This thread is full of win! I'm at every post.
And Scutter01, this was pure gold. I have to spread it around though before I can get you again.
I've been laughing so hard my son keeps yelling, Dad what the heck are you laughing at?
This thread is full of win! I'm at every post.
And Scutter01, this was pure gold. I have to spread it around though before I can get you again.
Send in a letter of praise/thanks into their department. The only time LEOs hear from the public is when they have screwed up. I think it would be nice to hear when they have done something right. I don't know if their training was different or just the kind of men they were, but i agree that we need more officers that behave in this professional manner. +1 to them!
I'm happy I gave everyone a good laugh lol
Generally, people tend to write the way they speak. Heavy accents or regional dialects will affect that. My mother-in-law (a native Kentuckian - from the hills of Hazard KY), to her dying day, insisted that "wash" was spelled "w-a-r-s-h" and that it was possible to "sale" something. I still don't know if her cousin is named "Dell" or "Dale".
It's really nice that you had a happy ending.
Haha what's funny is I just now realized it said shaked my hard lol
We have been LOAO for 5 pages and you just now noticed. Rep inbound for being slowHaha what's funny is I just now realized it said shaked my hard lol
Can't sneak anything past you southern Indiana boys.
Shaked your what? Boy, those were friendly cops!I was just at a thortons on poplar level road getting gas and walked in openly carrying my XD .40 and when I was in line to pay I noticed two LMPD officers by my car and when I walked out they asked me if I had a permit to carry my firearm I told him yes I do and he said alright sir and shaked my hard
You really have to hand it to the cops on how they handled the situation.
Yeah about the pronunciation. I had a friend from Boston and I never knew if her dogs name was "Kirky" or "Cookie".Generally, people tend to write the way they speak. Heavy accents or regional dialects will affect that. My mother-in-law (a native Kentuckian - from the hills of Hazard KY), to her dying day, insisted that "wash" was spelled "w-a-r-s-h" and that it was possible to "sale" something. I still don't know if her cousin is named "Dell" or "Dale".
Can't sneak anything past you southern Indiana boys.
Hard it to them.
I ran a piping job in East Tennessee about 10 years ago. The realtor lady drove me around Johnson city looking for a rental apartment for an entire afternoon and we **** chatted about our families. She kept referring to "air" son who lived out of state. I thought WTH is she talking about. Finally a plumber that I hired said she's saying "our" son. This guy had lived in New York and had relocated there a few years earlier. He said, "I translate for out of towners all the time now."My dad used to talk about "warshing dishes after supper." My uncle still uses "reach" instead of "hand." As in, "can you reach me that hammer?" Or, "the cashier reached me back my change." My grandpa also refers to the creek behind his house as the "crick." Until the day he died I never did understand a word that my great uncle was saying. It keeps things interesting.
I ran a piping job in East Tennessee about 10 years ago. The realtor lady drove me around Johnson city looking for a rental apartment for an entire afternoon and we **** chatted about our families. She kept referring to "air" son who lived out of state. I thought WTH is she talking about. Finally a plumber that I hired said she's saying "our" son. This guy had lived in New York and had relocated there a few years earlier. He said, "I translate for out of towners all the time now."
It's really nice that you had a happy ending.