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OLD TASK HELP THREADS > 30.4 (DLM Rose's Task - One if by Land, Two if by Sea)

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message 51: by Alice (new)

Alice (aliceg) | 424 comments Does Beach count as a land feature?


message 52: by Dlmrose, Moderator Emeritus (new)

Dlmrose | 18433 comments Mod
Alice wrote: "Does Beach count as a land feature?"

Beach works


message 53: by Cindy AL (new)

Cindy AL (cangelmd) | 645 comments In my part of the world "branch" is a word for a small creek or stream, as in the phrase "bourbon and branch water", will you accept branch as water?


message 54: by Dlmrose, Moderator Emeritus (new)

Dlmrose | 18433 comments Mod
Cindy wrote: "In my part of the world "branch" is a word for a small creek or stream, as in the phrase "bourbon and branch water", will you accept branch as water?"

Yes


message 55: by Cindy AL (new)

Cindy AL (cangelmd) | 645 comments THANK YOU!!!!


Sarah (Mood Reader) (bookworm1887) | 458 comments Would the word spring work?


message 57: by Dlmrose, Moderator Emeritus (new)

Dlmrose | 18433 comments Mod
Sarah wrote: "Would the word spring work?"

yes, for a body of water


Sarah (Mood Reader) (bookworm1887) | 458 comments Also from the dictionary you are using DLM would kill work?


Sarah (Mood Reader) (bookworm1887) | 458 comments Also are you taking variations of the words such as the plural, ing, ed, etc.?


message 60: by Dlmrose, Moderator Emeritus (new)

Dlmrose | 18433 comments Mod
Sarah wrote: "Also are you taking variations of the words such as the plural, ing, ed, etc.?"

"kill" would work- and "kills", but not killing, killed


Sarah (Mood Reader) (bookworm1887) | 458 comments I was thinking about everything not just kill, like arch, arched, arching, etc. Not just one of the words though, all of the possibilities.


message 62: by Dlmrose, Moderator Emeritus (new)

Dlmrose | 18433 comments Mod
Sarah wrote: "I was thinking about everything not just kill, like arch, arched, arching, etc. Not just one of the words though, all of the possibilities."

The plurals work, but not the other forms


message 63: by Literally (new)

Literally Jen (vampsita) If anyone needs a quick, light read, try The Farthest-Away Mountain. It's 130 pages. The other book I am using for the task is 768 pages (maybe more) so I feel they balance each other out.


message 64: by Arow (new)

Arow Hi; would Field work for part A?

Thanks!


message 65: by Dlmrose, Moderator Emeritus (new)

Dlmrose | 18433 comments Mod
Arow wrote: "Hi; would Field work for part A?

Thanks!"


yes


message 66: by Deedee (new)

Deedee | 2346 comments Hi -- another question -- would "park" work for Part A? (As in Mansfield Park by Jane Austen.) Thanks!


message 67: by Dlmrose, Moderator Emeritus (new)

Dlmrose | 18433 comments Mod
Deedee wrote: "Hi -- another question -- would "park" work for Part A? (As in Mansfield Park by Jane Austen.) Thanks!"

I was going to say no as it is a man-made feature, but I found this definition
Western U.S. a broad valley in a mountainous region.
so it is a yes ~D


message 68: by Zimbellina (new)

Zimbellina | 108 comments Hi, just wondering if 'drift' would work as in The Killings At Badger's Drift. I looked it up and one of the definitions was 'a large mass of material that is heaped up by the wind or by water currents'. Thanks!


message 69: by Dlmrose, Moderator Emeritus (new)

Dlmrose | 18433 comments Mod
Kandie wrote: "Hi, just wondering if 'drift' would work as in The Killings At Badger's Drift. I looked it up and one of the definitions was 'a large mass of material that is heaped up by the wind or..."

Drift works :)


message 70: by Zimbellina (new)

Zimbellina | 108 comments Dlmrose wrote: "Kandie wrote: "Hi, just wondering if 'drift' would work as in The Killings At Badger's Drift. I looked it up and one of the definitions was 'a large mass of material that is heaped up..."

Excellent :) Thanks!


message 71: by El (new)

El I saw that someone used "moon" as a natural landform. Would you also accept earth?


message 72: by Dlmrose, Moderator Emeritus (new)

Dlmrose | 18433 comments Mod
El wrote: "I saw that someone used "moon" as a natural landform. Would you also accept earth?"

I saw that someone else used moon, too- and I'm still thinking that one over...

My first thought was that moon missed the point of being a physical land feature as an element of topography. My premise goes back to Paul Revere- could Paul Revere have traveled by land over/through it? I've allowed some things like "woods" via that logic. I'm still looking for alternate definitions that might allow moon...I'll get back to you soon on earth


message 73: by Dlmrose, Moderator Emeritus (new)

Dlmrose | 18433 comments Mod
El wrote: "I saw that someone used "moon" as a natural landform. Would you also accept earth?"

I'll take earth


message 74: by El (new)

El Thanks for getting back to us on that, Dlmrose!


message 75: by Shawn (new)

Shawn "Marsh" is on both wikipedia lists!

Is it okay if I use The Prince of the Marshes: And Other Occupational Hazards of a Year in Iraq for either the land or sea part, or do you have a preference?


message 76: by Dlmrose, Moderator Emeritus (new)

Dlmrose | 18433 comments Mod
Mollie wrote: ""Marsh" is on both wikipedia lists!

Is it okay if I use The Prince of the Marshes: And Other Occupational Hazards of a Year in Iraq for either the land or sea part, or do you have a p..."


I think marsh is more land


message 77: by Shawn (new)

Shawn Okay, thanks!


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