I wrote a piece at Babble about the importance of teaching my kids to appreciate the things that MAKE you beautiful.
Go and read it or a unicorn loses its wings.
I wrote a piece at Babble about the importance of teaching my kids to appreciate the things that MAKE you beautiful.
Go and read it or a unicorn loses its wings.
Erma Bombeck said something that pretty much defines my approach to life.... "When I stand before God at the end of my life, I would hope that I would not have a single bit of talent left, and I could say, "I used everything you gave me." If you switch the word TALENT for LOVE or LAUGHTER or HAPPINESS....it still stands.
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I like this. People come here and make up their own bits of Mythology – although Pegacorn sounds pretty cool to me.
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There shouldn’t be an apostrophe between it and s in this sentence:
Go and read it or a unicorn loses it’s wings.
The rule of thumb is to say the sentence without the implied contraction; for example, “…loses it is wings.” If it doesn’t make sense, it probably isn’t the right place to use the apostrophe.
Ha! I find it funny that you chose to focus on the placement of the apostrophe and not the fact that unicorns don’t have wings to start with. Unless, of course, they have been crossed with a pegasus. However; if that’s the case, then they are technically a pegacorn.
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