Thanks to Terry for:
I don’t think this is an English fail. “Electricty” has a period after it, showing it is abbreviated.
in the space of that period, they could have put in the missing I.
And on the flip side of the cover, electricity is spelled out entirely. Weird.
I didn’t notice that. It’s a definite English fail.
The creator of this cover probably hangs out with Arthur Weasley from the Harry Potter books. That might explain the confusion.
Somehow a fail is all the more failsome when pressed into a chunk of iron.
It’s a fail, that is actually a small stone not a period. There is another stone almost in line with the first between the C and T.
Why would you abbreviate on one side but not the other? It’s not like it’s a trapezoid!
L, You’d be surprised at what is made to be a trapezoid these days
on the bottom one it says “ELECTRICLTY” And on the top it says “ELECTRICTY” So both are spelled incorrectly. Electricity is the correct spelling.
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I don’t think this is an English fail. “Electricty” has a period after it, showing it is abbreviated.
in the space of that period, they could have put in the missing I.
And on the flip side of the cover, electricity is spelled out entirely. Weird.
I didn’t notice that. It’s a definite English fail.
The creator of this cover probably hangs out with Arthur Weasley from the Harry Potter books. That might explain the confusion.
Somehow a fail is all the more failsome when pressed into a chunk of iron.
It’s a fail, that is actually a small stone not a period. There is another stone almost in line with the first between the C and T.
Why would you abbreviate on one side but not the other? It’s not like it’s a trapezoid!
L, You’d be surprised at what is made to be a trapezoid these days
on the bottom one it says “ELECTRICLTY” And on the top it says “ELECTRICTY” So both are spelled incorrectly. Electricity is the correct spelling.