Sounds like you're the one with a worm on the tongue, now.Anybody received their subscription copy of #12 yet? I'm haunting my mailbox.
Sounds like you're the one with a worm on the tongue, now.Anybody received their subscription copy of #12 yet? I'm haunting my mailbox.
Sounds like you're the one with a worm on the tongue, now.
It's an old gag from a Mork & Mindy episode. "Baited" breathDare I admit I'm not actually familar with that phrase?
It's an old gag from a Mork & Mindy episode. "Baited" breath
But those are two entirely different concepts: the former is what a springer spaniel does to birds, while the latter is what one does when building from a skeleton.(Or near-homophone, like "flush out" for "flesh out").
Exactly my point. I had a friend who said "flush out" when he meant "flesh out," at least until I set him straight. And I've seen at least one other person use it that way online fairly recently.But those are two entirely different concepts: the former is what a springer spaniel does to birds, while the latter is what one does when building from a skeleton.
And of course, deliberately using the wrong homophone is a major source of puns. As in the Morkism cited above.
They've gone to plaid!I've seen one person spell "ludicrous" as "ludacris."
Yes, but that can lead to people mistaking the pun for the truth. Much like how deliberate misspellings in brand names, titles, or the like can often be mistaken for the genuine spellings. I've seen people spell "cemetery" like "sematary" because of the Stephen King novel, and I've seen one person spell "ludicrous" as "ludacris."
FYI, these mistakes are called "eggcorns".
I wonder why they chose the story with the longest name as the title of the collection.
Also, the stories are in the wrong order if Amazon can be believed.
I checked the listing on Amazon. There is an image of the ToC page there; your name is correct on that page.It was mentioned in the 2024 books thread, and also I REALLY REALLY hope they fix the misspelling of my name in the final book. (Sigh.)
Seriously, someone at Titan has a real mental block against the first two letters of my last name, as this is far from the first time I've been given the last name of "Candido" in Titan's solicitations.....
: breathes sigh of relief :I checked the listing on Amazon. There is an image of the ToC page there; your name is correct on that page.
Which are not to be confused with egg-creams (a type of soda containing neither egg nor cream: seltzer water [traditionally squirted from the same kind of seltzer bottle that's become a stock gag of slapstick comedy], milk, and syrup [traditionally Fox's U-bet].) The protagonist of my novel has been established as having a fondness for strawberry egg-creams. Although several theories about the etymology of "egg-cream" suggest that the term itself may have originated as an eggcorn.FYI, these mistakes are called "eggcorns".
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