Just realized that "upside down" means "the up side is down", making it upside downBinette@lemmy.ml to Showerthoughts@lemmy.world – 334 points – 3 weeks ago113Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsTIL that people didn't get this. I had a similar situation where I would pronounce unleaded as unleededOh, I used to do this all the time. You see a word in print, but you never hear anybody say it, so you wind up pronouncing it wrong. I think the best was when I pronounced "misled" as my-seld because I thought it was the past tense of "misle".The spelling of some words can be very Ms. Leeding
TIL that people didn't get this. I had a similar situation where I would pronounce unleaded as unleededOh, I used to do this all the time. You see a word in print, but you never hear anybody say it, so you wind up pronouncing it wrong. I think the best was when I pronounced "misled" as my-seld because I thought it was the past tense of "misle".The spelling of some words can be very Ms. Leeding
Oh, I used to do this all the time. You see a word in print, but you never hear anybody say it, so you wind up pronouncing it wrong. I think the best was when I pronounced "misled" as my-seld because I thought it was the past tense of "misle".The spelling of some words can be very Ms. Leeding
TIL that people didn't get this. I had a similar situation where I would pronounce unleaded as unleeded
Oh, I used to do this all the time. You see a word in print, but you never hear anybody say it, so you wind up pronouncing it wrong.
I think the best was when I pronounced "misled" as my-seld because I thought it was the past tense of "misle".
The spelling of some words can be very Ms. Leeding