chad_hahn Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 In this months Automobile magazine in the "On The Block" section they tell about a 1 of 1000 Ford Mustang Cobra Indy Pace car that went up on auction. This car was bought new in 1994 for $26,845 put in storage for almost 10 years and sold at auction for $23,850! Not only did he loose three thousand uninflated dollars but storage cost and sundry expenses as well. The ending sentance could be applied to cameras as well: Buy new cars for pleasure, not as investments. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
al_kaplan1 Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 I hope he has trouble convincing the IRS that this was a legitimate tax loss! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ray . Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 "loose" is not tight. "lose" is to have something leave, or to not win. "sentence" is spelled with 2 e's. Sorry, couldn't help myself. ;) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jay bee Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 Ray - Lets review your posts and see if you've every committed any typos. Next time try a little harder helping yourself. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jay bee Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 And I know, its ever not every... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kens Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 Actually, "sentence" is spelled with 3 e's. ;-) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
joshroot Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 Zing! Go Ken! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spearhead Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 <i>Buy new cars for pleasure, not as investments. </i><p> I buy them for transportation. I don't see where pleasure comes into owning a car. Music and Portraits Blog: Life in Portugal Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
crackers_. Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 For $25,000 I could buy fifty '84 Chevy pickups. One of them is bound to run. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ray . Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 Let's try spelling a simple word like "lose" incorrectly enough times and maybe we can get it changed in the dictionary. Same for "too"... Let's just simplify and let it be "to". In fact let's not offer any corrective information to people at all when they make an error in spelling the simplest of words, ones they'll probably use almost every day. Let's just let them and all the other people here who spell it the same way remain in the dark for the rest of their lives. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
octavio bustard Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 ...OK Ray, lets! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
t_c5 Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 As an EOS user this is the first time I have looked at the Leica forum... Boy am I glad Ray dosen't shoot Canon! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
albert knapp md Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 Webster lives! (and is shooting Leica) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chad_hahn Posted November 29, 2003 Author Share Posted November 29, 2003 Next time I will make sure that I am sitting with both feet on the ground, that my elbows are off the desk and that my index fingers are on the f and j keys. I will also meticulously proof-read each line before I hit the submit button. No more firing off a post at the drop of a hat for me. Thanks for ruining my sense of spontaneity Mom, I mean Ray Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
alec1 Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 Just more evidence of the dumbing down of America. The heck with spelling and grammar. While some wonder why test scores continue to decline, others glory in their igorance. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ray . Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 Would you get so defensive if you had misinformation on some technical aspect of photography, and someone gave you the correct information? Why is this any different? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chad_hahn Posted November 29, 2003 Author Share Posted November 29, 2003 I think that there is a huge difference between not being a good typist and not knowing correct usage. Adding an extra o in lose is not like getting a fact wrong. The gist of the post came through your pedanticism notwithstanding Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ray . Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 It's not as if I'm sitting around correcting every little typo from everyone. I make them too. And I misspell words. But if you kept seeing people over and over referring to something as common as Tri-X as a digital process... eventually you'd want to set them straight, wouldn't you? I see this word spelled "loose" all the time. It's not a typo. If yours was, my apologies. Thiz maygz sence tooo doessssn't it? U cen reed it, eye know. But at what point do you start making up your own spelling, or just not care, and where do you recognize and respect convention of language??? Lots of people are going to think you're uneducated or stupid, even if you aren't, if you can't spell basic words when writing. If you want to go on like that, or don't care, that's your choice. I wasn't crucifying you for it, even though you seem to think that was my intent. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alex_Es Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 There is something about internet that does it to proofreading. The little submit and confirm buttons just scream: "Come on, get it over with!" Mea Culpa. Anyway, back to the Cobra. I wonder what the mechanical condition of that car is like after ten years of storage. It will probably need a lot of work. It is the same with cameras that sit on the shelf for a long time. But fixing up a camera is easier than fixing up an antique car. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
m_. Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 Ray: All good points but remember we got people from all over the world on this forum so be kind. language is nothing but a tool for communication. as long as we communicate, there isn't any problem in my book. yes, I can read your line all right so we are communicating fine. :o) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kevin m. Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 "I buy them for transportation. I don't see where pleasure comes into owning a car." But yet you went and got all poetic over a coffee maker. Think of a car, then, as a coffee pot with wheels and maybe you'll understand the attraction. Ray, I'm with you. At some point, bad grammar, spelling and punctuation say something about the person using them. I constantly see Chevy Camaros advertised as "Camero for sale." After awhile, I start to think that Camaro owners must be a bit stupid. Or maybe it's the mullets. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ray . Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 Poetic over a coffee maker? Chad, sorry, my mistake to single you out. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
asher Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 Eye half 3 degreez, end aye wahnt two stik two tha topik.<P> If collectors want to waste their money on a mechanical wonder simply to let it rot in storage while they stare at it, it's their business. It doesn't bother me until collectors' demand inflates prices for those of us who want to use these things for which they were designed and built... But I suppose that has nothing to do with Leica. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
james_kennedy2 Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 I'm with you, Ray. The English language deserves to be employed properly. My favorite fictional detective, Nero Wolfe, was found at the beginning of one novel feeding Webster's third, page by page, into the fireplace because it allowed "imply" and "infer" to be used interchangably. He also refused to take on a client who used "contact" as a verb. My pet bugaboo is the use of "enormity" as a synonym for large as opposed to evil. I have noticed the loose vs. lose used many times, especially among my fellow Boeing engineers. Hey, gang, if we never correct you, you will never learn, irregardless of how long you live. P.S. I threw that irregardless in there as a lure. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
al_kaplan1 Posted November 29, 2003 Share Posted November 29, 2003 Me ain't got no degree, but why him no know me no know. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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