shiori_makiba: Makiba Shiori in Kanji and Roman Letters (Default)
shiori_makiba ([personal profile] shiori_makiba) wrote2016-02-16 01:12 pm

Advanced Notice: Thank Muse It's Friday

Just a reminder to everyone that this Friday, 2/19, is a Thank Muse It's Friday one. The theme is “Love Is A Many Splendored Thing.” I'm hoping for prompts about all kinds of love – romantic, platonic, familial, etc – between all kinds of people.

If a schedule conflict or being in a really different time zone (I'm on USA Eastern Standard Time) would prevent you from leaving prompts on Friday, no worries – just leave prompts here with this advanced notice!

Thank you [personal profile] dialecticdreamer for inadvertently reminding me to put up the reminder. ^_^
 

UPDATE: dialecticdreamer wrote a link-back story along with ways to expand the story. Thank you!

thnidu: Tom Baker's Dr. Who, as an anthropomorphic hamster, in front of the Tardis. ©C.T.D'Alessio http://tinyurl.com/9q2gkko (Dr. Whomster)

Oops

[personal profile] thnidu 2016-02-18 10:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Though many people think of the expression that way, "a many-splendid thing" doesn't make sense. It's actually Love is a Many-Splendored Thing: something with many splendors, something that is wonderful and beautiful in many ways.

The song:
Wikipedia
Sung by Andy Williams

The film:
Wikipedia

The book that started it all:
Wikipedia
Han Suyin dies at 95 (author's obituary)


Edited 2016-02-18 22:53 (UTC)
thnidu: Tom Baker's Dr. Who, as an anthropomorphic hamster, in front of the Tardis. ©C.T.D'Alessio http://tinyurl.com/9q2gkko (Dr. Whomster)

Re: Oops

[personal profile] thnidu 2016-02-19 03:44 am (UTC)(link)
Indeed it isn't! for native English-speakers either (as I gather you're not??).
thnidu: Tom Baker's Dr. Who, as an anthropomorphic hamster, in front of the Tardis. ©C.T.D'Alessio http://tinyurl.com/9q2gkko (Dr. Whomster)

Re: Oops

[personal profile] thnidu 2016-02-19 04:23 am (UTC)(link)
I beg your pardon for my misapprehension, and I'm very glad that you find my corrections acceptable.

In a way it's a gift, but sometimes it's something of... not a curse, but an annoyance. You could call it eulexia, a word I just invented* (Greek "dys-" δυσ- 'bad, ill, abnormal' vs. "eu-" εὐ- 'good, well'). I read very fast and fluently, and I don't so much notice typos, grammatical errors, etc. as they jump off the page and smack me in the face.

* but did not originate, although possibly with this meaning
Edited 2016-02-19 04:28 (UTC)