Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
thee-ter (instead of the-a-ter)
Do you mean THEE-uh-ter, the way Brits pronounce it, or thee-ATE-er, the way some southerners pronounce it (like vee-HICK-el, same cadence)?
I find pronouncing it the British way if you aren't British to be pretentious, and the southern way sounds just plain wrong unless that's your natural accent.
But the real question is whether you spell it theater or theatre. My high school theatre teacher used the -re spelling, so I do it now instinctively, and sometimes people yell at me for it.
Wait, how do you pronounce it if not THEE-uh-ter? I'm 100% American and I think I pronounce it this way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bone on bone. Mostly how people say it.
I don’t understand anything about this post.
Anonymous wrote:Ok ok I am the hey bud hater. I do use terms of endearment to my kid but it’s not every other sentence. I was at the playground and I have seen these dads that every utterance towards the child involves bud. Hey bud. Good job bud. Bud it’s time to leave. On no bud don’t put that in your mouth. Bud bud bud!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
thee-ter (instead of the-a-ter)
Do you mean THEE-uh-ter, the way Brits pronounce it, or thee-ATE-er, the way some southerners pronounce it (like vee-HICK-el, same cadence)?
I find pronouncing it the British way if you aren't British to be pretentious, and the southern way sounds just plain wrong unless that's your natural accent.
But the real question is whether you spell it theater or theatre. My high school theatre teacher used the -re spelling, so I do it now instinctively, and sometimes people yell at me for it.
Anonymous wrote:
thee-ter (instead of the-a-ter)
Anonymous wrote:I had told you..
Type of sentence constructions.
Adding “had” when it’s not the right tense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn’t read the whole thread.
Calling kids Bud (sometimes Bug for a girl) - you named the kid. Thought about the name.me a lot while pregnant. Use it!
Align.
Do you only refer to your kid by their first name?
Yes, generally. Or if it’s just me and kid and I say something while looking at her, she understands I am talking to her. I cringe so much at the hey bud over and over (while the kid ignores the parent most times). When my kid gets hurt or sick I may also say honey or sweetie.
That’s…interesting.
NP. What’s the problem here? I call my kids honey, sweetie, darlin’, etc. all the time.
That’s what’s weird…that PP will only call her kids by a term of endearment if they’re injured or sick. So rigid and bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Didn’t read the whole thread.
Calling kids Bud (sometimes Bug for a girl) - you named the kid. Thought about the name.me a lot while pregnant. Use it!
Align.
Do you only refer to your kid by their first name?
Yes, generally. Or if it’s just me and kid and I say something while looking at her, she understands I am talking to her. I cringe so much at the hey bud over and over (while the kid ignores the parent most times). When my kid gets hurt or sick I may also say honey or sweetie.
That’s…interesting.
NP. What’s the problem here? I call my kids honey, sweetie, darlin’, etc. all the time.
Those words are for your AP
Do not give your kids Oedipal complexes.
Anonymous wrote:This isn't quite the same, but it's one of my major pet peeves: when a parent insists on calling their child by both first and middle names in public. It's so obvious they just want everyone to hear the kid's name and think how wonderful it is.
"Mackenna Brianne! Come back right now!"
"Tanner Ewan! Please put that back."