Welcome back.
We have had a few weeks of school already but there were other doings to be done so I am only now returning to blogland. I have spent most of my time at the lab; I'm lucky, as I have said before, to have that study spot and I take full advantage of it. I need to put in a desktop book holder...maybe just find two sturdy objects that will serve as book ends. Lots of people put pictures up at their desks but I think I'm a little short on space for that. Science needs room!
MIRL work mainly consists of checking (almost) every day from 2007 for events to analyze in the programs I wrote (I just revamped the first one I did and paired it with another one that spits out a plot of the numbers that the first one generates - tremendously enthralling to the general public). I wonder if I can put up some exemplary images so you might have the slightest clue as to what I'm going on about.
That last sentence reminds me: a phrase that begins with 'I wonder' is a declarative statement, not a question, and does not require or even allow for a question mark at its end (I'm talking to you, Tom Robbins).
Classes are classes. I am trying not to let lab work interfere with study time.
Now its time to get homework out of the way and to ask Chloe to stop putting her butt in my face so that I'll pay attention to her.

1 Comments:
You are correct, although a sentence beginning with the phrase "I wonder" and certainly be a question if the aforementioned phrase is followed by punctuation, as in: "I wonder, can I put up some exemplary images so you might have the slightest clue as to what I'm going on about?" Or, "I wonder -- does my DAA have anything more interesting to do with his time than to make insignificant grammatical arguments on my blog?"
As always, I think you are a fine son.
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