This may be getting too off topic, but just today in class our prof wrote
the variable "b" as "d" and then upon realizing his mistake corrected it and
said "the other b". Not sure if this is dyslexia or right/left related (or
if the two are very similar).

Tyler

On Wed, Feb 9, 2011 at 10:03 AM, Jonathan Wilkes <jancs...@yahoo.com> wrote:

> Those jokes exist in English, too.
>
>  ------------------------------
> * From: * Mathieu Bouchard <ma...@artengine.ca>;
> * To: * András Murányi <muran...@gmail.com>;
> * Cc: * <pd-list@iem.at>;
> * Subject: * Re: [PD] Need Help Understanding pack
> * Sent: * Wed, Feb 9, 2011 5:20:34 PM
>
>   On Wed, 9 Feb 2011, András Murányi wrote:
>
> > It's not a brain damage, but a neurological thing.
>
> But brain damage *is* a neurological thing :}
>
> But the phenomenon of confusing left and right is so common, that in
> Québec, we routinely call «gauche» «l'autre droite» ("left" is also known as
> "the other right"), and call «droite» «l'autre gauche» ("right" is also
> known as "the other left"), whenever someone picks the wrong direction after
> being given an instruction.
>
> (I don't know about the existence of such an expression anywhere else)
>
> _______________________________________________________________________
> | Mathieu Bouchard ---- tél: +1.514.383.3801 ---- Villeray, Montréal, QC
>
>
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