Ponder this
My friend's husband was out shopping yesterday and found this at the store. Candy for Valentine's Day is already on the shelves. Really? Are you kidding me? Noooo, it's still December, people!
Worse, ponder this tonight
"Recently, I noticed a headline in The New York Times that featured the word tasked. This is among my least favorite rhetorical strategies — the verbing of the noun. Contemporary American English is rife with such constructions: to journal, to parent, to impact, to effect. I wince a little every time I come across one."Let's think about a couple of the words I noticed in his article.
GIF is an acronym for "Graphics Interchange Format." It's a short, animated picture, without sound. GIFs are often used as memes, to portray an emotion or a reaction. How is the word pronounced? The inventor of the GIF format, Steve Wilhite of CompuServe, prefers "Jif" for a very strange reason. This article explains why the word should be pronounced "GIF" like the word "GIFT" without the "T." Enjoy this GIF of Newton's cradle.By the way, today is the penultimate day of a difficult year, as Jan Edmiston wrote on her blog. Do I need to define "penultimate" for us?
pe·nul·ti·mate / pəˈnəltəmət / adjective = last but one in a series of things; second last. Example: "Today is the penultimate day of a difficult year."
"Zeyde (never "Grandpa"), how about composing a Bible riddle-book and general, humorous observations of the Bible?"
"Fire was a tool to be used for the common good rather than a disease to be eliminated" (National Geographic).Last year, the Guardian had a similar article on controlled burning the way indigenous people did. These two articles explain the many reasons for burning the undergrowth.
"Don't you hate it when everybody talks about the joy of the Lord — but nobody smiles? Me, too."
This little book is a collection of jokes, riddles, puns, and limericks for juveniles, focusing on biblical characters and events.
"It was Christmas Eve morning" (p. 315).I read those lines near the end of the book, realizing that this morning really happened to be Christmas Eve morning.
"He squinched his eyes" (p. 302).I have used the word plenty of times, but I don't remember ever seeing "squinched" in print. In the book, the main characters were putting lights on a Christmas tree. He told her to squint (a related word) while looking at the lights, so they would notice any gaping places that needed a light or two. So what does the word mean?
squinch / skwin(t)SH / verb (North American) = tense up the muscles of (one's eyes or face); narrow one's eyes so as to be almost closed. Example: "He suggested she squinch her eyes while looking at the Christmas tree lights."Plague Ship ~ by Frank G. Slaughter, 1976, fiction (Peru), 9.5/10
"The heart sounds, too, although a little distant, were clear except for a murmur over the area of the mitral valve that often went with chronic rheumatic heart disease" (pp. 38-39).Charlotte, an elementary school friend of mine, had rheumatic fever. I thought they said "romantic fever." Here's the definition I found online:
"Rheumatic fever is a disease that can affect the heart, joints, brain, and skin. Rheumatic fever can develop if strep throat and scarlet fever infections are not treated properly. Early diagnosis of these infections and treatment with antibiotics are key to preventing rheumatic fever."
"Forgive yourself when things go wrong. We all make mistakes."
Angela Carson wants nothing more than to be the third-generation to run her family’s holiday store, Heart of Christmas, successfully. They’ve weathered over sixty tourist seasons, major hurricanes, and urban sprawl, in their old decommissioned lighthouse. But the national chain that set up shop in their small North Carolina town of Pleasant Sands may be more than Heart of Christmas can survive. Encouraged by her niece to ask Santa for help through the Dear Santa app, Angela gives in and lets the words fly in a way that, if Santa were real, would no doubt land her on the naughty list. What’s the harm when it’s just a computer-generated response?Dear Santa is billed as a "heartwarming Christmas story about finding your passion for life and love." The book I'm reading now is a heavy one about plague — yes, like the one we're living through. I'm not sorry I'm reading it, but this one is Christmassy, light-hearted, a beach read (literally, since the main character's Christmas store is in an old lighthouse), and fits this jolly season a bit better than a book about a plague in Peru. So I bought it for my Kindle a few minutes ago. The two books are so different that I think even if I alternate reading them, I wouldn't confuse the characters in the least.
Geoff Paisley has been at his mother’s side running the mega-chain Christmas Galore for the last ten years. When his mother falls ill, Geoff promises to answer the Dear Santa letters in her stead. Soon he realizes the woman he’s been corresponding with on Dear Santa is Angela. How could the woman that grates his every last nerve in person have intrigued him so deeply through those letters? When Geoff reveals that he’s her Dear Santa, will Angela be able to set aside their very public feud to embrace the magic of the holiday and possibly find true love?
The local plane of the Compañía del Aviación Faucett had been field-hopping up the northern coast of Peru from Lima during the morning, nearly always in sight of the Pacific Ocean stretching endlessly to the west. To the east the heights of the Andean Cordillera sharply defined the coastal plain, now quite close to it and again many miles away.
High in the Andes Mountains of Peru an archaeologist stumbles upon an ancient tomb, unwittingly releasing the germs from a civilization doomed by a plague over 5,000 years ago. Dr. Grant Reed and the dedicated crew of the international hospital ship Mercy, set about the task of quarantining the first victims of a hideous plague. Set adrift by frightened Peruvians, the aging and crippled ship faces a hurricane, mutinous patients, and even a pair of great white sharks, grisly mascots of a ship of death.
#1: Hanukah linda sta akiTranslation
Ocho kandelas para mi
Hanukah linda sta aki
Ocho kandelas para mi, oh...
Chorus: Una kandelika, dos kandelikas
Tres kandelikas, kuatro kandelikas
Sintyu kandelikas, sej kandelikas
Siete kandelikas, ocho kandelas para mi
#2: Muchas fiestas vo fazer
Kon alegria i plazer
Muchas fiestas vo fazeri
Kon alegria i plazer, oh...
Chorus: Una kandelika, dos kandelikas
Tres kandelikas, kuatro kandelikas
Sintyu kandelikas, sej kandelikas
Siete kandelikas, ocho kandelas para mi
#3: Los pastelikos vo kumer
Kon almendrikas i la myel
Los pastelikos vo kumer
Kon almendrikas i la myel, oh...
Chorus: Una kandelika, dos kandelikas
Tres kandelikas, kuatro kandelikas
Sintyu kandelikas, sej kandelikas
Siete kandelikas, ocho kandelas para mi
#1: It's here, beautiful Hanukkah, eight little candles for me,
It's here, beautiful Hanukkah, eight little candles for me, oh...
#2: I'll throw plenty of parties, full of joy and pleasure,
I'll throw plenty of parties, full of joy and pleasure, oh...
#3: I'll eat little pastries, with almonds and honey,
I'll eat little pastries, with almonds and honey, oh...
One little candle, two little candles, Three little candles, four little candles, Five little candles, six little candles, Seven little candles, eight little candles for me.The fourth day of Hanukkah begins at sunset this evening, so use the helper candle to light the fourth candle on the menorah. The sun sets today at 4:40 p.m. in St. Louis, Missouri.