Username
Dyske
Member Since
November 6, 2002
Total number of comments
118
Total number of votes received
668
Bio
I’m the administrator of this site.
Latest Comments
Life Savers 5 Flavor
- March 19, 2005, 11:18am
Hi Dave,
You can see the package by clicking on the first link.
you all
- March 8, 2005, 6:59pm
The word "you" has no plural form, which I think is the problem. I think "yous" should be a legitimate word.
Tsunami
- January 11, 2005, 10:47pm
In Japanese "T" is definitely pronounced. "TSU" and "SU" are two clearly different syllables in Japanese. I should know because my last name is: Suematsu.
Flying (with) Colours?
- August 10, 2004, 7:04am
Marta,
I keep replying to your email, but you don't seem to get it.
Wiener Coffee
- July 18, 2004, 11:54pm
Jun-Dai,
I think you raise interesting points here. With personal names, those issues have always existed and everyone deals with them differently. Some people would insist on the correct pronunciations of their foreign names even if their phonetic components do not exist in English language. Some people don't even bother, and give themselves common English names like John, Mike, Jane, Sally, etc..
As for me, I altered the official spelling of my name (Daisuke) so that people could pronounce my name correctly.
Wiener Coffee
- July 18, 2004, 8:23pm
Speedwell,
Tokyo used to be called Edo. I'm not sure about the rest. I can't think of any alternatives for them.
Jun-Dai,
True, England is Eikoku and the US is Beikoku. I'm not sure where they came from. There may be other countries for which the Japanese have their own names, but the difference is that everyone is aware of the original names, and uses them as frequently as the Japanese versions.
But, the way they pronounce the original names are often very wrong. For instance, Portugal would be pronounced more like "Porutogaru".
Pronouns
- May 12, 2004, 11:00pm
This really bothers me too. My rationale is that I am a man, so I use 'he' consistently. I feel that if I were a woman, I would use 'she' consistently. I wish that the government would step in and officially endorse (not enforce) a rule. If they tell me that it should always be 'she', I would have no problem; I would follow that consistently. It's just a matter of agreeing with something, so that we don't have to worry about being called a sexist, or keep using 'he/she'.
00′s
- April 7, 2004, 9:39am
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/07/dining/07TABL.html
New York Times seems to consistently use "80's", apostrophe after the number, before the 's'.
Also, there is another thread for this discussion.
There is no such a thing as...
- April 5, 2004, 2:50pm
http://www.artic.edu/webspaces/fnews/2002-may/mayregulars3.html
The very last line.
The other one was an email written by an English teacher.
Life Savers 5 Flavor
Do you see the link for candystand.com? It's right underneath the title "Life Savers 5 Flavor". Right on this page. Right above here.