I’m supposed to be working on my dissertation proposal (oh that old thing), but I don’t want to neglect my blog and leave my faithful readers hanging. That’s assuming I have any, of course.
So here is a Trish anecdote for purposes of amusement (and stalling).
I was in the kitchen yesterday when I heard a knock at the front door. I thought it was weird because we have a functioning doorbell. This is what I saw when I walked around the corner:
Apparently, this was not the first time she has come calling. Eddie said she banged on the door Friday too, and the boys cracked up.
I wonder what she would do if I let her inside. Besides poop, that is. And I certainly don’t want THAT in here.
Faithful reader, weighing in!
Also, I thought you might appreciate this picture: I took it on the New Jersey transit train yesterday on my way north. The diction amused me.
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Thanks for that. Why use “egress?” And why do people have against punctuation?
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I’m REALLY not sure. Why “de-training” wouldn’t work, which NJT uses everywhere else, I have no idea.
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Our dog does the same thing when she wants back inside. She paws at the door and her claws make that terrible nails on a chalkboard sound against the door glass.
She really knows how to get our attention.
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