Here's a compromise: A future book mentions that Klag is now suffering from progressive neck injuries.
I've mentioned this before, but I'm the same way about "salt and pepper" hair and beards. Surely there's some other way to describe a man with dark hair that's flecked with grey here and there?
Jay David Bolter and Richard Grusin said:Remediation as Reform
The word remediation is used by educators as a euphemism for the task of bringing lagging students up to an expected level of performance and by environmental engineers for "restoring" a damaged ecosystem. The word derives ultimately from the Latin remederi-"to heal, to restore to health." We have adopted the word to express the way in which one medium is seen by our culture as reforming or improving upon another. This belief in reform is particularly strong for those who are today repurposing earlier media into digital forms. They tell us, for example, that when broadcast television becomes interactive digital television, it will motivate and liberate viewers are never before; that electronic mail is more convenient and reliable than physical mail; that hypertext brings interactivity to the novel; and that virtual reality is a more "natural" environment for computing than a conventional video screen.
I've mentioned this before, but I'm the same way about "salt and pepper" hair and beards. Surely there's some other way to describe a man with dark hair that's flecked with grey here and there?
I've mentioned this before, but I'm the same way about "salt and pepper" hair and beards. Surely there's some other way to describe a man with dark hair that's flecked with grey here and there?
On modern readers, yes, but not on older ones like the Kindle 3 and earlier, or the original Nook.Slow refresh? Nope. By the time your eyes are at the top of the screen, the change has already occurred.
for your consideration, proof of KRAD's writing tick from the Gorkon Books:
I've mentioned this before, but I'm the same way about "salt and pepper" hair and beards. Surely there's some other way to describe a man with dark hair that's flecked with grey here and there?
I don't see what's wrong with "salt-and-pepper" there. It's a widely accepted and understood usage, and it's in the dictionary with that particular meaning -- although it seems to be a variant on the earlier "pepper-and-salt," which dates back to around 1770s. So that's simply the word for that type of hair or coat pattern. It seems no worse than using "redhead" to describe someone with orangish or coppery hair.
And it's not just used for men. Nearly everyone in my family past a certain age has salt-and-pepper hair.
Maybe I'm misinterepreting CNash but I don't think he's saying that there's anything wrong with that expression, just that it's over-used.
Maybe I'm misinterepreting CNash but I don't think he's saying that there's anything wrong with that expression, just that it's over-used.
But that's just it. How can something be overused when it is the standard word for the thing being described? It's not even a slang expression, it's just what that particular coloration is named. Hence my "redhead" analogy. It's like saying the word "phaser" is being overused. What else are you gonna call it?
Maybe I'm misinterepreting CNash but I don't think he's saying that there's anything wrong with that expression, just that it's over-used.
But that's just it. How can something be overused when it is the standard word for the thing being described? It's not even a slang expression, it's just what that particular coloration is named. Hence my "redhead" analogy. It's like saying the word "phaser" is being overused. What else are you gonna call it?
Perhaps it's more common in the US than in the UK or Ireland, but over here, you'd be more likely to hear 'greying' or 'grey.' I certainly wouldn't compare it to the word 'redhead', which seems to be fairly generic. But even still, you might hear someone with red hair described as having auburn hair, ginger hair, copper hair, rusty... (being a red head and having a redheaded daughter, I know of what I speak!)
A phaser is a phaser. That's what it is. Salt and pepper are condiments, not hair colours.
And it's certainly not a phrase I've ever actually heard used in every day speech or conversation. In fact, I'd be pretty sure I've never actually heard it used in real life.
Perhaps it's more common in the US than in the UK or Ireland, but over here, you'd be more likely to hear 'greying' or 'grey.'
Besides, given that you can have black pepper, white pepper, red pepper, brown pepper, I've never thought that salt and pepper is a particularly helpful description of hair colour...
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