SOME HUMOR
Watch this page for amusing items, corny jokes, English-teacher humor, and all manner of silliness...
"I have never let my schooling interfere with my education."
--Mark Twain
Advice for the day: If you have a lot of tension and you get a headache, do what it says on the aspirin bottle: "Take two aspirin" and "Keep away from children."
--Author Unknown 

Eye halve a spelling chequer
It came with my pea sea
It plainly marques four my revue
Miss steaks eye kin knot sea.

Eye strike a key and type a word
And weight four it two say
Weather eye am wrong oar write
It shows me strait a weigh.

As soon as a mist ache is maid
It nose bee fore two long
And eye can put the error rite
Its rare lea ever wrong.

Eye have run this poem threw it
I am shore your pleased two no
Its letter perfect awl the weigh
My chequer tolled me sew.
A few of the many reasons the English language is so very hard to learn
Who says you can't make up your own words?
This is for anyone who has ever purchased a computer or other piece of technology they didn't quite understand completely...
Or make up new meanings for words we already have...

T
he Washington Post hosts an annual contest in which readers are asked to supply alternate meanings for common words.
The 2004 winners are:

1. Coffee (n.), the person upon whom one coughs.
2. Flabbergasted (adj.), appalled over how much weight you have gained.
3. Abdicate (v.), to give up all hope of ever having a flat stomach.
4.Esplanade (v.), to attempt an explanation while drunk.
5.Willy-nilly (adj.), impotent.
6. Negligent (adj.), describes a condition in which you absentmindedly answer the door in your nightgown.
7. Lymph (v.), to walk with a lisp.
8. Gargoyle (n.), olive-flavored mouthwash.
9. Flatulence (n.) emergency vehicle that picks you up after you are run over by a steamroller.
10. Balderdash (n.), a rapidly receding hairline.
11. Testicle (n.), a humorous question on an exam.
12. Rectitude (n.), the formal, dignified bearing adopted by proctologists.
13. Pokemon (n), a Rastafarian proctologist.
14. Oyster (n.), a person who sprinkles his conversation with Yiddishisms.
15. Frisbeetarianism (n.), The belief that, when you die, your Soul flies up onto the roof and gets stuck there.
16. Circumvent (n.), an opening in the front of boxer shorts worn by Jewish men.
artist unknown
Click here
to learn a bunch of interesting stuff you didn't even know you didn't know.
and here for even more stuff you didn't know you didn't know
-- who knew?
Click here to read some new twists on some very old sayings...
"You can say any foolish thing to a dog, and the dog will give you a look that says, 'My God, you’re right! I never would've thought of that!'"
--Dave Barry
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