw what you were doing.
That mind reading ability of yours is truly miraculous! I'm surprised an intelligence agency hasn't recruited you.
I have to admit I find your picadillo on this word to be amusing as I grew up saying this word like your relative.
Did you do this deliberately?
I have a similar story - I only recently found out I'd been pronouncing (and indeed spelling) "anemone" incorrectly for my entire life. I thought it was "anenome", in fact that still sounds correct to me, and I suspect it'll take me a while before I really internalise the correct word. I presume it's because it's similar to "anonymous", but I don't really know how I came to be wrong for so long.
Don't worry - spelling it picadillo is just a peccadillo.
Code Name: Kemo Sabe
ROFL. Nope, I originally spelled it "pecadillo"and the spell checker on my tablet changed it to "picadillo". It's not a word I often use so I assumed I had been wrong on how to spell it and went with the computer assuming it knew better. This cracks me up. I never knew until this moment there is a Spanish dish called "picadillo". I was right, then wrong and now I've learned something new
I get how you can be wrong about something like that. I'm sure I've made similar mistakes with certain words.
Does anyone else find it funny that Vixen who regularly posts dozen comments in minutes stops when she wants to avoid addressing a mistake she knows is fact?
You must not eat much Mexican food! Having grown up largely in S. California, I love Tex-Mex and I always order picadillo in my tacos and enchiladas.
Ok, this is spillover from an ongoing debate between myself, Francisco and Harry Rag. The point is 9.4.1 and how to correctly evaluate it. The pro-guilt stance is of course Amanda's presence at VDP during Meredith's murder is a "proven fact" (well it would wouldn't it) and is confirmed in the TJMK version of M/B, while the IA version interprets it as an "acclaimed fact" in the trial. A simple google translation arrives at an "estabished fact" However, at the start of section 4.0 M/B seems to be advising the reader to evaluate the section as a "hypothesis" which appears to be the proper context as a premise. I must admit I'm not comfortable with an "acclaimed fact" as a translation since it doesn't make sense as far as I'm concerned. Is this just another case of M/B being ambiguous and offering a buffet of interpretations? What's the consensus?
Hoots
Don't call me dishonest. You're the dishonest one because if you look at the attachment it clearly gives the date, time and fares. You won't get a last minute budget fare unless you are lucky. Dishonest because you searched for 'tomorrow' and days in advance. I looked up 'next'.
Are you really expecting us to believe Knox and co are going to be perusing budget airlines in the early hours? Fact is, she went via Heathrow.
Nope. I did exactly that and your numbers are rubbish. Want me to do it again? Will you simply ignore it again?
Ok, this is spillover from an ongoing debate between myself, Francisco and Harry Rag. The point is 9.4.1 and how to correctly evaluate it. The pro-guilt stance is of course Amanda's presence at VDP during Meredith's murder is a "proven fact" (well it would wouldn't it) and is confirmed in the TJMK version of M/B, while the IA version interprets it as an "acclaimed fact" in the trial. A simple google translation arrives at an "estabished fact" However, at the start of section 4.0 M/B seems to be advising the reader to evaluate the section as a "hypothesis" which appears to be the proper context as a premise. I must admit I'm not comfortable with an "acclaimed fact" as a translation since it doesn't make sense as far as I'm concerned. Is this just another case of M/B being ambiguous and offering a buffet of interpretations? What's the consensus?
Hoots
I'm convinced that what it says is that there is proof that Amanda was in the cottage.
And there is. But so what? Her presence in the cottage is not in dispute. Only the time when she was there. DNA evidence does not include a time stamp.
Exactly. Ironically in 2010 Judge Massei ruled out the forensic relevance of the presumed semen stain under the victim's hips, on the grounds that she'd been sexually active and a DNA i.d. would not come with a time stamp.
But suddenly, turn that around and find Knox's DNA in her own bathroom, one that she'd shared for weeks with the victim, and that time stamp appears out of nowhere.