Morgan123
Well-Known Member
There was a "screwball cob" for sale on the FB group near me!!! Spat out my tea! Yes they did mean brown and white and not nuts!
I see lots of bridals for sale on my local fb groups
Theres a helpful sign on one of my rides pointing to the bridal path. I have to hum here comes the bride every time!I wrote to my MP about access issues. I got a reply quoting Hansard, which mentioned "bridal ways" several times. No wonder we have problems getting rights of way for horses.![]()
Appaloosa in various ways or ads like this one:
"father was a 17 hands Irish sport this mare was bred to event and Iam going to be as honest as I can she's is powerfull but respect fall never reared or bucked I've shown her wear she went in a double bridle no trouble she went on loan were she jumped one meter thirty but had muscel waste on one side and girl didn't do to correct Iam not a strong enough rider to hold her in the canter but Iam working on it her walk and trot is done we've done cross country and spiders oured ride where she will jump huge from the trot tables ect she needs someone who is more experienced then me to be able to keep her power under control there isn't a nasty bone in her body I e been rider her in a bare back pad to work the back even as she's a mare to rember pain she hacks out alone travels well had shoes on although bare foot at moment this mare needs an experience clam rider to bring the best out of her as she is wasted with me and needs to go do what she was bred for or would make top class brood mare"
Please ask someone to check it over before you place the ad, especially when you want a few thousand for the horse.
Someone on FB posted that they'd been hunting and drank 'mould wine' for the first time...
Someone on FB posted that they'd been hunting and drank 'mould wine' for the first time...
Screwbald, or a crackle noseband
I see lots of bridals for sale on my local fb groups
Its almost excusable to spell things the way you say them but you do need to speak properly first. of instead of have is the one I dislike most as in could of should of its have for heavens sake
Its almost excusable to spell things the way you say them but you do need to speak properly first. of instead of have is the one I dislike most as in could of should of its have for heavens sake
Gosh there's snobbery. There are lots of ways of pronouncing words, I come from the north, and live in near Norfolk, and work with a vast array of people for who English is not their first language, I would say I have become used to working out what is said by what context the word is being used.
I also spend a lot of time explaining complex things in simple understandable language, it is the meaning that you have to get a cross, so sometimes I flatten my accent, but that's my problem not theirs.
I have also worked in Cambridge where there are a lot of people who, 'speak well', but their ideas can be just and mistaken and ignorant as any one else's. The most bigoted, bullying person I have ever had the misfortune to work with had beautiful spelling mistake free, grammatically correct handwriting, spoke in received pronunciation, apart from when she was angry, but unfortunately for her it did not make her smarter than me.
This is the problem I think, most of these mis spellings are not really because people don't know how to spell, but because they don't appear to know what the word is supposed to be. Homonyms are more easily understood IMO, and it's easy for autocorrect to do things like haylage/haulage.
But
Cushions for cushings - you do hear a lot of people *speaking* the word cushions so it's not just a typo
My example of martian gal - guess the person looking had no idea that the word was martingale.
Gosh there's snobbery. There are lots of ways of pronouncing words, I come from the north, and live in near Norfolk, and work with a vast array of people for who English is not their first language, I would say I have become used to working out what is said by what context the word is being used.
I also spend a lot of time explaining complex things in simple understandable language, it is the meaning that you have to get a cross, so sometimes I flatten my accent, but that's my problem not theirs.
I have also worked in Cambridge where there are a lot of people who, 'speak well', but their ideas can be just and mistaken and ignorant as any one else's. The most bigoted, bullying person I have ever had the misfortune to work with had beautiful spelling mistake free, grammatically correct handwriting, spoke in received pronunciation, apart from when she was angry, but unfortunately for her it did not make her smarter than me.
Often what you would call the wrong word is may actually be the local way the word is pronounced.Professionals often get around not pouncing words that are liable to mispronunciation by using abbreviations, which creates an even greater problem.But using the wrong word isn't about accent, it is about not using the correct word, which is perfectly understandable in someone who speaks English as an additional/foreign language but when it is simply carelessness or misunderstanding of what is correct it jars. I am an Infants teacher and have always praised children for having a go at spelling and getting a near approximation but when an adult is communicating in writing, as on a forum, it would help if they knew which word they were using, otherwise we could all find ourselves talking at cross-purposes.
Often what you would call the wrong word is may actually be the local way the word is pronounced.
The one that is really annoying me lately, again because people don't know what the word should be is 'bias' instead of 'biased', as in "the judge is bias towards Arabs'. In fact there seem to be a number of words that have lost their past participle, the 'ed' ending has just disappeared, apparently.
Often what you would call the wrong word is may actually be the local way the word is pronounced.Professionals often get around not pouncing words that are liable to mispronunciation by using abbreviations, which creates an even greater problem.
You are also assuming their brain works the same as yours, mine doesn't. Its a bit like the old joke about the microphone that drops out in the middle or a word or sentence, only your brain fills in the wrong word. I know what I want to say, I have loads of ideas but 'sound' drops out when it come to writing it down.
If you are teaching small children I think you need read around the subject of dyslexia. I have obviously attained more in my life then my writing ability as a child would suggest, its not something you grow out of, you just learn coping strategies.
Is it? Genuinely curious as this is potentially one I'd be guilty of.
I thought "bias" was the noun, which wouldn't make sense in that context. "The judge has bias towards Arabs" sounds OK to me, so to me then they "are biased" towards/against whatever the subject matter is.
Happy to be corrected though!
You are quite correct if someone *has* a bias but if they *are biased* it is a past participle used as an adjective. I frequently see on here "I am bias", which is incorrect.