Tag Archives: imponderable

Imponderable #63: Newcastle England

5 Oct

October 5, 2012

If this does not sound like a Monty Python skit I don’t know what does.

                       

I miss the good of days of graffiti, when “I never wipe” was plastered across my neighborhood.

This is an example of what I always tell people: A good education does not mean you are smart. If this guy had a shred of common sense he would have known he’d get caught. Of course if he had common sense he would not have vandalized the cars to begin with.

Why would a smart university professor be so stupid as to vandalize cars in his own neighborhood with excellent vocabulary words? Especially considering that he has already been outspoken in his opposition to the cars?

The question is Imponderable.

 

Imponderable: Toledo Oregon (Classic Repost)

28 Sep

September 28, 2012

Last week’s three-part Imponderable was really one for the ages. (Seriously- a goblin?) But the Imponderable from the very beginning has featured things that leave you and me scratching our heads. Despite all the nutty Imponderables I’ve posted- from rare religious icons found in a trailer park to men run over by their own steam rollers to really bad attorneys doing raps and making bad puns, it is the first one that still makes me wonder.

June 23, 2011

Foreign Accent Syndrome is a real though hilarious malady. Simply put, some people with head injuries hurt a certain region of the brain that controls speech, leading to strange new speech patterns that sound like foreign accents. This must have been one awful root canal.

Yeah, I didn’t believe it either, but I looked it up and it is real. It doesn’t happen often, but it is documented. So in theory, someone from Nebraska can hit his head and wind up speaking like Patrick Stewart. The flip side is true too. Patrick Stewart could go in for a routine cavity fill and come out talking like Larry the Cable Guy.

Oh, how I wish that would happen. That’s hysterical. Sit back and think about it for a while. “Mr. La Forge, the warp engines have developed a negative feedback and the ventral stabilizer needs repair. Report to engineering and GIT-R-DONE!!!”

Star Trek: TNG really needed a few more rednecks, that’s for sure.

But to get back on track, reading the article brings up an imponderable question about British dentistry. The people of England are well-known for poor dentistry and bad teeth. So I submit to you this question about the British accent: is the British accent simply a matter of bad teeth? Could it simply be that the British accent is not a natural development but came about due to lousy dentists? Maybe there is no British accent, simply a neural reaction caused by head trauma.

Consider that Colonial Americans, upon leaving England and developing their own nation and dental system, within a few short generations lost the British accent.

It is a real chicken or the egg type of question. Which came first- the British accent or the bad teeth?

The question is Imponderable.