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Kinda fun to notice how much C&H artwork evolved over the yearsâŚ
Hobbes originally had black pads on his front feet/hands. Bill decided he didnât like them and soon dropped them. Hobbes also grew alot taller in a short timeâŚ
Calvin, you should have said MAY I. Hobbes would know better. Isnât that right, Hobbes? Iâll bet you even have a clever rejoinder. Iâm counting on it.
BTW, I know an English teacher who is a stickler for may I instead of can I when someone wants to go to the bathroom.
Hi Hobbes,
âHaving confidence in your obedience I wrote unto you, knowing that you will also do more than I say.â Philemon 21 (but not more than I wanted) :o)
Speaking of may, I searched for âYou May Thinkâ by the Cars this morning and of course it was âYou Might Thinkâ, which is wryly amusing because I am often annoyed that may is almost always used instead of might these days. Generally, I think might is better in this context and may is better in the can vs. may context.
It does seem that English, or âAmericanâ, has devolved to the point that clarity of meaning is no longer necessary when communicating; instead of making a clear statement we have to continually explain ourselves to those who donât âget itâ. Oh well, the more I rant and rail against poor grammar the more isolated I become.
wizodd: I believe another version of this philosophy is, â itâs easier to ask for forgiveness than permission.â
When my students ask âCan I go to the bathroom?â I reply with, âIâm not medically qualified to make that determination.â
It doesnât take most very long to learn⌠:>)
Hobbes, even more persnickety was the rule for using âwillâ and âshallââas I learned it, âThe rule is⌠to express a future event without emotional overtones, one should say I shall, we shall, but you/he/she/they will; conversely, for emphasis, willfulness, or insistence, one should say I/we will, but you/he/she/they shall.â (John Wallis, 1653)
I doubt very many people bother to make that distinction.
âYet I have left me 7,000 in Israel, all the knees which have not bowed unto Baal, and every mouth which has not kissed him.â I Kings 19:18 (and Iâm one of them)
BTW, apparently you donât object to split infinitives. :o)
JAMEJO, add to that the fact that no one is listening to what the other person is saying because they are too busy getting ready to say what they are going to say next.
Iâve also noticed that the English that is used behind the fast-food counters has been devolving in recent years, from
âCan I help the next person in line?â
to
âNext person in line?â or âCan I help you?â
to
âCan I help whoever is next?â
to
âCan I help whoâs next?â
to
âCan I help you next?â
to
âCânelp younext?â
Many English teachers used to stand at the front of the line and refuse to order their food until the person behind the counter properly said, âMay I please help the next person who is waiting in the line?â
But, from what I understand, there are now very few of those teachers left, since most have died of starvation. You know, natural selection and all that.
On Saturday we reached the final strip before Bill Watterson went on his 9-month sabbatical in 1991. At that point the syndicate began early reruns from 1985, so now we are back at the beginning of Calvin and Hobbes.
HALP! Iâve been collecting paper copies of C&H and, recently, decided to tape them into a notbook. One of them, a Sunday edition dated Nov. 19, had the punchline panel, along with the preceding panel torn out and Iâd like to know the punch line. Iâve been looking at the backdated Sunday editions of C&H in GoComics and Iâve gotten as far back as 2007 (they begin in the 1980s) and I canât find this particular one, although a few are repeated.
Let me describe it to see if an âexpertâ can tell me where in GoComics it may be found: It has many panels, with no dialague: Calvinâs mom is letting him out the door while anxiously looking at her watch; Calvinâs running at top speed. When he see Susie he suddenly realizes something; meanwhile, back home, Calvinâs mom sees that he forgot his paperbag lunch. Calvin is shocked to realize that heâs forgotten his lunch; Susie looks at C; Calvin runs home; his mom runs with the lunch; C takes a shortcut over a picket fence thus missing his mom running to the busstop, C at home sees his lunch isnât where he left it. Câs mom, at the busstop is told by Susie that C ran home. Câs mom meets C and hands him his lunch only to see that the schoolbus has departed; she yells at C and puts C in her car to drive him to school. At school C runs to the locker where Susie is. Câs mom closes her front door and the next 2 panels are missing. The final 2 panels must be great - please somebody help me!
comicgos almost 14 years ago
Youâre quick Calvin - sheâs just quicker!
Vista Bill Raley and Comet⢠almost 14 years ago
Day Two! Iâm enjoying these oldies!
rentier almost 14 years ago
CookieâŚ..mh, mhâŚâŚ!
margueritem almost 14 years ago
Sheâs too quick for you, Clavin!
pouncingtiger almost 14 years ago
Mom probably tried that trick, or something like it, when she was Calvinâs age.
MontanaLady almost 14 years ago
No, Calvin
PetrusS almost 14 years ago
It was worth a shot! Maybe next time shout some less extraordinary suggestions before you ask for cookiesâŚ
GrimmaTheNome almost 14 years ago
Its when she says, âgo ahead, ride on the roofâ that he should worry.
COWBOY7 almost 14 years ago
Too predictable with certain things, Calvin.
GâMorning, Mike, Grog & Marg!
Yukoner almost 14 years ago
Hey, it was a try. After all, no harm, no foul.
lazygrazer almost 14 years ago
Kinda fun to notice how much C&H artwork evolved over the yearsâŚ
Hobbes originally had black pads on his front feet/hands. Bill decided he didnât like them and soon dropped them. Hobbes also grew alot taller in a short timeâŚ
yuvrajhanspal almost 14 years ago
COME TO THE DARK SIDE!! We have COOKIES!!!
Elaine Rosco Premium Member almost 14 years ago
Mom knows you all to well CalvinâŚnext time try puppy dog eyes, that might workâŚlol
GROG Premium Member almost 14 years ago
With Calvin, I doubt thereâs a question he can pose that Mom can reasonably say âyesâ to.
Good Morning, Marg, Mike & â Lonewolfâ
zero almost 14 years ago
@grazer - But I think Mom was much cuter in that(^ todayâs ) eraâŚ
Hobbes Premium Member almost 14 years ago
Here is a âPearls Before Swineâ parallel for todayâs strip:
PearlsBeforeSwine_April2011
Rat was more successful than Calvin.
(Mr. Ed: Thanks for the HTML formatting tip for Web links.)
Puddleglum2 almost 14 years ago
Calvin, you should have said MAY I. Hobbes would know better. Isnât that right, Hobbes? Iâll bet you even have a clever rejoinder. Iâm counting on it. BTW, I know an English teacher who is a stickler for may I instead of can I when someone wants to go to the bathroom.
lewisbower almost 14 years ago
âSure Calvin, and while youâre up there, clean the gutters.â
Hobbes Premium Member almost 14 years ago
Hi Puddleglum2
What does the teacher require them to say? Iâm guessing itâs âMay I go to the can?â
May I give my linguistic opinion, if I can?
âMay Iâ is an example of trying to decide where to compromise between being an English purist and giving in to the evolution of the language.
Over the years, Iâve observed that when people place their orders at fast food restaurants, the language has evolved from
âMay I please haveâŚ.â to âI would likeâŚ.â to âCan I haveâŚâŚâ to âKin I gitâŚ..â or simply, âGimme aâŚ..â
In that context, giving in on the âmay vs. canâ debate doesnât seem all that bad.
â Hobbes
Wiseguy411 almost 14 years ago
Not so much that sheâs on to you Calvin, more likely sheâs been there - done that.
It was amusing to watch my children go through the process. They did not quite figure out that we had so many (time shifted) shared experiences.
Puddleglum2 almost 14 years ago
Hi Hobbes, âHaving confidence in your obedience I wrote unto you, knowing that you will also do more than I say.â Philemon 21 (but not more than I wanted) :o)
Speaking of may, I searched for âYou May Thinkâ by the Cars this morning and of course it was âYou Might Thinkâ, which is wryly amusing because I am often annoyed that may is almost always used instead of might these days. Generally, I think might is better in this context and may is better in the can vs. may context.
twj0729 almost 14 years ago
Love Momâs look, third panel!
Wiseguy411 almost 14 years ago
Puddlegum.
are you saying that might is right ???
(LOL)
jonathan.james almost 14 years ago
It does seem that English, or âAmericanâ, has devolved to the point that clarity of meaning is no longer necessary when communicating; instead of making a clear statement we have to continually explain ourselves to those who donât âget itâ. Oh well, the more I rant and rail against poor grammar the more isolated I become.
rajdking almost 14 years ago
Hey Calvin! Its very hot today. Leav the cookies to mom. Lets go out n have some chilled beer :).
Call Hobbs too.
Fogger_man almost 14 years ago
wizodd: I believe another version of this philosophy is, â itâs easier to ask for forgiveness than permission.â
When my students ask âCan I go to the bathroom?â I reply with, âIâm not medically qualified to make that determination.â It doesnât take most very long to learn⌠:>)
cleokaya almost 14 years ago
Time to learn the fine art of baking your own cookies.
kab2rb almost 14 years ago
Nice try Calvin get the worst over the to the source.
runninanreadin almost 14 years ago
I found that if you DONâT ask, the answer is AUTOMATICALLY ânoââŚsoooooo, you might as well ask, huh? lol
bmonk almost 14 years ago
Hobbes, even more persnickety was the rule for using âwillâ and âshallââas I learned it, âThe rule is⌠to express a future event without emotional overtones, one should say I shall, we shall, but you/he/she/they will; conversely, for emphasis, willfulness, or insistence, one should say I/we will, but you/he/she/they shall.â (John Wallis, 1653)
I doubt very many people bother to make that distinction.
ratlum almost 14 years ago
As long as there is cookies there is a challenge and Calvin will win some how.
Puddleglum2 almost 14 years ago
Wiseguy411, I might, if I may, but if I may not, I will/shall need might to overcome the lack of permission.
Puddleglum2 almost 14 years ago
Fogger_man, That English teacher I mentioned earlier used to say âI donât know whether you can or not, but Iâm not going to help youâ.
Puddleglum2 almost 14 years ago
JAMEJO said, âŚthe more isolated I become.
âYet I have left me 7,000 in Israel, all the knees which have not bowed unto Baal, and every mouth which has not kissed him.â I Kings 19:18 (and Iâm one of them) BTW, apparently you donât object to split infinitives. :o)
gofinsc almost 14 years ago
JAMEJO, add to that the fact that no one is listening to what the other person is saying because they are too busy getting ready to say what they are going to say next.
dvoyack almost 14 years ago
Nice try but next time ask if you can have a beer instead, it might work.
pejackso almost 14 years ago
Anybody know what happened to Watterson? Calvin doesnât look like Calvin anymore and none of the strips are funny.
Hobbes Premium Member almost 14 years ago
Hi JAMEJO
Iâve also noticed that the English that is used behind the fast-food counters has been devolving in recent years, from
âCan I help the next person in line?â to âNext person in line?â or âCan I help you?â to âCan I help whoever is next?â to âCan I help whoâs next?â to âCan I help you next?â to âCânelp younext?â
Many English teachers used to stand at the front of the line and refuse to order their food until the person behind the counter properly said, âMay I please help the next person who is waiting in the line?â
But, from what I understand, there are now very few of those teachers left, since most have died of starvation. You know, natural selection and all that.
âHobbes
Scrubb almost 14 years ago
x
LeStats almost 14 years ago
I hope Calvin remembers her on mothers day, she deserves it!
Hobbes Premium Member almost 14 years ago
SUSAN NEWMAN:
On Saturday we reached the final strip before Bill Watterson went on his 9-month sabbatical in 1991. At that point the syndicate began early reruns from 1985, so now we are back at the beginning of Calvin and Hobbes.
khpage almost 14 years ago
Calvin should have a training session with his lawyer, Hobbes because his mother is about a light year ahead of himâŚ
arye uygur almost 14 years ago
HALP! Iâve been collecting paper copies of C&H and, recently, decided to tape them into a notbook. One of them, a Sunday edition dated Nov. 19, had the punchline panel, along with the preceding panel torn out and Iâd like to know the punch line. Iâve been looking at the backdated Sunday editions of C&H in GoComics and Iâve gotten as far back as 2007 (they begin in the 1980s) and I canât find this particular one, although a few are repeated.
Let me describe it to see if an âexpertâ can tell me where in GoComics it may be found: It has many panels, with no dialague: Calvinâs mom is letting him out the door while anxiously looking at her watch; Calvinâs running at top speed. When he see Susie he suddenly realizes something; meanwhile, back home, Calvinâs mom sees that he forgot his paperbag lunch. Calvin is shocked to realize that heâs forgotten his lunch; Susie looks at C; Calvin runs home; his mom runs with the lunch; C takes a shortcut over a picket fence thus missing his mom running to the busstop, C at home sees his lunch isnât where he left it. Câs mom, at the busstop is told by Susie that C ran home. Câs mom meets C and hands him his lunch only to see that the schoolbus has departed; she yells at C and puts C in her car to drive him to school. At school C runs to the locker where Susie is. Câs mom closes her front door and the next 2 panels are missing. The final 2 panels must be great - please somebody help me!
Fogger_man almost 14 years ago
Puddleglum2:
One of my favorites is, âTake your time going, but hurry back!â ⌠donât think about it too hard⌠:>)
Llywus almost 14 years ago
Trivia time: what were Hobbeâs first words in the strip?
dahawk almost 14 years ago
May I add this to the word debate?
I shall!
Theyâs more than one way to say things!
See, I can.
Will I get posts correcting my grammar?
bmonk almost 14 years ago
Were Hobbesâ first words either, âNo thanks, Iâm full,â or, âWeâre kind of stupid that wayâ?
Midgrid almost 14 years ago
Ayre Uygur - it is a great ending! The strip youâre looking for is from September 24, 1994.
(Edited to remove spoiler.)
Hobbes Premium Member almost 14 years ago
TestingâŚâŚâŚ.TestingâŚâŚâŚ..TestingâŚâŚâŚ..
FerBurger almost 14 years ago
The origin of Hobbes . . .
Hobbes Premium Member almost 14 years ago
What happened to all the commas?
JP Steve Premium Member almost 14 years ago
Interesting⌠you can only see the comments if youâre not signed in?
Hobbes Premium Member almost 14 years ago
And the blank lines?
Hobbes Premium Member almost 14 years ago
And the italics?
Hobbes Premium Member almost 14 years ago
And the ability to edit previous comments? (Poor DogsniffâŚ..)
hihigirl over 13 years ago
Are those HOMEMADE COOKIIIIEEEES!!!!?? I LOVE homemade cookies!! :D
Larry da crocodile about 4 years ago
I have seen this 3 times now in calvin and hobbs. they must be repeating.