In an effort to keep these in one place . . .

Mark's recent post:

had to go THOG
had to be THOB
had to do THOD

The latest one I'm working on:

so that STHAO

and all the wonderful ending words that fit with it . . .

so that you would STHAOULD
so that you can STHAOUK
so that you went to the STHAOUFRGTD
so that he had STHAOED

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Replies to This Discussion

Yeah, it is more of a baby shuffle.
Ok, so what does -TSDZ, -TSD, -TSZ represent in Mark's theory?

How does Mark write final side that, this, those, these?
these -RPG (up arrow)
those -FBL (down arrow)

Barb's right about "this."

His "that" was mentioned earlier. I think it's -LGTS??
-FS is "was."
-RP is "were."

I really do like the "there."

I don't know if Mark has a right side "here." That would be a good one.

How about -PBLG for "just," Barb?
Mark throws in the * with -J for just. He uses -J sans * (stacked K+M) for "come"on the final side. I conflict we just/wedge (I started using -J for just before I found MS). Eclipse handles that conflict very well. The J fell into my writing before I even got everything defined. It's a nice, natural combo.

No "here" on the final side in MS.

-RT for there makes sense. I found -RJ on another forum before I learned of -RT, and I really like it.

I learned -FS for was at school. -FZ for saw is a new one for me from MS. Love it!
Yes, you do need the asterisk with the -J, just.

Thanks, Brenda!
Oh, I just read -FZ for "was."

I use -FS. I know I got that from a MK bootcamp, so I'm thinking he used to use -FS??
I think she is saying FZ is "saw" and FS is "was." That's how I'm reading it.
-FZ = saw
-FS = was

I like -FZ for saw because I already used -FS for was and a little bit of a stretch reverses the word.
Oh, I see, Barb. In here, to here, from here, come here, was here, right here . . . I like it!
DUH back atcha, Barb. My dyslexia must have kicked in, "saw," not "was."

Sorry about that, Girlfriends!

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