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cyclonefence

(5,151 posts)
126. I do so appreciate your reply
Sun Nov 3, 2024, 08:49 AM
Nov 2024

"Queen for a Day" was indeed what I watched when I was home sick. I remember my poor grandmother, whose husband--the person I loved most in the world--had been killed in a locomotive explosion (he was the engineer), saying "They don't know what sad is" about the women who competed with each other for a new wardrobe presented by Mary Cagney.

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1 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Jesus Arthur_Frain Nov 2024 #1
OMG! Those woody and tinny words. TheBlackAdder Nov 2024 #59
Who says there's something wrong with it? 3catwoman3 Nov 2024 #2
"There's no such word as snuck". And, you would be wrong. TwilightZone Nov 2024 #3
Exactly. Snuck is fine. MineralMan Nov 2024 #44
I'm not talking about definitions cyclonefence Nov 2024 #49
Well, ain't that something? -misanthroptimist Nov 2024 #134
What are you talking about? Emile Nov 2024 #4
Yes snuck is a word. It is in general usage. Srkdqltr Nov 2024 #5
"snuck" has replaced "sneaked" cyclonefence Nov 2024 #31
"What did you bring me the book that I do not to be read to out of up for?" Jerry2144 Nov 2024 #32
Really? whathehell Nov 2024 #109
Punchline about a child complaining to his father Jerry2144 Nov 2024 #111
One more thing: irregular verbs have disappeared from the newspaper Hekate Nov 2024 #46
Wrong. Verbs are being regularized in the age of telecommunications Bernardo de La Paz Nov 2024 #54
Perhaps so cyclonefence Nov 2024 #63
Dictionaries ARE guides. Proscribing & prescribing usage is as useless as telling tRump to stop being crude Bernardo de La Paz Nov 2024 #65
Hinton WV cyclonefence Nov 2024 #69
Oh my. You would have censored a lot of what Shakespeare wrote. wnylib Nov 2024 #64
Yes! His whole schtick was messing with how words are used.... Think. Again. Nov 2024 #107
I have not managed to convey my meaning cyclonefence Nov 2024 #130
With a pint? NotANeocon Nov 2024 #133
Forgot about those crisps cyclonefence Nov 2024 #160
Thou speakest verily. Language doth change. wnylib Nov 2024 #135
Sure do, don't it? cyclonefence Nov 2024 #161
'Crispy' may've taken off due to Rice Krispies, radius777 Nov 2024 #136
I rather like beginning some of my sentences with And. Polly Hennessey Nov 2024 #102
And? Think. Again. Nov 2024 #108
Sometimes jfz9580m Nov 2024 #145
I learned: They shrank. They have shrunk. LeftInTX Nov 2024 #158
Yeah cyclonefence Nov 2024 #159
Words evolve. Ocelot II Nov 2024 #6
Conjugate "snuck" for me cyclonefence Nov 2024 #51
It's irregularly irregular. Ocelot II Nov 2024 #68
I grew up with "snuck" LeftInTX Nov 2024 #75
Ditto nt calikid Nov 2024 #125
Just because you don't like it doesn't mean it's not appropriate usage. TwilightZone Nov 2024 #86
You can't. It's past tense of sneak LeftInTX Nov 2024 #88
You will be okay. H2O Man Nov 2024 #93
But it IS correct usage. Elessar Zappa Nov 2024 #118
Exactly. Language is as language does Bernardo de La Paz Nov 2024 #62
Isn't "crisp" the new word for "cool"? Ligyron Nov 2024 #7
Yes it is. It means awesome, cool, amazing, etc. liberalla Nov 2024 #104
IDK for sure but Liberalla is most definitely a crisp name. Ligyron Nov 2024 #150
Wut? stumpysbear Nov 2024 #8
Not sure, but one thing I do know, the word MOIST seems to really trigger people lol. toesonthenose Nov 2024 #9
My daughter worked with people who could not tolerate the word moist Marthe48 Nov 2024 #13
My daughters literally scream if I say it. Strange indeed haha. toesonthenose Nov 2024 #20
I love a moist cake. Ferrets are Cool Nov 2024 #27
The coworkers turned out to be mean girls Marthe48 Nov 2024 #29
That's really funny cyclonefence Nov 2024 #92
It triggers me and I have no idea why. Akacia Nov 2024 #50
I snuck into my bedroom because I stayed out too late. Polly Hennessey Nov 2024 #10
or a crisp autumn afternoon. Mossfern Nov 2024 #83
Yummy ornotna Nov 2024 #120
Is this like when people were all weirded out about the word "moist" a couple years back? bluesbassman Nov 2024 #11
People are still weirded out about "moist". TwilightZone Nov 2024 #12
I still don't get it. bluesbassman Nov 2024 #18
I don't, either. TwilightZone Nov 2024 #21
I think it's the sound of the word. Sky Jewels Nov 2024 #82
It's what it implies LeftInTX Nov 2024 #98
Also true. Sky Jewels Nov 2024 #100
It's associated with female sexuality meadowlander Nov 2024 #110
It's not just teen boys and there seems to be more to it than that. TwilightZone Nov 2024 #139
This is the first I've heard about 'moist' being weird. radius777 Nov 2024 #137
I don't think it's generational, and it's very common. TwilightZone Nov 2024 #138
I like Rebl2 Nov 2024 #15
I know, right? bluesbassman Nov 2024 #19
How about a moist handshake? Aristus Nov 2024 #22
Good point, but I don't shake hands with fourteen year old boys too often. bluesbassman Nov 2024 #74
People started freaking out about the word moist decades ago. chowder66 Nov 2024 #42
Well, I hate hearing verse for vs. It's versus yorkster Nov 2024 #14
Or draw canetoad Nov 2024 #77
Until I saw it in print cyclonefence Nov 2024 #127
oh, it's just been building up cyclonefence Nov 2024 #123
Well, you see crisp and crunchy got together yorkster Nov 2024 #124
I do so appreciate your reply cyclonefence Nov 2024 #126
What a strong and sad memory that is. yorkster Nov 2024 #132
I can't get used to "unctuous" being used in a positive way... 3catwoman3 Nov 2024 #144
Yikes. Uriah Heep comes to mind with that yorkster Nov 2024 #148
When I was a teenager I snuck out of the house into the crisp fall evening. n/t retread Nov 2024 #16
The weather was chill and moist Jerry2144 Nov 2024 #71
I thunk the same thing the other day RoadRunner Nov 2024 #17
Thunk is also a word in that context. TwilightZone Nov 2024 #23
Sometimes we alter words to fit what we are saying, or the way we say it. Aristus Nov 2024 #24
Brung in that context is a word. TwilightZone Nov 2024 #26
Based on the OP, it should be bringed LeftInTX Nov 2024 #89
You are mistaken cyclonefence Nov 2024 #96
I learned "snuck" in the 1960s LeftInTX Nov 2024 #97
It's much better than Jilly_in_VA Nov 2024 #25
LOL. chowder66 Nov 2024 #43
Oh yeah cyclonefence Nov 2024 #94
This guy was the son of Crisp! GreenWave Nov 2024 #28
I'd just be happy if kids would the first T back in "important"! Mark.b2 Nov 2024 #30
"That' is the word ... rog Nov 2024 #35
They substitute a glottal stop for the T Hekate Nov 2024 #47
I've noticed it in younger people, maybe 30-ish and below..nt Mark.b2 Nov 2024 #72
Really? Ehhh electric_blue68 Nov 2024 #101
Or impordant. Or liddle instead of little. yorkster Nov 2024 #112
What's going on? Crispix is my favorite cereal. miyazaki Nov 2024 #33
Maybe they don't like donuts SocialDemocrat61 Nov 2024 #34
People who dislike Krispy Kremes be crazy! nt Ilsa Nov 2024 #41
I hate them! Gimme a nice heavy cake donut. Not crispy, a little moist. nt JustABozoOnThisBus Nov 2024 #73
Like the sour creme donuts? Now those are heavy! Ilsa Nov 2024 #116
Yes, those should survive dunking in coffee without dissolving. Hey, it's time for breakfast! nt JustABozoOnThisBus Nov 2024 #122
Me, too. I like what I call "hockey puck" donuts. 3catwoman3 Nov 2024 #146
DU member CrispyQ will be very disappointed to hear this. boston bean Nov 2024 #36
This is apparently the most important issue in your world today? msfiddlestix Nov 2024 #37
Agree. debm55 Nov 2024 #38
It's a respite from politics Hekate Nov 2024 #48
I am helping to run a cemetery tour displacedvermoter Nov 2024 #39
"Snuck isn't a word, Conan. And you went to Harvard ..." sl8 Nov 2024 #40
All right Jennifer Garner!!! cyclonefence Nov 2024 #52
Still no context for your OP. "Snuck", "sneaked", "crisp" and "crispy" all have their places and usages. . . . . nt Bernardo de La Paz Nov 2024 #57
Just my gripe cyclonefence Nov 2024 #66
"Crispy" actually has a useful specific meaning, if you would pause long enough to see it Bernardo de La Paz Nov 2024 #70
Have despised it from the 1first time I had to hear it, too. I think it started in commercials, Judi Lynn Nov 2024 #80
So far cyclonefence Nov 2024 #91
Well, she did look pretty abashed when Conan corrected her. sl8 Nov 2024 #105
Nothing at all. A "Crisp" is one piece from a packet of crisps. MineralMan Nov 2024 #45
Congratulations Dear_Prudence Nov 2024 #55
Ha! I had forgotten the date. Thanks! MineralMan Nov 2024 #56
A guy from the UK said LeftInTX Nov 2024 #76
Well, they call the top roof of the car the "head." MineralMan Nov 2024 #84
Have you looked at the price dweller Nov 2024 #53
I think it's a great word! And all it's variants, too. CrispyQ Nov 2024 #58
Ha, nice. TwilightZone Nov 2024 #87
The language evolves. It's a health thing. marble falls Nov 2024 #60
A lot of slang, grammatical usage, and alternate spellings... ananda Nov 2024 #61
Be consistent. Don't break your own rules when you are pretending to lay down the law Bernardo de La Paz Nov 2024 #67
You don't understand cyclonefence Nov 2024 #95
But what is "standard" is not static nor has it even been. Elessar Zappa Nov 2024 #119
Wut? Island Blue Nov 2024 #78
'Snuck' has overtaken 'sneaked' in written American English, though 'crisp' is still ahead of 'crispy' muriel_volestrangler Nov 2024 #79
The citation isn't from usage of the word cyclonefence Nov 2024 #103
No, the OED writer says "derived from crisp"; the translator used "cryspy" muriel_volestrangler Nov 2024 #113
I hate the word "wholesome" n/t gay texan Nov 2024 #81
Indubitably nolabear Nov 2024 #85
Your usage of "Goddam" is hilarious in the context of the rest of your post. TwilightZone Nov 2024 #90
I got ForgedCrank Nov 2024 #99
Your dad and my mom had that in common. My mother was a nurse but... 3catwoman3 Nov 2024 #154
"Ain't" wasn't a word when I was a kid. It is now. notroot Nov 2024 #106
"Ain't I?" seems more justifiable than "aren't I?" muriel_volestrangler Nov 2024 #114
My mom didn't like it, either. Maybe because she grew up country, herself. notroot Nov 2024 #117
Ain't has been around since at least the 1700s. TwilightZone Nov 2024 #140
Just relaying my childhood experience. notroot Nov 2024 #147
"Ain't wasn't a word when I was a kid. It is now." TwilightZone Nov 2024 #152
Just relating my lived experience. Not sure why you're so keen to debate this point. notroot Nov 2024 #153
My mom would scold us if we said it...lol LeftInTX Nov 2024 #157
Nothing. Nothing is wrong with it ismnotwasm Nov 2024 #115
Moist still has it. TwilightZone Nov 2024 #142
Snuck: "Earliest known use 1500's" Renew Deal Nov 2024 #121
For a strange post.. PJMcK Nov 2024 #128
and the word hanged.....my 5th grade English teacher said OBJECTS are HUNG and samnsara Nov 2024 #129
Think how hard it is to say CRISPS in a sentence, Croney Nov 2024 #131
Invite has been used as a noun since the early 1600s. TwilightZone Nov 2024 #141
I still lament the demise of the word invitation. Croney Nov 2024 #149
lol soandso Nov 2024 #162
About as hard as "wisps"? Or "lisps"? muriel_volestrangler Nov 2024 #155
Yep. My response was to the specific OP word. Croney Nov 2024 #156
I don't know what any of this is about jfz9580m Nov 2024 #143
Crisp personified. Sneederbunk Nov 2024 #151
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