akirlu: (Default)
Okay. Say your story is set in London in the early 19th century, and you've established that a group of characters are poor. They're a guild of servant-class laborers who collectively have not had work in months. And they were never well paid or prosperous to begin with. And now, because of public antipathy, these guys have been stuck in their guild hall for weeks for fear of getting beaten up whenever they go out. They are understandably sick of this circumstance, and so they've been whipped into a frenzy and they are going to go out and march on Parliament, and so they rush out into the yard of the guild hall, and some of them have horses so they get on them, and...

And no. No they don't. None of them have horses. These guys were poor to begin with, did not use horses to make their living, and hadn't been able to earn any money for ages and were too proud to accept charity from their few allies. Horses, famously, eat their heads off, whether in use or not. Even if these fellows were hauliers or some such, they couldn't possibly afford to stable and feed animals who weren't earning their keep. No one without significant wealth could afford to keep idle horses. Horses and carriages, especially in town, were the purview of people of pretty serious means. People of moderate means used hired hacks and carriages, and people of little means used their feet. And you can't even say the guild members might plausibly have borrowed the horses from carters or the nearest leasing stables because they had been trapped in their guild hall for weeks because virtually everyone had turned against them, and beat them to a pulp whenever they stuck their noses out.

So no. No horses. Also: no one in the early 19th century described soliciting an opinion as "input."

And so I say: arrrgh.
akirlu: (Default)
Just in case All Knowledge is Indeed Contained in LJ still: Does anyone know how to turn off the crop marks in the PC version of MSWord 2003? Whenever I have a document open in Print Layout View (which is most of the time) in Word 2003, I have crop marks appearing in the corners. They don't interfere with my use of the program or anything, but I'd like to turn them off, and they annoy me because I don't know how. I figured out how to do it in the Word 2010 version I have at work, but can't seem to find the setting toggle in 2003. Any clues? Anyone?

(It may be worth mentioning that they appeared when I added the Asian Languages module to Word so that I can type in Chinese, which I don't *think* is relevant to turning them off but does mean that I don't know in what menu they got turned on, because I didn't manually do it. One might suppose they could be found in Tools/Options/View, or perhaps Tools/Options/Asian Typography, but I'm not finding anything in either spot.)
akirlu: (Default)
Criteria are plural. If there's only one of them, it's a criterion. It's not really that hard, and if you continue to write "(the/this/a) criteria" you'll make the pedant baby Jesus cry, okay? So just stop it.

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