Friday, July 31, 2009

I love the weird and the wacky

Do you like snark? Do you love weird stuff from the internet?

Do I even have to ask

check out CakeWrecks the best of the worst cakes out there

and the guilty pleasure Tacky Weddings

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Why can't I remember a password?

I was going to update this a couple of days ago, but... what's my password?
So after much tearing of my hair and fighting through resets, I finally remembered it and here I am!!!

It would be so much easier if I could just remember.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Who was a cheerleader?

Check out the slideshow do see what celebrities were cheerleaders
www.wmur.com

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Strange interests

Names - where did your name come from?
Why did your parents pick it? What does it mean?
These names come from professions:


Ackerman - An oxherder
Ambler - Broke in horses
Archer - A professional Archer
Backster - Baker
Bailey - A bailiff
Baker - Baked
Balister - Archer
Barber - Cut hair, pulled teeth, let blood
Barker - Tanner, one who processes leather
Bauer - Farmer
Baxter - A baker
Beck, Becker - A baker
Bellman - Night watchman or town crier
Belter - Made bells
Bender - Cut leather
Binder - Bound items
Bloomer - A man who works an iron smelting forge
Bower, Bowman, Bowyer - Made bows and arrows
Brazier Brass - worker
Brewer - Made beer
Brewster, Brewer - made beer
Bricker - Brick maker
Brightsmith - Metal worker
Bunter - Rag and bone collector
Butcher - Processed and sold meat
Butler - Cared for the cellar and was in charge of wine and beer
Carpenter - Worked with wood and built things
Carrier - One who hauls messages or small goods
Carter - A cart driver, a teamster
Cartwright - A cart maker
Carver - A sculptor
Chamberlain - A position in a castle, one responsibility was finances
Chambers - Looked after their lord's affairs
Chaplin - A chaplain
Chapman - A traveling peddler
Chandler - A candle maker
Clark - A clerk or scholar
Collier - Produced charcoal
Constable - A person who took care of a castle in the absence of the owner
Cook - Cooked
Cooper - A barrel maker
Cordwainer - worked in fine leather, made shoes
Currier - Cured leather
Cutler - Made knives
Day - A dairy worker
Draper - Cloth merchant
Dyer - Dyed cloth and clothes
Faber - Smith, someone who makes things
Falconer - Cared for and hunted with birds
Farmer - Farmed
Fisher - One who fishes
Fletcher - An arrow maker
Fowler - Keeper or catcher of birds
Forester - Like a modern day sheriff, patrolled the woods
Franklin - a freeholder
Freedman - One released from slavery
Frobisher - Polished armour and swords
Fuller - Made felt, trampled cloth
Gardner, Gardener - A gardener
Glazier - One who cuts and sets glass
Glover - Made gloves
Goldsmith - A jeweler who works with gold
Greensmith - Worker in copper
Groom - A man who tends horses
Hacker - Maker of hoes
Hackler, Hackman - Processed flax or hemp to make linen
Harker - Another name for Herald, town crier
Harper - Plays the harp
Hatchler - See Hackler
Hatter - Made hats
Hawker - Peddler
Hayward - Someone who tended the hedges
Herald - Town criers, spread the news
Hewer - Tree cutter
Hillard, Hiller, Hillier - A roofer working in slate
Holster - Groom who looked after horses
Hooper - Made hoops for barrels
Horner - Works with horn for spoons or combs
Hunter - Hunted
Joyner - A carpenter
Kellogg - A killer of hogs
Kempster - Wool comber
Knacker - Harness maker
Leach - A doctor
Linkerman, Linkman - A man who carried a "link" or a torch to guide people through city streets
Lister, Litster - Dyer
Lorimer - A maker of horse gear, made bridles
Machin, Macun - A stone worker
Mailer - Enameller
Marshal - In charge of horses, carts, wagons and barrels. Oversaw transporting of goods.
Mason - A brick, plaster or stone worker
Mercer - Works with cloth, sells cloth
Miller - Grinds grain
Miner - Worked in a mine
Minter - Makes coins
Naperer, Napier - Servant in charge of table linen
Naylor - A nail maker
Packer - Packs goods such as pickles or herring
Packman - Traveled around with goods for sale in a pack
Palmer - One who had been (or pretended to have been) to the Holy Land
Parker - Park caretaker
Pitman - Coal miner
Plowman - Farmer, a farm laborer
Plowwright - Maker or repairer of plows
Porter - Gatekeeper
Potter - Maker of metal or clay pots
Proctor - A steward
Redman - A thatcher (reed man)
Reeve - Supervised the lord's property, made sure work was done
Saddler - Makes saddles
Sawyer - A wood sawer
Shepard - Looked after the sheep
Sherman, Shearman - One who processed cloth
Shoemaker - Made shoes
Skinner - Prepares hides for tanning
Smith - A maker of things
Steward - One employed to oversee domestic concerns
Tailor, Taylor - Made clothes
Tanner - Tans leather
Thatcher, Thacker - One who covered roofs with straw or reeds
Tiller - Farmer
Tillman, Tillerman - Plowman
Tinker - Repaired pots and household items
Trapper - Caught animals for their fur
Trinder - A wheel maker
Walker - A fuller, trambled cloth
Ward - A watchman
Weaver - Wove cloth
Webber, Webster - Weaver
Whacker - Horse or oxen team driver
Wheeler - Made wheels
Wheelwright - Maker or repairer of wagon wheels
Whitster - One who bleached cloth
Woodward - Keeper of a forest
Wright - Builder or repairer

Well, that's all for now.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Obsessing about books

I'm waiting for the following to come out in paperback
Patricia Briggs Bone Crossed Mercy Thompson - Book 4
Patricia Briggs Hunting Grounds Alpha & Omega - Book 2
I'm undecided about buying the Mercy Thompson graphic novel. I usually don't buy gn's.

Waiting for another book from:
Eileen Wilks

Waiting for the library to have:
Laurel Hamilton Skin Trade Or should I buy it? I'll have to wait til it comes out in paperback.

I may be obsessed, but I'm cheap.

It's begun

It's begun -
I've become obsessed with knitting
I feel old - it all hurts and it's getting harder to move each day
Child 1 isn't speaking to me - is that a good or a bad thing?
the memory is going, what was I thinking about?