kcrew said:Oh boy....What comes around goes around I guess
!!!!No argument here. I still love this thread and am glad I could contribute even if the jokes on me!
![]()
Okay I see the I missed the the ' in joke's. That WAS a typo

kcrew said:Oh boy....What comes around goes around I guess
!!!!No argument here. I still love this thread and am glad I could contribute even if the jokes on me!
![]()
WDW2000 said:
LuluLovesDisney said:
carolinagirl said:This thread is entertaining! Since we are venting about our little grammatical pet peeves, here is mine: using the word anxious in the place of eager.
The word anxious means: Uneasy and apprehensive about an uncertain event or matter; worried. Attended with, showing, or causing anxiety: spent an anxious night waiting for the test results.
It does NOT mean that you are looking forward to something such as "I am anxiously waiting our Disney vacation". Instead you are "eagerly" waiting for your Disney vacation.
Well, their, I mean, they're, oops....there you have my $.02.![]()
ScottOKW2K said:Maybe they have just recieved they're/there/their quote from the WDW Travel Co. in the male/mail, and they now have reason to be more anxious than eager. I eagerly await you're/your response.
BTW - the answer on where you bury dead people ( aka "life challenged" ) is easy. You bury them in the ground .... <flame suit on>
ScottOKW2K said:Maybe they have just recieved they're/there/their quote from the WDW Travel Co. in the male/mail, and they now have reason to be more anxious than eager. I eagerly await you're/your response.
Not necessarily. More than one Smith lives there, right? So... oh, the heck with it. Just paint "Welcome to the Smith house" on the darned sign and be done with it!cinjam said:Interesting. So if I have a welcome sign on my front lawn, it should read:
"WELCOME TO THE SMITHS' HOUSE"
mjkaferle5 said:Should we now discuss the 400 different spellings of Hoop-dee Doo Revue I have seen on the DIS!!
LuluLovesDisney said:I'm surprised no one else mentioned my pet peeve- when people refer to WDW as "Disneyland". ( I mentioned this earlier, but it was the last post on a page.) I know several people that will call WDW "Disneyland", even those who have been there several times. It drives me insane.
sameyeyam said:It's truly amazing that we can understand one another with all of the regional sayings, misspeeeleedd words and gram-atical errors.
My mother never had the opportunity to finish high school (due to parents moving around a lot). But her entire life she always used the wrong "big words" in sentences. When I was an adult I asked her why she always tried to use those big words if she didn't understand them. She replied, "I guess I'm trying to make up for not having an education, I hear them on tv or someone using them and it makes me feel smarter in spite of my lack of education". It used to drive me absolute crazy and when I was a teen it embarassed me. My mother passed away last year, but what I wouldn't give to hear her use the wrong word in a sentence just one more time!
So whenever I see the wrong words used or not spelled correctly on this board, it makes me smile and remember my mother. She was a wonderful women who came from a broken home and humble beginnings. She cared enough about her children to give them the education she always wanted, but could never have.![]()
dkostel said:Things like other people's grammar or misuse of words don't really bother me, but, I used to have a co-worker who thought it was Old Timer's disease instead of Alzheimer's disease (and we worked at a hospital). I often wondered if she really thought the medical and scientific communities would be so cruel.
Actually, no. Possessive of plural Jones would be Joneses'. The Joneses' house. Jones's or Jones' would indicate something belongs to only one Jones, not more than one Jones.sleepydog25 said:As for the "Joneses," it is also alright (and once was the most common way) to merely use an apostrophe since they name ends in an "s" or "z" sound: the Jones' house.
ExPirateShopGirl said:As long as we're on the topic of words that aren't words...
WTH (acronym - might mean 'what the hey') does 'kewl' mean? Why would a grown person type it? It's not as if a person is saving keystrokes... Is it now cool to misspell cool? It's not even phonetically correct...
![]()
Laura said:Actually, no. Possessive of plural Jones would be Joneses'. The Joneses' house. Jones's or Jones' would indicate something belongs to only one Jones, not more than one Jones.
kaytieeldr said:Not necessarily. More than one Smith lives there, right? So... oh, the heck with it. Just paint "Welcome to the Smith house" on the darned sign and be done with it!![]()