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Poll: Who leads PSU out of the tunnel against auburn?

Who is our new head coach versus auburn?

  • Bryan Harsin (He’s in town. Convenient.)

    Votes: 1 6.3%
  • Jay

    Votes: 5 31.3%
  • Scrap

    Votes: 3 18.8%
  • FLO

    Votes: 4 25.0%
  • Sandy (Why delegate?)

    Votes: 3 18.8%

  • Total voters
    16

BobPSU92

Well-Known Member
May 6, 2015
44,692
58,336
1
Based on Dan Patrick’s unique insight, Franklin should be in La-La Land come kickoff versus auburn. Sandy needs to channel her brilliant leadering and act fast. Who takes the reins for PSU versus auburn?
 
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7e43f82b410cb6d09816e62a8fab34a292f37a0a.gifv
 
Based on Dan Patrick’s unique insight, Franklin should be in La-La Land come kickoff versus auburn. Sandy needs to channel her brilliant leadering and act fast. Who takes the reigns for PSU versus auburn?

Pay attention Bob....


GettyImages-91610463-1024x700.jpg
 
Based on Dan Patrick’s unique insight, Franklin should be in La-La Land come kickoff versus auburn. Sandy needs to channel her brilliant leadering and act fast. Who takes the reigns for PSU versus auburn?
Bob, I wouldn't point this out for just any poster, but you are so meticulous, I figure you care about such detail.
***let it be noted -- Bob made the correction and remains one of our most interesting, best posters.

The correct word here is "reins", not "reigns"

The words "rein" and "reign" are homophones. Reign is as a noun that refers to "the period during which a sovereign rules" or a verb that means "to hold royal office; rule as king or queen." Rein is a noun that refers to "a long, narrow strap attached at one end to a horse’s bit" or a verb that means "to check or guide by pulling on its reins."

"reign" vs "rein". What is the difference? - The Grammar Guide

prowritingaid.com/grammar/1000154/Reign-vs-Rein--What-is-the-difference
 
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Bob, I wouldn't point this out for just any poster, but you are so meticulous, I figure you care about such detail.

The correct word here is "reins", not "reigns"

The words "rein" and "reign" are homophones. Reign is as a noun that refers to "the period during which a sovereign rules" or a verb that means "to hold royal office; rule as king or queen." Rein is a noun that refers to "a long, narrow strap attached at one end to a horse’s bit" or a verb that means "to check or guide by pulling on its reins."

"reign" vs "rein". What is the difference? - The Grammar Guide

prowritingaid.com/grammar/1000154/Reign-vs-Rein--What-is-the-difference

Shit. I know better and just typed without thinking. Of course I’ll fix it. Thanks. This will stick with me much of the day. I hate, hate, hate typos.

Chalk it up to my fear of homophones. o_O
 
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Gotta be Jay! We need a scapegoat and there's never been somebody we loved to blame more than JayPa!
 
Bob, I wouldn't point this out for just any poster, but you are so meticulous, I figure you care about such detail.
***let it be noted -- Bob made the correction and remains one of our most interesting, best posters.

The correct word here is "reins", not "reigns"

The words "rein" and "reign" are homophones. Reign is as a noun that refers to "the period during which a sovereign rules" or a verb that means "to hold royal office; rule as king or queen." Rein is a noun that refers to "a long, narrow strap attached at one end to a horse’s bit" or a verb that means "to check or guide by pulling on its reins."

"reign" vs "rein". What is the difference? - The Grammar Guide

prowritingaid.com/grammar/1000154/Reign-vs-Rein--What-is-the-difference
C'mon man, rain it in:p
 
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Bob, I wouldn't point this out for just any poster, but you are so meticulous, I figure you care about such detail.
***let it be noted -- Bob made the correction and remains one of our most interesting, best posters.

The correct word here is "reins", not "reigns"

The words "rein" and "reign" are homophones. Reign is as a noun that refers to "the period during which a sovereign rules" or a verb that means "to hold royal office; rule as king or queen." Rein is a noun that refers to "a long, narrow strap attached at one end to a horse’s bit" or a verb that means "to check or guide by pulling on its reins."

"reign" vs "rein". What is the difference? - The Grammar Guide

prowritingaid.com/grammar/1000154/Reign-vs-Rein--What-is-the-difference

So you're saying Bob likes homos?
 
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Reactions: BobPSU92
Shit. I know better and just typed without thinking. Of course I’ll fix it. Thanks. This will stick with me much of the day. I hate, hate, hate typos.

Chalk it up to my fear of homophones. o_O
You were right the first time. You meant who would rule over the team and who would bestowed the ruler.....right? Sorta like Chas the Emperor Knoll.😉
 
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Based on Dan Patrick’s unique insight, Franklin should be in La-La Land come kickoff versus auburn. Sandy needs to channel her brilliant leadering and act fast. Who takes the reins for PSU versus auburn?
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gandalf-the-white.jpg
 
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