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druth·ers (informal, North American), noun = a person's preference in a matter. Example: "If I had my druthers, I would prefer to be a writer."
Origin of the phrase = When a person says, "I'd rather," it sounds like the word "druther." Therefore, it's a shortened way of saying "I would rather."
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Hours later, when I sat down to read, I decided to go back to a trio of books I'd barely gotten into months ago: The Herland Trilogy on my Kindle. I knew I'd need to start over. I searched my Kindle, found the trilogy, and opened it to where I'd stopped reading. That's when I was startled to see these words on the very top line of the last page I had gotten to:
". . . can't always have your 'druthers' . . ." (p. 22).
I stopped reading after those five words, just to jot all this stuff down. What are the odds? I haven't used "druthers" in ages, probably not in years. And there it was, in the book I picked up to read. A book I'd been reading long ago, not even recently.
1 comment:
Serendipity.
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