From a fellow English major. You made me think of I think Tarrytown at a HODS panel, where LP kept talking about Angelique being HUNG, and the tag team of Karlen and Selby kept ragging her about Hanged, hung and well hung.....
She repeats the mistake in her piece on Salem for the Bloopers & Treasures DVD; therefore, I consider it part of the bloopers and not part of the treasures.
LOL! Indeed! And isn't SHE an English major? Or got her MA in English? Sheesh!
Quote from: BuzzH on January 22, 2007, 03:00:07 PMLOL! Indeed! And isn't SHE an English major? Or got her MA in English? Sheesh! She has an MA in Creative Writing.
most students take them for enrichment purposes, not because they are passionate about past participles.
I was considering majoring in past participles but was so disappointed when I couldn't find even one college that offered even one course in it!
I'm a gerund man, myself. Hey, waitaminnut! wasn't he on the series - Gerund Stiles??? Did he get hanged? Or beheaded?
Gerund, eh? [spoiler]Well, it was neither HangING nor BeheadING. It was a shootING![/spoiler]
I think that has to do with fear over lawsuits should students take to dangling their participles in class.
John Bartendale, a traveling minstrel, was convicted of felony and hanged for an hour until people thought he was dead. A passerby later on noticed earth moving where he had been buried and dug him up. Apparently he sat up upon being revived and asked where he was!
This was in 1643, which is a little odd because I would have thought provisions under English common law would have prevented retrial for the same offense.
I don't think it's a coincidence that many descendants of executioners today are in science and engineering professions.