This has nothing to do with the falling rates of literacy, but I've been meaning to ask you if you have a recorder that we might borrow when we go to Nova Scotia in hopes of recording some kitchen jams:) Plus, dh is interested in recording the open band and was thinking it would be nice to try something before he bought. Or maybe you have a suggestion?
I kin sort of sea glitches like that in probably quickly assembled capstans (doze the organism that products the commercial all sew capture it, or doves sum won also dew that?), but more and more often I fine entire stories on commercial web sights that seem to have been run throw an automatic spalling clicker and never bin locked it buy a hymen proofreader. The hominems are bed enough, but wan the words sugared by the spool chalker donut even half the right numb of syllabus, it gets two painful too bare. I wise tweeze purple understood why its goad to unveil an edit hare in the publishing posess. *psi*
It does hurt - but you get used to that sort of thing in closed captions (moreso in live broadcasts - you'd think they'd proofread something being taped). But I've actually privately turned "vulch" into a verb, derived from that particular misspelling:
vulch (v.t.): 1) To attend a meeting of a group one is not actually a member of for the purpose of eating the refreshments. 2) To hover in the aisle of a parking lot waiting for someone to back out of his or her parking place.
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We might be interested in borrowing the mics. I'll keep you posted.
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vulch (v.t.): 1) To attend a meeting of a group one is not actually a member of for the purpose of eating the refreshments. 2) To hover in the aisle of a parking lot waiting for someone to back out of his or her parking place.
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