avclub-c3be6e8cf75a921162b52b8937e66da9--disqus
marcus75
avclub-c3be6e8cf75a921162b52b8937e66da9--disqus

I'd expect a kid to misspell it "favorit" over "favrit." 9-year-olds have a pretty good grasp of syllables. The dropped "e"s from "shap" and "ar" seem intentional as well, since "shape" adheres to the general rule for silent "e" after a long vowel and "are" is a really common word; dropping the "e" from "favorite"

The margin thing is actually believable, for the same reason that a kid that age would probably have better handwriting. It's how this kid* adheres to the margins that's suspicious.

John the Revelator actually saw 2017 and the only thing he could comprehend about it was that it was the end of the world.

I'll believe a 9-year-old being a stickler for margins, but he would have just squeezed the rest of the word in. The hyphen there takes up nearly the space it would take to write "ite."

9-year-olds tend to have better handwriting than a lot of adults because they care more about it at that stage. Grammar and spelling errors, even at that age, tend to fall into patterns as well and that letter is all over the map. The fishiest thing in my eyes though?
" . . . wh-
ite . . ."
Ignore that you shouldn't

WTF is "extremely few?"

One of them is actually wearing cargo shorts.

"I see you're fluent in Japanese. Are you comfortable with casual racism?"

I have yet to learn anything about Jacques Cousteau that didn't make me more impressed by him.

Some of it is inherited from the British hate-crush on France

I wouldn't say it was totally unknown (the term "shell shock" originated during WWI) but it was certainly not well understood.

I'm sure it somehow proves that anti-vaxxers are right.

So you mean you liked it never? Cause that's how language has always worked.

It's more of an all-Mel publication; I personally liked their Music article "Mels on Melody: Songcraft with Melle Mel and Mel Torme"

I've run into some stupid pedantic twits here, but you're taking the cake.

What awesome captains? We don't have to take Euron's word that he has literally a thousand ships to accept that he still has a sizable fleet, with experienced captains and crews, and his fleet was already in between Dragonstone and Dorne, and he knows shipping lanes as well as anyone in the world. It's hardly the

The definition you quoted verbatim is marked "historical."

Stow it. That's an archaic definition and the one Whovian quoted has been standard usage for a very long time.

magic