Now there's a word I needed. I want a house with space for a meadery.
Now there's a word I needed. I want a house with space for a meadery.
Now there's a word I needed. I want a house with space for a meadery.
I was quite enchanted with that idea, too! There is a meadery up the valley, excellent wares. I have two bottles of their product on hand.
Shakespearean scholars have debated this for years. There are those who sit on the fence, and those who claim that there is no subsequent evidence in Hamlet that that was Shakespeare's intention and others who raise the point that he was known for his double entendres and it might well have been a double ententre. I am inclined to think that perhaps he was using it tongue-in-cheek. This is one of the reasons I hated studying literature--the attempt to decipher what was going on in the author's head when he/she wrote something...most writers write without giving a lot o thought as to how what they have written might be interpreted by literature scholars in the future.Kinda changes that whole monologue from Hamlet...very interesting. Thanks!
Himself used to listen to books on tape/disc when he would drive to and from work. I never liked a book on tape for a reason similar to why you don't like dissecting author's meaning. The person reading the story, even if it is the author themselves, never sounds like I hear the voices in my head. Yup, I hear voices in my head! But ONLY when I'm reading books. For now...I dislike dissecting and speculating about what the author meant. I know what I read and understand, what it means to me. I either enjoy the story or I don't, that is my take away, if it gives me insight, then that is dessert from the author....
Seriously? There IS a term for that? Never heard of that one but, oddly enough, when LittleBit sits like that we call it her "Kittyloaf" pose!
Yankees don't call that amber, sometimes? In Canada we call it amber or yellow.amber:
1. Translucent fossilized tree resin, generally yellow or orange but
sometimes blue, often used as jewelry.
2. (in British English) The middle light in a set of three traffic lights,
between the red and the green lights.
3. (in biology, biochemistry and genetics) The RNA codon UAG, which stops
the third stage of protein production, translation.
<https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/amber>
Yankees don't call that amber, sometimes? In Canada we call it amber or yellow.