ptsg
Super Member
Technically both ways are correct, right? Just trying to improve my "Engrish" here.When using a contraction of 'it is not', I prefer 'it isn't' over 'it's not'.
Technically both ways are correct, right? Just trying to improve my "Engrish" here.When using a contraction of 'it is not', I prefer 'it isn't' over 'it's not'.
We had to make all drawings in ink...including all borders and text boxes etc...talk about tedious...one mistake and it was get another sheet of vellum and start over regardless of how far along one was...!Another one when I was in college as a civil engineering major we had to make a small set of plans. This was before CAD so the plans were all hand lettered. We put in erosion control and used rip rap, which is large round stone. The guy that drew that sheet put riff raff though instead. I had to go around that sheet and correct it. I just had this image of a bunch of poor homeless people sitting in a ditch trying to hold back the water and keep the dirt from washing away.
I could never figure out why they called that rock 'rip-rap' or the erosion control tubes called 'waddles'.... that one I kind of understand, because they are flexible and can waddle. Wouldn't "wiggles" be more appropriate?We had to make all drawings in ink...including all borders and text boxes etc...talk about tedious...one mistake and it was get another sheet of vellum and start over regardless of how far along one was...!
As for the "riff raff"...I would have stamped it "as built" and been done with it...(jkng)...!
I'm also of Polish/Russian ancestry. Everyone would refer to and address my maternal great-grandmother as (phonetically) "Bop-cha". I thought that was her name, it wasn't many, many years later that I discovered that "bapcia" was Polish for "grandmother". What was weird was that people who weren't even related to her called her that too.My grandmother and father spoke Polish and Russian fluently, my mother only understood, but spoke very few words.
When they were discussing something or 'talking about' someone, they would speak Polish so that the kids wouldn't understand.
During one relatively heated discussion, I heard my mother say "he was just a SOVENABE !" ...... I heard this word -- "SOVENABE" many times in later conversations they had. I basically grew up thinking it was some Polish word.