I want nothing more than to save up enough money to escape everyone and everything I know and start comepletely fresh. New job, new city, new friends — after 16 years of moving from place to place, these last eight years have been stifling. I thought I wanted consistency. No, I want rebirth. Not with who I am but with whom I associate. I have good friends here, I do. But I’ve also got some I could do without. I need a new beginning. Me, me, me.
Have you ever looked through your Facebook wall and gone, “I don’t give a fuck about any of these people.”?
The true dreamer
A dreamer is one who looks at the sky He watches as clouds go wondering by but he wonders why?
I’ve demonstrated here the use of the misuse of grammar. Often practiced as a device in poetry, the misuse of grammar and proper punctuation can pack a powerful punch (as much as a metaphor might). In an ever-evolving English, we harness the freedom to manipulate our words to not only say something, but make a statement. It’s in the way in which we hold a pen. It’s in how we arrange our thoughts. We can provoke an underlying meaning in a formulated fashion which will not only produce a story, but also an emotion.
All work henceforth is and shall be original to the author of tumblr.com/grammartricks (if not quoted or reblogged).
The Five Worst-Dressed Men of September
Our editors regrettably bring you the five men who have broken rule after rule, leading to sartorial ruin. This month, Gossip Girl star Penn Badgley, an Emmys attendee, and, shown here, the newly minted Mr. Kim Kardashian.
Curb Your Enthusiasm Did It of the Day: In a terrifying sign of the times, the New York Times today posted an article to its website accompanied by a headline that features a smiley-face emoticon.
The Cutline’s Dylan Stableford notes that this is not the first time a Gray Lady header has incorporated an emoticon, but it is the first time “an emoticon was used to convey information in a headline.”
Times senior software architect Jacob Harris took to Twitter to explain the surprising move. “Just to be clear, the :) is not in the print headline or the e-headline sent to electronic devices,” Harris tweeted. “It’s just some homepage fun.”
NPR’s Eric Athas retweeted Harris and pointed to a poignant Curb Your Enthusiasm clip in which Larry David predicts this foreboding novelty:
[yahoo.]
http://laculbute.tumblr.com/post/10785049685
Rules for Writing Good
- Verbs has to agree with their subjects.
- Prepositions are not words to end sentences with.
- And don’t start a sentence with a conjunction.
- It is wrong to ever split an infinitive.
- Avoid clichés like the plague.
- Also, always avoid annoying…



