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Signs revisited...

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September 13, 2006, 22:01
Kalleh
Signs revisited...
In today's Bierma column, which I posted elsewhere, he mentioned 2 signs he'd recently seen:

~ Every Single Jean $20 Off

~ The Perfect Pant Event

For the first sign, Bierma asked them if the sign meant he would receive a $40 discount for a pair of jeans. Wink

Then in our community, the police have put up this sign:

Police Ticket Stop Sign Violators

That begs the question (that phrase is probably misused!), do speeders and stop light violators and DUIs get a free pass? Roll Eyes

We've had sign threads before...but have you seen any fun ones recently?
September 14, 2006, 08:38
museamuse
I haven't actually seen this one but Bill Bryson quotes it in Lost Continent (I think). A store selling camping gear was having a winter sale and the sign read:

"This is the Winter of Our Discount Tent"
September 14, 2006, 10:11
<Asa Lovejoy>
And this is the late summer of our joy to see you back!!! Big Grin
September 14, 2006, 11:50
museamuse
Oh you know me: here today, gone tomorrow, and here again the day after...

Nice to see you too! Big Grin
September 14, 2006, 20:59
Kalleh
Hey, Muse...Asa has been up to a lot while you've been gone. He's married now! Big Grin

Love the winter of our discount tent sign!
September 17, 2006, 20:20
Kalleh
From my Dad's Reader's Digest:

A sign on the elevator read:

"In case of fire, don't use the elevator."

Underneath it, someone had written in:

"Use water." Big Grin
September 19, 2006, 10:48
pearce
quote:
Originally posted by Kalleh:
From my Dad's Reader's Digest:

A sign on the elevator read:

"In case of fire, don't use the elevator."

Underneath it, someone had written in:

"Use water." Big Grin

Good one. But is the piece included in copies of the Reader's Digest of people other than your Dad? Wink
September 19, 2006, 18:50
Caterwauller
LOL - good question, Pearce! Ha!


*******
"Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions.
~Dalai Lama
September 19, 2006, 19:51
Kalleh
quote:
But is the piece included in copies of the Reader's Digest of people other than your Dad?

Actually no. It's just in his. Razz

[Confession time: I am always guilty when I read "Reader's Digest," especially in front of such an erudite crowd as on Wordcraft... so I had to mention that it was my father's magazine and not mine. Roll Eyes]
September 20, 2006, 00:49
Richard English
I don't care for RD sinec I find it lacking in depth - which I suppose is inevitable for a digest or precis. However, it is a good example of a journal that takes complex concepts and writing and turns them into articles that are accessible to the majority.

As you will have realised from previous postings of mine, I regard this as an important and useful skill. There is far too much written that is unecessarily complex, arcane and elitist. Translating such works into more understandable forms must surely increase the sum total of information available.

Those who learn about something from the likes of RD can, if they so wish, obtain further information from the source(s). But without the initial RD exposure they'd prossibly never have known about it.


Richard English
September 20, 2006, 05:26
Caterwauller
I agree with you, Richard! I think any access to information is valid. They don't claim to have all of the information or anything, they are what they are. Lovely, that.


*******
"Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions.
~Dalai Lama
September 20, 2006, 06:53
pearce
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Richard English:
… it is a good example of a journal that takes complex concepts and writing and turns them into articles that are accessible to the majority.

Just to break the habits of a lifetime, I agree.
September 20, 2006, 08:27
arnie
quote:
Originally posted by pearce:
Good one. But is the piece included in copies of the Reader's Digest of people other than your Dad? Wink
The title of that publication has always annoyed me a little. Surely it should be Readers' Digest? I am sure they have more readers than just Kalleh's Dad!


Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.
September 20, 2006, 20:00
shufitz
quote:
Surely it should be Readers' Digest? I am sure they have more readers than just Kalleh's Dad!
But surely each copy of the digest belongs to a single reader? And thus is that reader's digest? Wink
September 20, 2006, 20:14
KHC
My own RD was delivered today... and I'm not ashamed; I devour it. It links to many questions, thoughts, articles, news, etc.
September 21, 2006, 00:46
Richard English
quote:
But surely each copy of the digest belongs to a single reader? And thus is that reader's digest?

Is it a digest for readers or a digest for a reader?


Richard English
September 21, 2006, 06:24
<Asa Lovejoy>
This reminds me of John Callahan's book, "Digesting the Inner Child," which depicted a snake consuming a little boy.
September 21, 2006, 20:33
Kalleh
quote:
I don't care for RD sinec I find it lacking in depth

Yes, that's the point. I agree, however, with KHC that nobody should be embarrassed for reading...and I shouldn't have been. Besides, the jokes are great! Big Grin

Richard, I'd consider it a digest for a reader, and I find the apostrophe appropriate (though we all know that I am not an apostrophe expert!)