I have noticed that British dramas don't have nearly as much expositional dialogue as American dramas. As a result, they are decidedly more difficult to follow.
I've called so many people for the Admissions office that I can touch-dial a telephone now. That is actually a worthwhile skill, so thank you, Providence Christian College!
I definitely would not have purchased this Lipton Green Tea if I had read the ingredients first. Shouldn't "green tea" come BEFORE "high fructose corn syrup"?
The girl sitting next to me in American History is telling her friend that her parents took out a home loan in her name. That sounds like a very bad idea.
I wish I knew what to do to fix my reading automaticity problem. Book reviews are really difficult to write when I can't read a paragraph without stumbling.
I wish it would rain again. That would be the best birthday present—besides money and toys. But after money and toys—and hugs—rain would be the best present.
Let it be known that upon this day in history, the tenth of November in the year of our Lord two-thousand and nine, Clay Smith licked all the way to the center of his orange Tootsie Pop without biting it. Huzzah!
There are a lot of Providence birthdays in the first two weeks of November. There's Evelyn Vane, Kellie Holly, Patty Tsai, Kim Postma, Lynnae Bosch, Jon Becker, and me! Huzzah for early November birthdays!
How awkward! The couple by me in American History are bickering loudly over whether the Philippines are in Asia, while the rest of us wait for the professor.
I can't understand the method behind the inflection of the indefinate article before words beginning with "histor-". It's "an historian" and "an historical [event]" but "a history". This is confusing.