Good tidings of great joy! ETS confirmed my November schedule, so I'll be plunging back into the work force soon. I'm also attempting to sign up with a tutoring agency that matches tutors with families; I've turned in my paperwork but don't yet know whether they'll accept me as an "independent contractor," which is how the arrangement's been conceived.
Meanwhile, I continue to slap stuff up on eBay. Several items have only a few hours left before they wink out of existence, and I'll be forced to re-list them, perhaps with sexier photos. While I was ecstatic to have sold that pewter medallion by Donald DeLue for $25 plus shipping, that's been the only item to sell thus far. Am fervently hoping that someone goes for the Civil War Registry. More items are on their way, including that awesome scrapbook I wrote about earlier. Check out ingwaeungbo on eBay to see what's for sale.
_
Saturday, October 23, 2010
November means WORK
9 comments:
READ THIS BEFORE COMMENTING!
All comments are subject to approval before they are published, so they will not appear immediately. Comments should be civil, relevant, and substantive. Anonymous comments are not allowed and will be unceremoniously deleted. For more on my comments policy, please see this entry on my other blog.
AND A NEW RULE (per this post): comments critical of Trump's lying must include criticism of Biden's or Kamala's or some prominent leftie's lying on a one-for-one basis! Failure to be balanced means your comment will not be published.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Awesome news, man. Here's to hoping that this turns out to be a rewarding job in addition to just being a way to pay the bills.
ReplyDeleteI like your eBay name, by the way. Intriguing choice. Don't know if I'll bid on any of the items, but that's some interesting loot you have up there.
There's Moron The Way.
ReplyDeleteActually, Kevin, "November" doesn't mean "work" at all but refers to the burnt-out ember of a star that went supernova. In antiquity, this month was spelled "Novaember," but has since been corrupted to its current spelling.
ReplyDeleteYou really ought to do more research before making baseless claims.
Jeffery Hodges
* * *
Jeff,
ReplyDeleteI need to stop relying on Wikipedia as a source.
Kevin
Actually, November comes from the Latin "novem" for "nine," as it was the ninth month of the Roman calendar. As November will mean the beginning of positive cash flow, which will presumably allow you to purchase some new duds at some point (or be "dressed to the nines"), I think this is appropriate.
ReplyDelete(OK, perhaps not as creative as Dr. Doom, but I tried.)
(Also, my word verification word for today? Mange. I think Blogspot is trying to tell me something...)
I'm pretty sure Jeff was joking with his faux-tymology.
ReplyDeleteOh, I'm positive he was joking. But his etymology made me curious, so I looked up "November" and then tried to reverse engineer some twisted logic into it.
ReplyDeleteDidn't work too well, did it.
I debated whether to leave my previous comment, fearing that I hadn't caught that you had caught his joke. In the end, my pedantry won out.
ReplyDelete(How do you explain "won out" as opposed to "won" to an English student?)
Pedantry FTW!
ReplyDelete(Why certain prepositions are attached to verbs at some times and not at others... that is a headache.)