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Recent Comments

  1. about 7 years ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    Y’know, I do think Marigold did. Good catch.

  2. about 7 years ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    Gershwin reference?

  3. about 7 years ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    (from a more reliable source – OED online – “as genitive Pegasi /-sʌɪ/ Used with preceding letter or numeral to designate a star in the constellation Pegasus.”)

  4. about 7 years ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    (And in language, it is pegasi: "In modern terminology, the word “pegasus” (plural “pegasi”) has come to refer to any winged horse, though the term “pterippus” (meaning winged horse, plural “pterippi”) is also used.""

  5. about 7 years ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    If we’re going by mythology, no, the plural is.. .there is no plural, because there was only one pegasus; it was unique.

  6. about 7 years ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    … there was that one episode (trying to remember the title) where we only thought we knew whodidit (or was that an episode of Cannon?) but yes, basically right. (And while I enjoy the show, for what little it’s worth I prefer less genre-ish detective fiction (Hill, George…))

  7. about 7 years ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    We’re sorry, we have no idea how your couch even got into your apartment in the first place, it’s physically impossible (with apologies to Douglas Adams for the (mis)quote). … That said, seems only kind and good for someone to try to help Marigold out of there, even if it needs a hint of clever

  8. about 7 years ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    I’m guessing it’s something like that; the word may be just an anchor point…

  9. about 7 years ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    I’ll watch out for that, thanks. Just got up to chapter 6 or so (finding to my surprise that I haven’t read it before.)

  10. about 7 years ago on Phoebe and Her Unicorn

    ah, what was that Pratchett novel in which Havelock Vetinari described civilization as the art of living/getting along in cities? And using that (maybe overly etymological, but maybe insightful) description as a guide, maybe civilization does require at least some withholding.