Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The strings sewn into dresses and sweaters (hanger strings)
https://www.dailyedge.ie/hanger-strings-are-so-annoying-2865909-Jul2016/
I didn’t know that you were supposed to cut the thread out of a new coat pocket. For years I worse an expense coat with flaps and no pockets. I just didn’t want to rip it.![]()
Anonymous wrote:In middle school I thought Marion Barry was two people. Mary and Barry. "They" were on the news a lot (scandals) but it took until high school that I realized it was one person and that person was the mayor of DC. Granted, I'm pretty sure I didn't the governor/mayor/ect of anyone in Virginia at the time either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought the expression “your name is mud” referred to your name being in the dirt. Two years ago I learned it was “your name is Mudd” referring to the doctor, Dr Mudd, who took care of President Lincoln’s murderer John Wilkes Booth and the doctor’s name and reputation we’re ruined.
I also just learned that east/west interstates are even numbers while north/south are odd numbers.
Mark today as the day I learned that!
I only learned about the interstates about 5 year ago when my husband casually mentioned it.
-- 51 year old here....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That you are supposed to give a hostess gift when you go to someone's house. I grew up middle class, and the only people we ever entertained were lower middle class family.
I learned this in college. Extremely embarrassing.
I'm fifty and just learned this right now. None of my middle class / lower middle class family and friends did this
Anonymous wrote:In middle school I thought Marion Barry was two people. Mary and Barry. "They" were on the news a lot (scandals) but it took until high school that I realized it was one person and that person was the mayor of DC. Granted, I'm pretty sure I didn't the governor/mayor/ect of anyone in Virginia at the time either.
Anonymous wrote:I thought the expression “your name is mud” referred to your name being in the dirt. Two years ago I learned it was “your name is Mudd” referring to the doctor, Dr Mudd, who took care of President Lincoln’s murderer John Wilkes Booth and the doctor’s name and reputation we’re ruined.
I also just learned that east/west interstates are even numbers while north/south are odd numbers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My best friend in my not-very-diverse school district was half Japanese and half Jewish. They were observant Jews and there were three kids in the family. For a long time, I thought all Japanese people practiced Judaism.
That’s kinda funny![]()
I grew up in NY and I assumed everybody’s schools closed for the Jewish holidays. I had no idea it was just a NY area thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That it's astigmatism and "a stigmatism."
me too!
This raises an interesting spinoff. Do you correct your spouse when they say something like this? I do, because I don’t want others to think less of my spouse. However, I appreciate it can be viewed as patronizing. I always struggle whether to say something.
I used to, but he will never admit to any mistake or change his behavior accordingly,.so I stopped. This is why our Tupperware lids are all warped beyond usefulness (he insists on leaving lids on in microwave even after being shown the nearly invisible instructions not to on the lid). Last week he made a cake for our son's birthday and put plates over the round pans when he took them out of the oven to cool, then refused to acknowledge that this might be why the cake was soggy not "moist," as he insisted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That realtor is not pronounced "real-uh-tor"
again, this is regional.
Jewelry and Realtor are pronounced differently depending on where you were raised.