Now that’s a field trip - thanks Ms. Frizzle!
We never got handjobs at my OLD school!
How do you know they were getting and not giving? After all, giving is something the whole class can do (assuming they have at least one hand)
Is it “handjob” or “hand job”?
A hand job could be a handjob, but a hand job isn’t itself a handjob.
Hand jobs: Massaging, opening jars,.handjobs.
Handjobs: Old fashioned, the rusty trombone, etc.
A rusty trombone is not just a handjob. It’s anilingus at the same time. The rusty part is because the lips get covered in “rust” from the “mouth piece” of the metaphoric trombone.
I classify it more a handjob than a rimjob, but I suppose it’s more down to who’s playing and their forté.
It all comes down to how hard they blow.
What I’m reading from this is: why not both?
Or more precisely, why not one, and then the other. Purely for statistical purposes.
This is a big ass-mistake.
Always a relevant XKCD
For those who don’t know it yet
For today’s lucky ten thousand.
I understood that reference. ☝️
First handjob
Mentoring Daily.
First hand job experience at disability mentoring day
Unfortunately, now those students have been relieved on duty
I’m over here amazed with how many times I had to read the headline before my brain would register what was wrong. It’s times like this that I can almost understand how stuff like this happens. Ha
Same but I struggled to make any other sense of it, trying to understand how stuff like this happened
You’re ready for the job market! (hand)
i mean it builds character
Student Gets First Handjob
It’s “first-hand”. English is stupid. Sometimes two words don’t become compound. Sometimes they do become compound and they’re just grafted together, like in German. And sometimes you use a hyphen. I’m really good at writing and I can’t always keep this shit straight.
Hyphens tend to drop over time. When’s the last time you saw someone refer to “e-mail”?
That’s a different kind of use for hyphen though. The use of hyphen that I’m talking about is actually flexible, used as-needed to turn any given multiple words into a single adjective, adverb, noun, etc.
Also, never get your English punctuation (or other) patterns from JRPGs, nor from popular usage on the internet. I’m not saying literacy is lowering, but I will say that people with poor literacy use the internet more than ever, and bad patterns emerge.
The easiest way to solve the editorial issue for a lot headlines like this is to simply ask a teenager to read it. Their reaction will tell you if it’s correct or not…
First-hand-job
firs thand
There’s a reason wording and punctuation is important. For example: “let’s eat, Greg.” Vs “let’s eat Greg.”