cimorene: Closeup of a colorful parrot preening itself (>:))
Cimorene ([personal profile] cimorene) wrote2022-07-09 02:28 pm

Battle Viscosity sounds like a phrase that the unix console would output while compiling


  1. personality so big it seemed impossible for it to be snubbed out,


  2. The school had gratuitously allowed the Metalhead to graduate,


  3. the singer whaling into the microphone,


  4. he had free reign to annoy his friends all day,


  5. Steve’s viscous battle

princessofgeeks: (Default)

[personal profile] princessofgeeks 2022-07-09 11:46 am (UTC)(link)
No. 1 might almost be a play on words.
redthedragon: Gray and gold anthro dragon. (Default)

[personal profile] redthedragon 2022-07-09 01:23 pm (UTC)(link)
wait, what's 4? i thought the expression was free reign, like, free rule/no rule of law on them. is it free rein?
redthedragon: Gray and gold anthro dragon. (Default)

[personal profile] redthedragon 2022-07-09 03:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Neat, fun to learn something from one of these posts XD

> "Free reign" might sound impressive to you but not to your editor or teacher.
this line from the Merriam-Webster page is cracking me up because if memory serves I used to get corrected from "free rein" to "free reign" by my high school english teachers, actually XD i'm inheriting errors from my education, how terrible
stranger: rose nebula on starfield (Default)

[personal profile] stranger 2022-07-09 05:30 pm (UTC)(link)
I could actually see both 1. and 2. as deliberate comments, one about a personality not susceptible to snubs, and one about how remarkably, um, unexpected Meathead's gratuitous graduation is. "Free reign" however, makes for a long-standing mental sigh, since it's so *almost* reasonable, but not quite; a free rein, and the consequences thereof, is much more concretely understandable, even if one has only a vague idea what a horse is.

There's perhaps more inaccurate-substitute-word comedy now, since spellcheck weeds out the not-a-word strings. Well, sometimes. By the time I've told spellcheck to skip proper names, SF terms, British idioms, non-English phrases, regionalisms and broken-word speech fragments, I'm surprised it bothers to catch any actual mis-spellings.

Then I think about how irregular and generally ridiculous English is, especially about spelling, and wonder why I'm attached to traditionally correct usage instead of progressively welcoming logical re-visioning of the language.
krait: a sea snake (krait) swimming (Default)

[personal profile] krait 2022-07-11 03:39 am (UTC)(link)
I'm with you on "free reign." The point of reigning is that you're already free. :D Whereas a horse on a rein is restrained, unless one specifies that the rein is not being applied.
krait: a sea snake (krait) on a blue background (alternate sea krait)

[personal profile] krait 2022-07-11 03:33 am (UTC)(link)
#3 immediately made me imagine some kind of concert that involves someone enthusiastically mimicking whalesong into a microphone. No idea what genre that'd be, but I'd probably attend! :D
ealgylden: (Old Hamlet's Ghost)

[personal profile] ealgylden 2022-07-19 04:29 am (UTC)(link)
I see #5 and other viscous variations constantly; in a canon that has large amounts of viscosity vis-a-vis tentacles and things, it's frustrating but probably not surprising. The one that grinds my gears is "interdenominational monsters." Repeatedly! If it were one author's tic, okay, but no! I have sometimes chuckled at the "no beta we die like [x]" tags, but seriously, kids, maybe get a beta.