You may know me from all the cat pictures I post.
-
You may know me from all the cat pictures I post. But I'm also an English teacher
Let me tell you how a sentence can have 11 HADs in a row and still be correct
(Also, Max makes a brief appearance in this video)
@rufustheduck Perfect! Well done!
:-)) -
You may know me from all the cat pictures I post. But I'm also an English teacher
Let me tell you how a sentence can have 11 HADs in a row and still be correct
(Also, Max makes a brief appearance in this video)
@rufustheduck Haha, I love this

-
You may know me from all the cat pictures I post. But I'm also an English teacher
Let me tell you how a sentence can have 11 HADs in a row and still be correct
(Also, Max makes a brief appearance in this video)
@rufustheduck
Now do Buffalo
-
You may know me from all the cat pictures I post. But I'm also an English teacher
Let me tell you how a sentence can have 11 HADs in a row and still be correct
(Also, Max makes a brief appearance in this video)
One time, when one of my kids was early grade school age, we figured out a way to create sentences consisting solely of an arbitrarily large number of squash.
Squash! — “Squeeze!” Or “Look. A vegetable!”
Squash squash! — Squeeze vegetables!
Squash squash squash — Vegetables squeeze vegetables.
Squash squash squash squash! — Squeeze vegetables that other vegetables squeeze!
Squash squash squash squash squash —Vegetables squeeze vegetables that squeeze vegetables.It’s pretty easy to see how this generalizes to truly ridiculous amounts of squash.
-
You may know me from all the cat pictures I post. But I'm also an English teacher
Let me tell you how a sentence can have 11 HADs in a row and still be correct
(Also, Max makes a brief appearance in this video)
@rufustheduck It's not correct as shown, because it is missing essential punctuation.
-
@rufustheduck It's not correct as shown, because it is missing essential punctuation.
"if you say" - verbal punctuation is literally the point of this video, but we don't say "quote" or "comma" we just indicate it - so that sentence is correct in that it is every word that will come out of your mouth.
-
"if you say" - verbal punctuation is literally the point of this video, but we don't say "quote" or "comma" we just indicate it - so that sentence is correct in that it is every word that will come out of your mouth.
@deirdrebeth @rufustheduck
But without the written punctuation, one wouldn't know how to say it, such that it would make sense to a listener. I still maintain that the written form, without punctuation, is not a valid sentence. -
One time, when one of my kids was early grade school age, we figured out a way to create sentences consisting solely of an arbitrarily large number of squash.
Squash! — “Squeeze!” Or “Look. A vegetable!”
Squash squash! — Squeeze vegetables!
Squash squash squash — Vegetables squeeze vegetables.
Squash squash squash squash! — Squeeze vegetables that other vegetables squeeze!
Squash squash squash squash squash —Vegetables squeeze vegetables that squeeze vegetables.It’s pretty easy to see how this generalizes to truly ridiculous amounts of squash.
@dpnash I love this!
-
@deirdrebeth @rufustheduck
But without the written punctuation, one wouldn't know how to say it, such that it would make sense to a listener. I still maintain that the written form, without punctuation, is not a valid sentence.@brouhaha @deirdrebeth Hello my friends!
I think you're both correct. I decided to focus on pronunciation in the video so it wouldn't be too long - but punctuation IS important, so I added it to the sentence at the end when I say it correctly, so you can see how the two work together.
I hope you're having a wonderful day
-
You may know me from all the cat pictures I post. But I'm also an English teacher
Let me tell you how a sentence can have 11 HADs in a row and still be correct
(Also, Max makes a brief appearance in this video)
@rufustheduck Amazing!
-
J jwcph@helvede.net shared this topic