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Printed from https://writing.com/main/books/action/view/entry_id/1065222
Rated: 18+ · Book · Personal · #1196512
Not for the faint of art.
#1065222 added February 29, 2024 at 7:46am
Restrictions: None
Quantum Leap Day
The one thing that can make February even worse than it's already is? Well, it's now. Today. Leap days make the worst month of the year even longer, almost as long as other months like April or September, but without their benefits.

Since my current daily blogging streak now encompasses two Leap Days, I thought I'd take a look to remind myself what I might have been talking about on February 29, 2020, just a few weeks before we took a leap right into a societal meltdown. But I didn't really acknowledge it then. Hell, I probably wouldn't acknowledge it now, if it weren't for "Invalid ItemOpen in new Window. .

It's just another day, after all; though, if you're a salaried employee, you're working for free  Open in new Window. today. Hope you took the day off and told the boss to take a flying leap.

I'm going to leap to the conclusion that you already know why there's a leap day.  Open in new Window. Maybe you even know why it occurs in February within our largely arbitrary Gregorian calendar system. But what I didn't know, so I'm assuming no one else does either, is that the word "leap" in English is etymologically related to "lope," one of the many near-synonyms for "run."

Which leads me to ponder: the past tense of leap is either "leaped" or "leapt." I suspect "leapt" is more British than "leaped," but either is correct. This is similar to words like "dream," but, oddly, "sleep" only leaps into the past tense as "slept;" it's never "sleeped," even though it rhymes with "leaped."

English is weird. Obviously, the past tense of "leap" should be "lope." "We lope to the wrong conclusion yesterday," for example.

Ah well. Further such musings will have to wait another four years.

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Printed from https://writing.com/main/books/action/view/entry_id/1065222