Nov. 13th, 2007

modernwizard: (Default)
Surrealist.co.uk's Bad Joke Generator came up with a relatively good one about Goths...

What's a Goth's favorite drink?

modernwizard: (Default)
Surrealist.co.uk's Bad Joke Generator came up with a relatively good one about Goths...

What's a Goth's favorite drink?

modernwizard: (Default)
If I'm wracked with an emotion, should I be RACKED or WRACKED? If I use "rack," I conjure up the pleasant image of someone's tendons being unscrewed on a Procrustean bed. If I use "wrack," it connotes "wreck" and "wreak," a verb that absolutely must be conjoined with "havoc." [Seriously, what else do you wreak besides havoc? Destruction, maybe, but that's about it.] Both spellings are acceptable and absolutely synonymous, so the choice comes down to a predilection for connotations. I use "wrack" because, when someone is wracked with pain, sobs, a coughing fit, etc., he/she is usually incapacitated, hunched over, deflated and otherwise wrecked. I like the wreckage, not the rackage.

Boy, that silent W in "wracked" looks stupid. I guess I shouldn't look at words like "write," "wriggle," "wrap," "wraith," "wreath," "wrath," etc. They all look RONG! :p

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