Sunday Scribblings: Spelling

spelling

I’ve always been good at spelling—in my head, that is. What comes out from the ends of my fingers on a keyboard isn’t always pretty, which is why writing with Microsoft Word (or other word processors over the years) has been extremely frustrating.

Oh, not ordinary letters or memos or business process documentation. No, spell-checkers do quite well with those. The frustration comes because most of the things I’ve written since I was 14 years old have involved SCIENCE. It was bad enough when I wrote slowly with a pen or a typewriter. It’s even worse now. There isn’t a software spell-checker anywhere that is worth a damn when it comes to scientific terminology.

You see, even when I type the genus of the California Condor (Gymnogyps) correctly, Microsoft Word insists that I must mean Gymnasium.

And Vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin)? Word wants to change it to cyanide. Not quite the same thing, is it? (If you answered “Yes” to that, I hope you don’t work in a hospital or nursing home.)

Fast forward through years of spell-check-induced invective to last December, when I discovered John Petrie’s blog. Mr. Petrie (Dr. Petrie?) is apparently a scientific editor. (Don’t try to read his About page. Just…don’t. There are more reliable clues to his career on some of the other pages.)

Mr. Petrie is my hero. Why? Because he has assembled a custom scientific dictionary for Microsoft Word that includes more than 600,000 scientific terms. Biology, chemistry, physics, mathematics. Genus/species, drug names, diseases and treatment methods. It’s all there, and he’s giving it away free.

Go look at it. Download it. And while you’re there, check the sidebar for links to some really interesting language blogs.

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Sunday Scribbles 2013-11-17: etcetera

This week’s Sunday Scribbles prompt is: etc.


As usual when I haven’t a clue what to do with a writing prompt, I start with a definition.

From Merriam-Webster Online:

a number of unspecified additional persons or things

 

That could describe my typical day. I start with a plan, a good plan. Then…life happens. “A number of unspecified additional persons or things” interrupt my carefully planned day, interfering with my work schedule, delaying household chores, distracting me from all the tasks on my To Do list.

  • A phone call from a friend.
  • The sound of kids in the playground across the street.
  • An unexpected package delivered by the mailman, who needs a signature.
  • The scruffy homeless man who offers to rake my lawn in exchange for a sandwich.
  • A rabbit hops across the back yard and the cats raise a ruckus until I distract them with a toy.
  • The light bulb in my desk lamp burns out.
  • A button pops off my jacket, and I can’t find the black thread to sew it back on.

Interruptions are part of a normal life. Inconvenient sometimes, but without etceteras life wouldn’t be nearly as interesting.

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Mount TBR Progress Report 2013-11-16

I’m re-thinking my TBR plan for 2014.

Stats for this week:

  • One TBR2013-listed book finished.
  • Three books finished that weren’t on my list.

Originally, I planned to start my 2014 TBR list with the books I haven’t finished from my 2013 list, adding other book titles until I hit 36 books. I still think the numerical goal (36 books) is reasonable, but my lack of literary self-discipline is discouraging. When I finish one book and am looking for my next read, I keep skipping over my TBR shelf to grab something from one of my other dusty shelves…or something new from the library…or a book borrowed from a friend.

This week I’ll be looking through the TBR discussions for alternative ways to meet the challenge. I think I might be better off just setting a target number and filling in the titles AFTER I read the book.

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Flashback Friday 2013-11-15

Yesterday you saw Cavendish as an adult cat. Today, I thought I’d show Cavendish as a six-month-old catlet.

At that age, Cav had two speeds, bat-out-of-hell and stop. I caught this picture just as Cav went through a phase change.

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3rd Sentence Thursday, 2013-11-14

Using mattress or whip stitch, sew along back of cat and down bottom.

 Book: Best in Show: Knit Your Own Cat, p. 117
Authors: Sally Muir and Joanna Osborne

I read that sentence with a mouth full of tea, and Henry Cavendish sitting on my lap. Cav is one of our three cats, a brown tiger very much like the illustration in the book.

The thought of sewing a whip stitch along his back made me laugh.

I wiped the slightly used tea off Cav’s back (it missed the borrowed book) and then I counted the sentences on the page. 1…2…yes, the whip stitch bit was the third sentence in the finishing instructions for the Tabby Cat Prowling pattern.

I’ve got today’s blog post topic!

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