The name is Mr. Hart! Today’s the day you start, so please do not get smart, and merely play your part, lest I swipe your name from my chart. You don’t scare me you steaming kettle cuz’ I’ve got more than fettle my fur and bones are made of metal I’m not some dainty petal you’re dealing with a mess of nettles Ms. Charlie I like your spunk, even if it is a load of bunk! So listen up you mangy punk, you’ll clean and swab and move this junk, or off my Pier you’ll be sunk! Go ahead and bluster and snark and sneer even with Hounds and ghosts I’ve nothing to fear you’ll never find me growing drear I’m a warrior even without a spear so why don’t you stay out of my way, dear Oh I do forget you’re new, but remember the soul I drew; your father will drink a bitter brew, if you don’t pay me what I’m due; so it’s a pleasure doing business with you. You’re nothing but seething snakeskin swine don’t worry, I’ll get the work done fine but while you plot and gloat and dine just don’t forget
(on the subject of movies, books, and games)
On the internet, you see scoring systems everywhere, especially in reviews and such. There are many ways of going about this: some use the grading system (A-F), some use the star system (1-5), but easily the most common system is the 1-10 system. Over the last few weeks, though, I’ve been starting to become critical of that system’s downsides.
There are two main ways to look at the 1-10 system, as I see it. The first and most common is to see it as an opinion meter, where 1 is awful, 5 is mediocre, and 10 is amazing. The other way to look at it is a scale from the worst to the best. In