tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5430917408212835186.post6312106153966759333..comments2023-03-26T09:32:07.414+02:00Comments on Metis Meets Mittington: Be fast to grab your very last chance!Alfred B. Mittingtonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09408858308842184986noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5430917408212835186.post-16160645189622418152013-06-03T18:38:59.986+02:002013-06-03T18:38:59.986+02:00Dear Most Avid Reader,
It just so happens I spell...<br />Dear Most Avid Reader,<br /><br />It just so happens I spell that word 'Youmour' (there's a delightful wink in there at Love the French Way...). For all the rest, as long as 270 million of our American cousins SAY 'gotta', I think we ought to oblige them and WRITE 'gotta'. And as for the double negative: I don't see no problem with it...<br /><br />I haven't got the slightest what the two German words mean. I don't think anybody knows, for that matter. Which is no reason not to use them. The same goes, after all, for the works of Emmanuel Kant and Friedrich Hegel. Not to mention Pooh Bear...<br /><br />Your most affectionate,<br /><br />Alfred B MittingtonAlfred B. Mittingtonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09408858308842184986noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5430917408212835186.post-23846658988016684152013-06-03T18:01:45.062+02:002013-06-03T18:01:45.062+02:00"gotta" !
Permissible but pur. . .leas..."gotta" ! <br /><br />Permissible but pur. . .lease. Why do you regularly ruin your fine style with this ugly Americanism?<br /><br />As for 'not be allowed no more' . . . .Words (almost) fail me. I assume it's another example of your bizarre humour. Or 'humor', as you would doubtless write it.<br /><br />BTW - What the bloody hell do the 2 words mean?<br /><br />Your most avid reader.Colin Davieshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17034285745883721921noreply@blogger.com