Is it just me, or does doing something that makes your cat take on that "I am going to kill you in your sleep, oh yessss I will, just you wait" expression seem like not such a good craft idea?
I mean, yeah - the Sailor Moon hairpiece is kind of cute and funny, but the cat wearing it is just radiating out waves of hate. Pure solid kitty hate. Which is about the hatiest kind of hate there is.
"I'm not a hipster. I just like knitting."
Also a crocheter, quilter, pony-head, and professor/scientist.
I only speak for myself. Views posted here are not necessarily the views of my workplace, my congregation, or any other group of which I am a part.
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Showing posts with label cats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cats. Show all posts
Monday, August 27, 2007
Sunday, August 26, 2007
Sometimes, when you're sad about something, watching kittens playing with a box helps make it a little bit better.
From the estimable (and sanity-saving, sometimes) Cute Overload. (I figured out how to over-ride the borked permalinks thing).
From the estimable (and sanity-saving, sometimes) Cute Overload. (I figured out how to over-ride the borked permalinks thing).
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Cats can has grammar: Anil Dash takes on the lolcat phenomenon. A quotation: "The fact that we can tell no cat would talk like this shows that kitty pidgin is actually quite consistent."
Do you know how much I love that? How much it warms the cockles of my deeply-geeky, very-nearly-majored-in-linguistics-before-I-realized-how-much-its-job-market-sucked heart?
I totally, totally HEART that people are talking about lolcat grammar like it's a real language, that it's something that can be analyzed. I totally HEART that people can go "Well, this sentence works, but this one is totally wrong" - that people can (subconsciously) grasp that there are apparently rules to kitty-pidgin and they know when those rules are being violated. (There's a followup post, but it's not quite as informative as the original)
Language Log surmises that lolcat is actually just a modern variant of pet baby-talk, and cites a Wodehouse passage as an example of someone doing what I think of as "Tricky-Woo talk" (from the All Creatures Great and Small episode - Tricky-Woo was one of those little rat-dogs that was so pampered, he would go into an (apparently faked) asthma attack as a way of getting his owner to pay attention to him and give him treats.)
I would beg to differ; lolcat speak is more of a true pidgin than it is babytalk, I think. It shares some qualities with Engrish (and yes, I know, I am going to Hell for laughing at Engrish.), in particular, the absurdity and the wrong-but-rulebound types of verb conjugation.
I wonder if in 20 years, if linguistics departments still exist, if someone will study the rise of lolcat language. (Part of me kind of hopes so, but part of me kind of doesn't. Already we seem to have an awful lot of "useless stuff" that gets turned into dissertations these days.)
Do you know how much I love that? How much it warms the cockles of my deeply-geeky, very-nearly-majored-in-linguistics-before-I-realized-how-much-its-job-market-sucked heart?
I totally, totally HEART that people are talking about lolcat grammar like it's a real language, that it's something that can be analyzed. I totally HEART that people can go "Well, this sentence works, but this one is totally wrong" - that people can (subconsciously) grasp that there are apparently rules to kitty-pidgin and they know when those rules are being violated. (There's a followup post, but it's not quite as informative as the original)
Language Log surmises that lolcat is actually just a modern variant of pet baby-talk, and cites a Wodehouse passage as an example of someone doing what I think of as "Tricky-Woo talk" (from the All Creatures Great and Small episode - Tricky-Woo was one of those little rat-dogs that was so pampered, he would go into an (apparently faked) asthma attack as a way of getting his owner to pay attention to him and give him treats.)
I would beg to differ; lolcat speak is more of a true pidgin than it is babytalk, I think. It shares some qualities with Engrish (and yes, I know, I am going to Hell for laughing at Engrish.), in particular, the absurdity and the wrong-but-rulebound types of verb conjugation.
I wonder if in 20 years, if linguistics departments still exist, if someone will study the rise of lolcat language. (Part of me kind of hopes so, but part of me kind of doesn't. Already we seem to have an awful lot of "useless stuff" that gets turned into dissertations these days.)
Thursday, February 15, 2007
From Loxoceles:
cats imitating emoticons.
oh my gosh, that's funny! (or at least I thought it was)
Oh, and the cat doing the XD emoticon reminded me of:
the Original Laughing Cat (N.B.: Sound. And it only really works with the sound on. But I DEFY you to not giggle looking and listening to that thing.)
cats imitating emoticons.
oh my gosh, that's funny! (or at least I thought it was)
Oh, and the cat doing the XD emoticon reminded me of:
the Original Laughing Cat (N.B.: Sound. And it only really works with the sound on. But I DEFY you to not giggle looking and listening to that thing.)
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