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I love Calvinās expression in the last panel! I get down on my knees which is very close to Momās bend over position to get the point across when Iām being challenged. If things still donāt get done then I use the, āWe were going to do this or that but now since you havenāt picked up your things I guess we canāt then.ā Otherwise I use the, āI picked up all my things so we can so now itās up to you to do yours.ā I never paid my son to do something he should learn to do anyway for himself and I donāt for his daughter today. I lead by example which also works with healthy eating habits. I think too many parents donāt lead by example and thatās where they can avoid alot of problems they have trouble fixing with their kids that will go into adulthood!
@Gweedo Murray: Heās not five years old, heās six years old. I seem to recall that fact being mentioned even recently.
That said, the last time I read of a child his age using such big words was in a famous account of a prodigy who regrettably got leukemia at a young age. He went into remission, but I donāt know whether heās still alive (and donāt remember his name, alas).
@GreenJade,
FYI - my comment was entirely in jest pertaining to your name, your comment, and your penchant for puns. Your smile face indicates that you realize that. I thought that some people might not have caught the double meaning in āChoreāean. I like to encourage fellow punsters. :o)
Calvin, you didnāt take my advice, yesterday. You could have saved yourself time and trouble. Iām looking out for your best interests.
Mom, how can you stoop so low? You go, Mom! āTell him you mean business!ā - Robert Vaughn in Mark E. Salomone commercial on TV
@WoodEye: If you are a hapless married man, then yes you sure do! Only instead of a Mind Scrambling Eyeball Ray (which only appears when she asks you if she looks fat) itās called the Honey Do List! :-D
My evil mother had a magic incantation , 3 magic words consisting of my first, middle, and last names. Could always beat her with the words, āHmph! I wanted to clean my room anyway!ā
Actually my Mon wasnāt evil. Women canāt help it that they are born with this desire to control men. āComing Dear.ā
my friendās son was into dinosaurs at a very young age. He could tell you the name (while looking at a picture) of everry dinosaur and if you asked him what he wanted to be when he grew up he would tell you he wanted t be a paleontologist. When I was three I had a very large vocabulary. People used to comment to my mother about it because they were amazed at the words I used. My mom never spoke to us in ābaby talk.ā
I could read when I was three and was a voracious reader. I would read six library books over the weekend (I could have read more but six was the limit you could take out at one time. There are many children who have great vocabularies at young ages.
In reality this strip isnāt about a little boy, itās about adults and their inner child ā¦ an extensive vocabulary isnāt really out of place. I adore Calvin; he reminds me of a little guy my wife watches, but then a lot of what I see in the real kid is what I also see in myself at that age. Thatās the source of the humor for me; thatās why heās not Dennis the Menace so much.
LeslieAnne,
Oh the recogitations (is it even a word?)ā¦ Maybe recollections would suffice.
āThanks for the Memoriesā - Bob Hope and Shirley Ross
āMemories are Made of Thisā - Dean Martin
Puddleglum is my favorite character in the Chronicles of Narnia series. You used the word āClassicā. Have you read The Silver Chair? I also liked The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, especially The Dark Island chapter, although I would shun the experience.
Momās just have that special look they put on when they let you know you have reached the end of the line. A wise child will heed that look. Calvin is brave but knows when it is time to retreat.
my mind often scrambles as i read these comments, especially by those who feel itās necessary to explain in condescending fashion the excellent wordplay such as greenjadeās yesterday
My Old English Sheepdog uses this look on all other
animals she encounters, from other dogs to chickens
and kittens. It really works. All are intimidated.
TN-REDD,
Thank you for the āCoolā¦ NICE! !ā yesterday.
āBloviatingā is a great word here, especially since itās hyperbolic in this context (for emphasis). You have shown a prime example of a BIG word that fits perfectly and is amusing as well.
BTW, I used āshownā rather than exhibited. See, people, Iām manifestly capable of utilizing one-syllable words where they apply as well or better than bigger words. :o)
P.S. Does that sufficiently squelch the naysayers, at least for the moment, LeslieAnne? Donāt count on it! One, two, three, fourā¦heh, heh, heh! - The Count on Sesame Street
Calvin is an extremely gifted child. Itās not that he does bad in skoolāitās just that skool is boring to him and his superior brain. Of course, it does help superior brains to study for their spelling tests.
I want to thank all of you who flagged the spam must have worked so far not on my interent site.
Dino for kids to learn it takes parents to learn so there are several generations of kids who become parents where parentās didnāt learn about keep house clean. Or how to raise a child right.
somebodyshort - My youngest son was pretty much the same way. He was reading everything in sight at 5 (which gave him a large vocabulary), but he didnāt even start talking until he was 4. Had to take him to speech therapy too. Whatās funny is that he also watched a lot of Winnie the Pooh videos when he was younger, so now people will ask him if heās from England. Heās never even been out of the USA, and has lived in KS his whole life!
Speak of the devil and he ābloviatesā. Maybe he is Humpty Dumpty, and every time he falls āoff the wallā his āmind often scramblesā. Nothing was intended to be condescending. Some people donāt have as much of a āpenchant for punsā as others. I know from person-to-person conversations that some things go over peopleās heads for whatever reasons. Itās awkward when that happens, but thatās the risk we take when we attempt humor. Besides, I was trying to make sure that GreenJade realized that I was speaking entirely in jest.
Frankly, this one person, in particular, has become as obnoxious as two or three others that used to frequent these premises (this website). Since he has gone overboard with his words, perhaps he should walk the plank bodily as well.
BTW, itās āby them, not by thoseā. Those is a modifying word.
PuddleGlum: I love all of CS Lewis!!! :D The Chronicles are some of my favorites of all times!!! The way he is able to spin the stories and make you feel what they felt is amazingā¦ Classic is the best descriptive word!
As was mentioned I believe yesterday in the comicā¦ there will always be people who donāt understand creativity! That is applicable to art of pictures as well as the art of vocabulary!
MIke Firesmith I think most moms do! Mine sure did! (And I picked it up from her! Mwhahahahahahahhahahahahahaha
i rest my case, the condescension continues; i am glad for the realization that humor is attempted. keep trying, but donāt quit the day job. actually the attempts are funnier than the results.
imo people who correct grammar and spelling on a forum such as this demonstrate perfectly condescension and lame, misguided pedantry.
The erudite lawyer keeps showing up in Calvinās penchant for words such as ānefariousā. Calvin just doesnāt know heās in there, of courseā¦..
Billdi: so we are condescending and you are what??? Rude, inconsiderate, or any one of a number of words that I can think of,
I do believe this all started because of what basically was an insult on Puddleglum for using big wordsā¦ We are all different! I donāt criticize you for not using big words and you (or anyone else) shouldnāt do the same because we do.
my apologies to you and all other big word users. i enjoy big words. i enjoy short words. i enjoy long sentences and short sentences. i celebrate our differences and our different writing styles.
i also celebrate my right to express opinions and observations in my writing style.
the words we choose to use and the way we use them say volumes about who and what we are.
most writers know this: if they canāt handle criticism (or sarcastic fun) without feeling rudely insulted they should choose another endeavor.
i submit that someone who feels itās necessary to correct spelling, grammar and usage on this informal forum is rude, inconsiderate and insulting.
My own opinion is that itās great to ridicule someone elseās errors in English grammar, usage or spelling, *if* their flawed post was picking on others at the time for having done just the same thing.
khpage, as a lawyer I donāt think Calvin, or anyone else, is being very lawyerly by using big words. Proofreaders, pedants, malapropists and malcontents all love doing it. As well as little kids who just love feeling remarkable words roll off their tongues. Meanwhile, most lawyers seem to be merely in a rut, repeating the same old nonsense phrases like āin no way, shape or formā ā¦ and whoever heard of doing X in a form or in a shape, rather than in a way?
I say, if youāre gonna use big words, have some good creative fun with it! Especially if youāre a lawyer - life in the law would be way too boring without having some fun with words.
Evil Eye Fleagle used to use one evil eye to give you the whammy which was equal to beating you to a pulp. If he used both his evil eyes, this was a double whammy which was equal to getting the pulp beat up too. The kid is lucky mom only gave him a single whammy.
In the time Calvin (aka: āStupendous Manā) has been goofing off and arguing with mom (aka: āEvil Mom-Ladyā), he could have had his messy room cleaned up by now ā¦ even if it meant just shoving it all either into his closet or under his bed, getting it all out of sight and, therefore, giving his room the appearance of being clean (as long as mom didnāt look around too closely)!
billdi rests his case by perpetuating his case. He has been doing this sort of thing for some considerable time. He is the expectorating image of Vonnegut (if not the same person). Sarcasm in good fun is one thing, but billdi is mean-spirited and nasty.
billdi writes, āthe words we choose to use and the way we use them say volumes about who and what we are.ā Amen! Based on that statement I (hope to) rest MY case.
Wow! What a power! Do you think if Stupendous Man were to hold up a mirror at exactly the right moment, he could get Evil Mom Lady to zap herself and do his room for him?
I know someone who didnāt say a word until she was 3 going on 4. Then, according to her mom and older sister, her first words were, after spilling her milk, āDonāt worry mom, itāll evaporate!ā (Notice adult scientific knowledge didnāt come with the vocabulary.) Folks at church were often confused when they heard a question or comment with adult vocabulary - they would look around for the speaker, not noticing the 4 year old in her mothers arms. So Calvin is not the only kid with precocious vocabulary.
pouncingtiger over 14 years ago
Calvin values his life.
rentier over 14 years ago
Do her nefarious bidding!
PetrusS over 14 years ago
Even stupendous man has his enemies which he canāt conquer
vibjyor over 14 years ago
Now, isnāt that stupendous !
MontanaLady over 14 years ago
Mom sinks down to Calvinās levelā¦ā¦
and gives him theā¦ā¦ā¦ā¦..Evil Eye!!!
GreenJade over 14 years ago
Love Calvinās grin in the first panel. Evil Mom-lady strikes again !! LOL
@Puddleglum āFYI - I am not from China or Korea :)
moronbis over 14 years ago
I see terror in Momās eyes and Stupendous Manās heart. Love his expressions in panel 3 and 4.
Evil Mom-Ladyā¦. hahahaā¦
WoodEye over 14 years ago
Mind scrambling eyeball Rayā¦ I know that guy!
kreole over 14 years ago
Evil-Mom Lady? Even Stupendous Man is pushing it with that one!
Dino-1 over 14 years ago
I love Calvinās expression in the last panel! I get down on my knees which is very close to Momās bend over position to get the point across when Iām being challenged. If things still donāt get done then I use the, āWe were going to do this or that but now since you havenāt picked up your things I guess we canāt then.ā Otherwise I use the, āI picked up all my things so we can so now itās up to you to do yours.ā I never paid my son to do something he should learn to do anyway for himself and I donāt for his daughter today. I lead by example which also works with healthy eating habits. I think too many parents donāt lead by example and thatās where they can avoid alot of problems they have trouble fixing with their kids that will go into adulthood!
Rakkav over 14 years ago
I donāt remember ever seeing this one!
http://www.dramabutton.com/
Rakkav over 14 years ago
@Gweedo Murray: Heās not five years old, heās six years old. I seem to recall that fact being mentioned even recently.
That said, the last time I read of a child his age using such big words was in a famous account of a prodigy who regrettably got leukemia at a young age. He went into remission, but I donāt know whether heās still alive (and donāt remember his name, alas).
Hobbesbud over 14 years ago
I remember the Evil Eye. I also remember Cooties and Rat Fink. A kid had a lot to worry about at that age.
Puddleglum2 over 14 years ago
@GreenJade, FYI - my comment was entirely in jest pertaining to your name, your comment, and your penchant for puns. Your smile face indicates that you realize that. I thought that some people might not have caught the double meaning in āChoreāean. I like to encourage fellow punsters. :o)
Puddleglum2 over 14 years ago
Calvin, you didnāt take my advice, yesterday. You could have saved yourself time and trouble. Iām looking out for your best interests. Mom, how can you stoop so low? You go, Mom! āTell him you mean business!ā - Robert Vaughn in Mark E. Salomone commercial on TV
Bittermelon of Truth over 14 years ago
@WoodEye: If you are a hapless married man, then yes you sure do! Only instead of a Mind Scrambling Eyeball Ray (which only appears when she asks you if she looks fat) itās called the Honey Do List! :-D
lewisbower over 14 years ago
My evil mother had a magic incantation , 3 magic words consisting of my first, middle, and last names. Could always beat her with the words, āHmph! I wanted to clean my room anyway!ā
Actually my Mon wasnāt evil. Women canāt help it that they are born with this desire to control men. āComing Dear.ā
Tineli over 14 years ago
Unfortunately, heās only stupendous man - heād better be Chuck Norris.
cdward over 14 years ago
Bending down that low shows real backbone on Momās part.
GROG Premium Member over 14 years ago
That was stupendous. :-)
Good Morning, Marg, Mike & ā Lonewolfā
milano99 over 14 years ago
Here in the Midwest, we call that the stinkeye.
linsonl over 14 years ago
Boyā¦.that panel sure brings back memories ofā¦..the LOOK!
LeslieAnne over 14 years ago
Oh the memoriesā¦
madampresiden12 over 14 years ago
my friendās son was into dinosaurs at a very young age. He could tell you the name (while looking at a picture) of everry dinosaur and if you asked him what he wanted to be when he grew up he would tell you he wanted t be a paleontologist. When I was three I had a very large vocabulary. People used to comment to my mother about it because they were amazed at the words I used. My mom never spoke to us in ābaby talk.ā I could read when I was three and was a voracious reader. I would read six library books over the weekend (I could have read more but six was the limit you could take out at one time. There are many children who have great vocabularies at young ages.
jonathan.james over 14 years ago
In reality this strip isnāt about a little boy, itās about adults and their inner child ā¦ an extensive vocabulary isnāt really out of place. I adore Calvin; he reminds me of a little guy my wife watches, but then a lot of what I see in the real kid is what I also see in myself at that age. Thatās the source of the humor for me; thatās why heās not Dennis the Menace so much.
TN-REDD over 14 years ago
After all Calvinās bloviating ,MOM shuts him down with a mighty āOH YEAH ?ā
Puddleglum2 over 14 years ago
LeslieAnne, Oh the recogitations (is it even a word?)ā¦ Maybe recollections would suffice. āThanks for the Memoriesā - Bob Hope and Shirley Ross āMemories are Made of Thisā - Dean Martin Puddleglum is my favorite character in the Chronicles of Narnia series. You used the word āClassicā. Have you read The Silver Chair? I also liked The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, especially The Dark Island chapter, although I would shun the experience.
fsrstarr over 14 years ago
Momās just have that special look they put on when they let you know you have reached the end of the line. A wise child will heed that look. Calvin is brave but knows when it is time to retreat.
cleokaya over 14 years ago
My wife has this look and it is just as effective on me as it is when used on Calvin
dcmatthews over 14 years ago
āGreat Zokā? Stupendous Manās idol is the laser-ray dragon from the old āHerculoidsā cartoon? Cool!
billdi Premium Member over 14 years ago
my mind often scrambles as i read these comments, especially by those who feel itās necessary to explain in condescending fashion the excellent wordplay such as greenjadeās yesterday
agpeter over 14 years ago
My Old English Sheepdog uses this look on all other animals she encounters, from other dogs to chickens and kittens. It really works. All are intimidated.
Puddleglum2 over 14 years ago
TN-REDD, Thank you for the āCoolā¦ NICE! !ā yesterday. āBloviatingā is a great word here, especially since itās hyperbolic in this context (for emphasis). You have shown a prime example of a BIG word that fits perfectly and is amusing as well. BTW, I used āshownā rather than exhibited. See, people, Iām manifestly capable of utilizing one-syllable words where they apply as well or better than bigger words. :o) P.S. Does that sufficiently squelch the naysayers, at least for the moment, LeslieAnne? Donāt count on it! One, two, three, fourā¦heh, heh, heh! - The Count on Sesame Street
photoman022 over 14 years ago
Calvin is an extremely gifted child. Itās not that he does bad in skoolāitās just that skool is boring to him and his superior brain. Of course, it does help superior brains to study for their spelling tests.
kab2rb over 14 years ago
I want to thank all of you who flagged the spam must have worked so far not on my interent site.
Dino for kids to learn it takes parents to learn so there are several generations of kids who become parents where parentās didnāt learn about keep house clean. Or how to raise a child right.
Smiley Rmom over 14 years ago
somebodyshort - My youngest son was pretty much the same way. He was reading everything in sight at 5 (which gave him a large vocabulary), but he didnāt even start talking until he was 4. Had to take him to speech therapy too. Whatās funny is that he also watched a lot of Winnie the Pooh videos when he was younger, so now people will ask him if heās from England. Heās never even been out of the USA, and has lived in KS his whole life!
dahawk over 14 years ago
See my post yesterday about a smart azz response from my eldest son:
āIām getting tired of telling you - - - !ā
āWell, Iām getting tired of listening!ā
Heās in his mid 40ās now and we still laugh about that.
coffeeturtle over 14 years ago
use your stupendous powers to clean the roomā¦ hehe
bald over 14 years ago
superman had kryptonite, calvin has his mom
Puddleglum2 over 14 years ago
Speak of the devil and he ābloviatesā. Maybe he is Humpty Dumpty, and every time he falls āoff the wallā his āmind often scramblesā. Nothing was intended to be condescending. Some people donāt have as much of a āpenchant for punsā as others. I know from person-to-person conversations that some things go over peopleās heads for whatever reasons. Itās awkward when that happens, but thatās the risk we take when we attempt humor. Besides, I was trying to make sure that GreenJade realized that I was speaking entirely in jest. Frankly, this one person, in particular, has become as obnoxious as two or three others that used to frequent these premises (this website). Since he has gone overboard with his words, perhaps he should walk the plank bodily as well. BTW, itās āby them, not by thoseā. Those is a modifying word.
mike.firesmith over 14 years ago
*Good morning Marg! Good morning Fran and Kizzzy! Good Morning LāWolf! Good Morning Grog!**
Wow, my mom had that super power too
LeslieAnne over 14 years ago
PuddleGlum: I love all of CS Lewis!!! :D The Chronicles are some of my favorites of all times!!! The way he is able to spin the stories and make you feel what they felt is amazingā¦ Classic is the best descriptive word!
As was mentioned I believe yesterday in the comicā¦ there will always be people who donāt understand creativity! That is applicable to art of pictures as well as the art of vocabulary!
MIke Firesmith I think most moms do! Mine sure did! (And I picked it up from her! Mwhahahahahahahhahahahahahaha
billdi Premium Member over 14 years ago
i rest my case, the condescension continues; i am glad for the realization that humor is attempted. keep trying, but donāt quit the day job. actually the attempts are funnier than the results. imo people who correct grammar and spelling on a forum such as this demonstrate perfectly condescension and lame, misguided pedantry.
alan.gurka over 14 years ago
Thatās why heās Stupendous Man: even his nefarious nemesis he defers to, referring to her as āEvil Mom-Lady.ā
khpage over 14 years ago
The erudite lawyer keeps showing up in Calvinās penchant for words such as ānefariousā. Calvin just doesnāt know heās in there, of courseā¦..
LeslieAnne over 14 years ago
Billdi: so we are condescending and you are what??? Rude, inconsiderate, or any one of a number of words that I can think of,
I do believe this all started because of what basically was an insult on Puddleglum for using big wordsā¦ We are all different! I donāt criticize you for not using big words and you (or anyone else) shouldnāt do the same because we do.
billdi Premium Member over 14 years ago
my apologies to you and all other big word users. i enjoy big words. i enjoy short words. i enjoy long sentences and short sentences. i celebrate our differences and our different writing styles. i also celebrate my right to express opinions and observations in my writing style. the words we choose to use and the way we use them say volumes about who and what we are. most writers know this: if they canāt handle criticism (or sarcastic fun) without feeling rudely insulted they should choose another endeavor. i submit that someone who feels itās necessary to correct spelling, grammar and usage on this informal forum is rude, inconsiderate and insulting.
avonsalis over 14 years ago
I thought we settled this several days ago!
My own opinion is that itās great to ridicule someone elseās errors in English grammar, usage or spelling, *if* their flawed post was picking on others at the time for having done just the same thing.
khpage, as a lawyer I donāt think Calvin, or anyone else, is being very lawyerly by using big words. Proofreaders, pedants, malapropists and malcontents all love doing it. As well as little kids who just love feeling remarkable words roll off their tongues. Meanwhile, most lawyers seem to be merely in a rut, repeating the same old nonsense phrases like āin no way, shape or formā ā¦ and whoever heard of doing X in a form or in a shape, rather than in a way?
I say, if youāre gonna use big words, have some good creative fun with it! Especially if youāre a lawyer - life in the law would be way too boring without having some fun with words.
BigBobzilla over 14 years ago
Evil Eye Fleagle used to use one evil eye to give you the whammy which was equal to beating you to a pulp. If he used both his evil eyes, this was a double whammy which was equal to getting the pulp beat up too. The kid is lucky mom only gave him a single whammy.
Gretchen's Mom over 14 years ago
In the time Calvin (aka: āStupendous Manā) has been goofing off and arguing with mom (aka: āEvil Mom-Ladyā), he could have had his messy room cleaned up by now ā¦ even if it meant just shoving it all either into his closet or under his bed, getting it all out of sight and, therefore, giving his room the appearance of being clean (as long as mom didnāt look around too closely)!
Ushindi over 14 years ago
BigBobzillaās āEvil-Eye Fleegleā:
Puddleglum2 over 14 years ago
billdi rests his case by perpetuating his case. He has been doing this sort of thing for some considerable time. He is the expectorating image of Vonnegut (if not the same person). Sarcasm in good fun is one thing, but billdi is mean-spirited and nasty. billdi writes, āthe words we choose to use and the way we use them say volumes about who and what we are.ā Amen! Based on that statement I (hope to) rest MY case.
JTGAM over 14 years ago
Wow! What a power! Do you think if Stupendous Man were to hold up a mirror at exactly the right moment, he could get Evil Mom Lady to zap herself and do his room for him?
marvee over 14 years ago
Mom is just glad that her nefarious bidding is being done. She doesnāt care what words he uses as long as he cleans his room.
stopgap over 14 years ago
I love this comic.
bmonk over 14 years ago
kreole said, about 18 evil eyes ago
Evil-Mom Lady? Even Stupendous Man is pushing it with that one!
I think Evil-Mom Lady is satisfied as long as Stupendous Man just gets hiss stupendous little butt upstairs and get cleaning.
stuart over 14 years ago
I know someone who didnāt say a word until she was 3 going on 4. Then, according to her mom and older sister, her first words were, after spilling her milk, āDonāt worry mom, itāll evaporate!ā (Notice adult scientific knowledge didnāt come with the vocabulary.) Folks at church were often confused when they heard a question or comment with adult vocabulary - they would look around for the speaker, not noticing the 4 year old in her mothers arms. So Calvin is not the only kid with precocious vocabulary.
boykatlover over 14 years ago
Makes me want to sing, āSomething in the way she looksā¦ā
Barnacle_Boy over 14 years ago
Twisted fiendā¦he he