View Full Version : The amazing letter "e"
carhill2mn
10-26-2018, 11:21 AM
The little letter "e" can change a single woman to many women. It can change one man to an army of men. It can change cloths so as to make clothes.
One clothes are made they can be used to clothe a man, a woman, many women, many men or even children.
What an amazing letter, the little "e".
RADER
10-26-2018, 01:45 PM
I remember the letter "E"
It came between "C" and "F" on my report card.
It stood for Enough already.
rader
Cassandra Lynn
10-26-2018, 03:06 PM
I'm gonna pick on some people just a little bit.
I've noticed that little 'e' missing sometimes when people are referring to clothes, and I assume it must be like the little 'u' that gets added to color and parlor in the UK version of the English language. Here in my time and place and especially growing up, 'cloths' were found in the cleaning supply closet and were old torn up t-shirts which were used as dust rags and as cloths for cleaning working parts which needed oiling.
But then again I've also noticed that my clothes 'fit' me (present and past tense) and yet when someone across the water speaks, they say "my new dress fitted me" (past tense only). They really should get with the new world me thinks...……*wink wink.
:heehee:Cass:heehee:
biancabellelover
10-26-2018, 05:16 PM
Ys indd, whr would w b without th lttr “e”.
Michll
(Sorry, couldn’t help myself, LOL)
Jen60
10-26-2018, 07:03 PM
It’s the letter”y” we need to be careful of, as it can change a lad to a lady!
Crissy 107
10-26-2018, 09:24 PM
Jen, I like that, very good!
alwayshave
10-26-2018, 09:28 PM
Carole, I think e.e. cummings would agree with you.
Beverley Sims
10-26-2018, 11:18 PM
"A" works well in changing names, John, Joanna for one.
Michael, Michaela. :-)
t-girlxsophie
10-27-2018, 01:14 AM
Cassandra,all my dresses fitted me at one time,then the pounds started piling on :)
Oh wait!!! do you measure someones weight in pounds across the pond?
Sophie
ps.your definition of cloths is same as mine :thumbsup:
DaisyLawrence
10-27-2018, 01:55 AM
I'm gonna pick on some people just a little bit.
I've noticed that little 'e' missing sometimes when people are referring to clothes, and I assume it must be like the little 'u' that gets added to color and parlor in the UK version of the English language. Here in my time and place and especially growing up, 'cloths' were found in the cleaning supply closet and were old torn up t-shirts which were used as dust rags and as cloths for cleaning working parts which needed oiling.
But then again I've also noticed that my clothes 'fit' me (present and past tense) and yet when someone across the water speaks, they say "my new dress fitted me" (past tense only). They really should get with the new world me thinks...……*wink wink.
:heehee:Cass:heehee:
That's funny. UK version of English? Don't know about that but I do know the English version of English and it is, of course, correct. Trouble is, regional deficiencies. Clothes we wear but cloths are things you clean with. Anything else is mispelt. But the past tense thing is a regional dialect error as well. Around here people talk in the past tense about things that have yet to happen. For example, yesterday my neighbour said " the lounge needs decorated". Now what he meant was either "the lounge needs to be decorated" or "the lounge needs decorating". He speaks like this because he is an idiot who can not shake off a lifetime of regional stupidity in the quest to not sound like an idiot. I explain this but it fails to have an impact. :)
Anothing thing amazing about the letter e is I keep reading about how E has literally changed the life of some M2F trangender people. :)
GretchenM
10-27-2018, 05:34 AM
Daisy,
I think your discussion of these regional differences is interesting. But you revealed another one. You said "Anything else is mispelt." Over here in the Wild West we say "misspelled." I guess as long as we know what is meant we are OK. But it is an interesting subject.
Cassandra Lynn
10-27-2018, 02:15 PM
That's funny. UK version of English? Don't know about that but I do know the English version of English and it is, of course, correct. Trouble is, regional deficiencies. Clothes we wear but cloths are things you clean with. Anything else is mispelt. But the past tense thing is a regional dialect error as well. Around here people talk in the past tense about things that have yet to happen.
Thank you Daisy, that actually helps explain it all nicely.
Once, in another lifetime (many years ago anyways, but it seems like profoundly more), I had a very very dear friend I met on another TG-site (CDC we called it and it evolved into the 'TGlounge', which this person founded and still owns) and we sadly rarely speak anymore, but anyways (*wipes eyes) we had great fun teasing each other, or as I believe you folks put it 'winding me up?'.
She was quite fond of telling me that the language we speak over here, is in fact, the idiots version of the ENGLISH language. That site, much like this one and many more, had quite a large population of Scots, Welsh, and English folk so I picked up some words along the way.
I don't know that 'prolly' for probably, is all that common over your way, but it has stuck with me, and that and, 'methinks' is something I use frequently and gets me some strange looks.
Oh, and your quite right that capitalized version of the letter E does play a prominent role in the life and times of trans-folk.
Cass
Jenny22
10-27-2018, 04:29 PM
It's always interesting to me how E often replaces A in one's mind: 'except' instead of accept.
DaisyLawrence
10-27-2018, 04:59 PM
Daisy,
I think your discussion of these regional differences is interesting. But you revealed another one. You said "Anything else is mispelt." Over here in the Wild West we say "misspelled." I guess as long as we know what is meant we are OK. But it is an interesting subject.
Ah yes Gretchen, well done. In 'English' English, misspelt and misspelled are both correct and mean the same thing (although misspelled is slowly taking over). However, did you notice that I (deliberately for a change, for comic effect) misspelled misspelt? Should have a double S you see. I thought it would be ironic to spell that wrong as I usually spell most other words wrong anyway. :)
BLUE ORCHID
10-28-2018, 05:11 AM
Hi Carole :hugs:, That little ( E ) is a Gender changer, JO to JOE. >Orchid .oO:daydreaming:Oo.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.3 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.