I had a deadline, and my grandma came to visit (which was wonderful), and blog posts were the last thing on my mind.
Instead, I played this card game from Atlas Games:
I guess I'll just have to write two posts this week. For now, here's another tale from
The Storybook of Misused Words
"An Intense Story of Somber Purpose,"
or "The Difference Between 'For All Intents and Purposes' and 'For All Intensive Purposes'"
"Why are you eating that?" he demanded, as trolls gnawed on his wheelbarrow till the wheel was quite crooked.
But the trolls and the pixies continued to destroy his garden and his tools.
"Why won't anyone listen?" gardener moaned. "For all intents and purposes, I might as well be speaking to myself."
Later that day, as he wandered through town looking for pixie repellent and a new wheelbarrow, he stumbled across an unusual shop. The sign read: "Dunne, Dunne, & DUNNE Modifiers: For All Intensive Purposes."
Immediately, the gardener hurried inside and bought several intensive word forms, including some that were quite strange and rare.
When he returned to the garden, he shouted one of his new modifiers at the pixies, "What in tarnation do you think you are doing?!"
And the pixies faltered a little.
So he threw out at the trolls: "How in the Sweet William am I supposed to work if you keep eating the wheelbarrow?"
And then: "Why the Weeping Willow won't you leave?" Followed by "Who the Monkey Puzzle Tree do you think you are?!"
And under this onslaught of strange modifiers, the pixies and trolls fled.
"That was intense," said one fleeing troll to a pixie.
"I think," replied the pixie, "that was the intent."
Love it! Grammar is advanced magic... ;)
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