Monday, August 13, 2007

 

Drawing the line

So what is it with people who believe a squiggle of pen on paper is just a squiggle, but if the it ends with a line crossed back through the body of the squiggle, then suddenly it's a signature? Did these people attend signature school? One would have thought that one's signature/seal/John Hancock/whatever you like to call it is supposed to be an personal inimitable mark, but these squigglers and crossers are ending up with signatures just like every other man and his dog.

It's drawing the line - just like the use of the F-Bomb in movies. An M-rated movie is allowed one, but an R16 could potentially not need to use any other word (although no-one needs to prove this for the sake of the argument; such a repetitive script wouldn't make for very exciting watching). This is all based on the perfectly reasonable assumption that kids will all miss the first utterance of it, or perhaps they won't know what it means and will immediately ask their parents. Movie censors have drawn the line early because either way, the second swearword will affect kids deeply the second time around.

Wow - two totally unrelated topics, a tenuous and clumsy segue to link them, and we have a post. Neither subject alone was worthy of a post, so I spent the better part of 30 seconds working on bringing them together. And then I wondered when I was done - "Was that worth it?"

Comments:
Yeah everyone needs a signature like Bosses printed in capital letters! So much easier.
 
Yeah it should actually read Boss's. It is late oh punctuation guru.

I actually find it ironic with this article I am writing for Consumer magazine that the editor tells you that you have spelled a word wrong or used the wrong spelling of a word, but in pointing out my spelling mistake they make two or three!
 
Possibly not, but good to have something from you...ANYTHING from you...to read !
 
It should actually read Boss'! Muhaha!

And thanks for reading!
 
And this from a man whose signature is top of the line in squiggle? So a squiggle's okay, as long as it hasn't got a line through it? Hmmm
 
Hi Jon.

What about this?

Unloosen equates to unfasten.
Unfasten equates to Unloosen.
Fasten does not mean to Loosen.
Loosen does not mean to fasten.

If you think I am kidding. Check the Collins Dictionary for Unloosen and Unfasten!
Oh my brain hurts!

Happy new year Jon!
 
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