Carrie, I did know that, just testing people. My daughter said some of her Professors said set ooo, also. And no thanks on the medical student part, after what my daughter went through in school.
Every morning my daughter calls and we try to get each other with a new word. My husband, the crossword puzzle nut, almost never misses. But my daughters word today was carrion, and my husband thought it was a type of organ (piano). Ha.
When Are You Planting Bulbs This Year?
I know it mostly from art history classes from the study of ancient archaeological finds being discussed as those discovered and not moved from their original place before the find is careful recorded in relationship to the whole site, thus in situ. I did not know it was used in Medicine. It pops up often in architecture references, too. Structures built on site as opposed to those trucked in from a shop or store. Cabinets built in situ, not from Home Depot. So now we can refer to direct sowing as "in situ" and be ever so in our gardening verbiage. Too funny. Victor should be happy and I think I will adopt his code of "c2" for it. c2 Seeds. Sounds good. Patti
Polly - please tell hubby that carrion is small luggage you take on a plane - especially when in 'seat 2'!
Oh, Victor! Even the crows know that one.
Oh Victor! is right, Pirl.
I wonder if there is a way to count how many "Victor!"'s there are on DG? x, C
Now, THAT would be quite the challenge!
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