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DECEMBER
27, 2025
DECEMBER
21, 2025
Dear Mr. Campbell: I'm enjoying your 15.4-ounce microwavable tomato soup bowls. As a single guy in my seventies, I find this product easier to prepare than your larger-quantity condensed soups. There's no need to use a separate bowl nor to add water nor to refrigerate the leftover extra servings. However, I do need to unpack my tool kit. Readers of this website may recognize where I'm going with this.
Now all I have to do is replace the cover loosely, microwave the bowl, lift off the cover, and enjoy. Simple!
DECEMBER
19, 2025
DECEMBER
17, 2015 Television manufacturers, having failed to convince enough of us to invest in three-dimensional TVs, have essentially given up on that idea. Theyve moved on from 3D to 4K. Ultra HD, or 4K, boasts over eight million pixels. That's four times as many as HD. To accommodate so many tiny dots, the screen has to be bigger too large for my little one-person apartment. Besides, as far as I'm concerned, ordinary HD usually offers enough detail.
I also get along fine without 3D, both for TV and for movies. Production techniques can be employed to depict the third dimension without requiring special glasses.
DECEMBER
15, 2025
But most will stall for a second while mentally composing their answer. Well, look.... Or if they need more time, Well, look, uh, you know, I mean.... ¶ Another meaningless observation or two: When the President noted that a kid in a financially strapped family doesn't need to receive 37 dolls this Christmas, the closed captioning on both CNN and MS NOW helpfully autocompleted the gift by adding the missing ar and reformatting the result as $37. The same application insists on referring to Susie Wiles, the White House Chief of Staff, as Siouxsie Wiles. That spelling seems ridiculous.
DECEMBER
13, 2015 An episode earlier this year of ABCs sitcom Last Man Standing began with a couple trying to sleep. The neighbors dog was barking again. The first 17 seconds of dialogue included three very dated jokes.
DECEMBER
10, 2025
There used to be a Gothic adverb ufta meaning repeatedly. In German and Old English it became oft. Then in the 13th century, the English extended oft to often. By the 15th century, the pronunciation was often degraded to offen. The t had become silent! (Except for performers using a British accent.) And by the 16th century, the original root word oft had become archaic. The Hartford Courant notes that the t was once actually pronounced in phrases such as Cristes Maesse (Christ's Mass), better known now as Christmas. But during the 17th century, the t sound was dropped whenever it was preceded by a fricative consonant (such as s or f) and followed by a voiced consonant (such as l, r, m or n). Got that? Anyway, before you could say misseltoe, Irving Berlin was writing about a white Chrissmus where tree tops glissen and children lissen. There are, of course, many silent letters in our orthography. To English speakers, recently acquired Pittsburgh Pirates outfielder Jhostynxon Garcia has a first name that looks as complicated as the random characters in a password. Therefore, The Password has become his nickname. However, the h is silent and the x is pronounced like an s, so he's really Joe-Stinson Garcia. By the way, today is his 23rd birthday. There's a major Canadian city that offen loses its second t and becomes Toronno.
Can you think of other oddities?
DECEMBER
8, 2015 Wake up, America! Some people actually disagree with me! They have attitudes they're trying to shove down our throats! Thats the frantic warning in many embittered letters to the editor and postings on social media. For example, someone called dankies213 wrote: People are always complaining that they don't like religion shoved down their throat, when Hollywood shoves beauty and looking good down our throats and no one complains about that really. And someone named David Nedlin posted last week: Maybe now some people will wake up & listen to me when I say we have to deport & eliminate ALL Muslims & Gather up ALL illegal firearms & execute their owners. Think thats too extreme? Maybe someday a loved one of yours will be SHOT DEAD & then you may change your mind. Wake up, people or you will be next!
Im tired of opinionated people who tell me I need to realize dare we say I need to be woke up that I'm somehow being duped into swallowing things that think are obviously evil. At a minimum, we need new metaphors. We need a lot else besides.
A female wolf probably had observed a human retrieving a crab trap from deep water. She realized, I can do that! And there's food in that thing! She swam out and pulled the buoy to shore, then grabbed the attached rope and reeled that in as well. The crab bait was soon on land for her dining convenience. But that wasn't tool use, strictly speaking. The wolf hadn't invented a new purpose for the buoy and rope, bringing them in from elsewhere and making serve as her tools. When a chimp unwraps a banana, is it converting the peel into a tool to access the sweet fruit inside? She had merely taken advantage of an existing situation and used it for her own benefit.
DECEMBER
4, 2025
When I was in grade school, kids had no trouble reading Sally's letter to the North Pole in this classic Peanuts cartoon, with each letter smoothly connected to the next.
Public-school teacher Josh Giesbrecht writes, My own writing morphed from Palmerian script into mostly print shortly after starting college, when I regularly had to copy down reams of notes. But fountain pens want to connect letters. Ballpoint pens and No.2 pencils need to be convinced to write, need to be pushed into the paper rather than merely brush against it.
DECEMBER
2, 2025
When I was a high school student in semi-rural Ohio more than 60 years ago, the plan was this: If the weather was going to be bad on Tuesday, school was canceled. Here in western Pennsylvania today, we're expecting several of inches of snow. It will be hazardous for the buses to run their routes. But education must go on! Practically every district has announced that they'll hold classes as usual, but on a two-hour delay.
DECEMBER
1, 2025
BAA, aside from ovine utterances, can stand for a Business Associate Agreement or possibly the Boston Athletic Association or maybe a Bachelor of Applied Arts degree. What do we call abbreviations like this? As memory slowly fades with advancing age, I find myself sometimes unable to recall a bit of common knowledge. A string of initials pronounced as though they form an actual word is called ... not an anagram, but what? I asked Google last week and was reminded that the term is acronym, from roots denoting a name nym whittled down to a point acro. Further searching revealed that many acronyms were invented by telegraphers in order to use fewer characters. One example was SCOTUS for Supreme Court Of The United States, which the United Press teletype at my college radio station often printed as a header for news stories.
And who was this fictional Tom Swift? A tinkerer like Tom Edison who developed inventions by trial and error. His ideas were depicted in more than a hundred young adult novels during the 20th century: flying submarines, airplane-engine silencers, synthetic diamonds, house trailers, portable movie cameras. In dialogue, the books often appended an apt adverb to the simple verb said. That gave rise to Tom Swifty parodies that were popular in the 1960s. For example, the title of this piece. Or I forgot what I needed at the store, Tom said listlessly. Or We're out of flowers, Tom said lackadaisically.
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