Shop Products
Houzz Logo Print
columbusguy1

lath lath lath lath lath lath

columbusguy1
11 years ago

I'll make it real simple:

Sound the word out--the e makes it a long a sound--LAYTH, rather than LAHTH....Buy a dictionary cheap at a used book store and look the d**n words up...If you can't use a brain for a simple task, how can you possibly think that a truly idiotic spell-checker is going to work? It is written for people who know what the proper word will look like and can sound it out...don't just let it choose your word on its own!!

Comments (14)

  • Circus Peanut
    11 years ago

    lathe:

    lath:
    {{!gwi}}
    Laythe:
    Lethe:

    lithe:

    This post was edited by circuspeanut on Tue, Feb 12, 13 at 8:05

  • sombreuil_mongrel
    11 years ago

    Someone is having a bad morning.
    Don't get worked up into a lather.
    Casey

  • graywings123
    11 years ago

    Yikes, I assume you have directed that at me, Columbusguy1, and I just want to let you know how very sorry I am that I spelled that word wrong. Very, very sorry.

    Let me explain what happened. I try not to post a question here unless I can't find the answer elsewhere. So I searched google using the incorrect spelling - lathe and plaster - which I promise will be the last time I ever type it incorrectly. I found lots of references with that spelling, so I didn't look further - or is it farther? - for another spelling. And since I thought it was pronounced with a long A, the spelling seemed correct.

    Again, I am horribly embarrassed at my spelling mistake as it is clear how strongly it has bothered you, and I certainly didn't want to do that. I hope I have humbled myself sufficiently that you can forgive me.

    In fact, I think that every time I see your name from now on anywhere on Gardenweb, I will type in the word lath just to show you how well I have learned. I know I will be bringing joy to your life each time you see it.

    And I am going to save this thread as one of the Gardenweb classics.

  • Circus Peanut
    11 years ago

    LOL Graywings! One must assume a Very Wrong Side of Bed this morning for poor ColumbusGuy.

  • mama goose_gw zn6OH
    11 years ago

    Dere graywings, don't fell bad. Somtimes we all have truoble with are speling and tyeping. And somtimes grammer, to.

    Dere columbusguy, I'm from Ohio, to.

    Southern Ohio, but one of my DDs happens to be in Columbus today, and what a beeeuuutiful day it is--not one cloud in a baby-blue sky. Hope your day has improved. ;)

    This post was edited by mama_goose on Tue, Feb 12, 13 at 13:31

  • Fori
    11 years ago

    I knew what you meant, GW. :)

  • liriodendron
    11 years ago

    Hey, if it makes you feel better think of this.

    If you have installed lath on the your wall studs then you had have lathEd it.

  • columbusguy1
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Hey All...

    I wasn't directing it specifically at graywings...but I have seen it so often here that something just finally got to me. I do fiction writing at an ancient history site, and understand that misspellings do occur...a lot of my stuff is written spur-of-the moment at 2A.M., but there I do catch most of mine which are mainly due to speed and keyboard layout.

    Many, many people here are quite knowledgeable about restoration, so I guess I expect higher standards--earlier that day, I was at a professional restoration site, and saw so many errors that I thought 'there is no way I'd use these people'.

    The other thing which gets to me is computer-speak and technology--and the fact that a lot of people just assume that since it is high-tech, it is going to function perfectly. Well, that is not true with things like spell-checkers; they are only as good as the person who uses it: it will offer suggested spellings which it thinks are alternates to your typed word, but it also was created by people who assume that if you see the proper word, you will know which one to pick. With our current educational system, the time will soon come when they will likely give up any pretence to grammar or spelling at all and give in to text usages.

    Finding out that cursive writing is no longer taught in public schools also contributed to my despair--when I heard that, my mouth literally dropped open in shock and it took a bit for me to collect myself. I already knew our math skills were woefully behind the rest of the world, but the fact that we won't even be able to read something not printed was truly astounding. My mother saved a couple of my penmanship books from elementary school as I found out going through her effects, but I should have known back in '98 when I wrote something out at work and one of the other people couldn't figure out even from context that the letter I used to start one sentence was a capital 'Q'.

  • graywings123
    11 years ago

    lath

  • mama goose_gw zn6OH
    11 years ago

    Two of former President Lyndon Johnson's grandchildren were featured on last evening's NBC news, reading excerpts from his and Lady Bird's early love letters. The love letters have just been made public by the Johnson Presidential Library. LBJ's granddaughter, Katherine Robb, said that she felt that with today's technology, handwritten declarations of love would become less likely. (My paraphrasing.)

    I have a difficult time imagining a world without cursive writing, but I was shocked when our local high school dropped 'shop' and 'home ec.' I know I'm dating myself with those terms, I think by that time they were called industrial arts and family/consumer science.

    The world is changing too fast for me; that's another reason I appreciate my old house. (Which has no lath and plaster, so maybe it's not all that old.)

  • energy_rater_la
    11 years ago

    ok then.
    glad to see that this isn't one of those threads
    gone so horribly wrong!

    I done seen nuf of dat rond hear.

    haf a gud day evrone

    bes o luk.

  • function_first
    11 years ago

    People who are knowledgable about restoration and willing to put down their tools and come to a forum - uncompensated - just to share their extensive knowledge with others are a delight to me. I'll happily take their tips, experience, know how, humor and whatever else they would like to share with whatever spelling and structures they choose to share it. If I can figure out what they're saying, it's clear enough for me. What's that saying about looking a gift horse in the mouth?

  • party_music50
    11 years ago

    Wow.

    I strongly encourage graywings and everyone else here to give ColumbusGuy whatever he wants!



    lath lath lath lath lath

  • awm03
    11 years ago

    Just to be extra geeky, Lethe, the mythical river, is pronounced with two syllables (lay-thuh), unlike all the other examples.