Heck. I thought Gina was really going to cure Lou’s malocchio, and they’d become a couple and live happily ever after. But one of my favorite things about this strip is, there’s a new twist almost every day. So we’ll see what happens.
PS: I’ve commented before that “soap opera” strips like Mary Worth and Rex Morgan go on and on for weeks and months with nothing much happening. But check out Rex Morgan today (Dec. 14)! .
Just checked the spelling of “chanel(l)er” on a dictionary Website. Merriam-Webster claims the word was first used in 1987, and spells the word with one “L”. My suspicion is that the accepted US spelling would use one L and much of the English-influenced world would use double-L, as they do with “traveller”. When a word has a documented existence of less than 25 years, one is never certain about these things…
Heck. I thought Gina was really going to cure Lou’s malocchio, and they’d become a couple and live happily ever after. But one of my favorite things about this strip is, there’s a new twist almost every day. So we’ll see what happens.
PS: I’ve commented before that “soap opera” strips like Mary Worth and Rex Morgan go on and on for weeks and months with nothing much happening. But check out Rex Morgan today (Dec. 14)! .
“Live happily ever after” is boring
Gosh, Rina! Does that mean you’ve been there?
Just checked the spelling of “chanel(l)er” on a dictionary Website. Merriam-Webster claims the word was first used in 1987, and spells the word with one “L”. My suspicion is that the accepted US spelling would use one L and much of the English-influenced world would use double-L, as they do with “traveller”. When a word has a documented existence of less than 25 years, one is never certain about these things…
Don’t forget, Gina (and Lou and Velia) are Canadian, and it’s Gina who’s speaking.
And Lou.
Comis characters can spell as they like.
So, apparently, can message contributors who neglect to proofread.