🌟🏡 Welcome to 10882 Hook Ct in New Market! Don’t miss this gem in Lake Linganore’s The Hamptons village, almost like new!
Why you’ll love it:
🛏️ 4 bedrooms & 🛁 3 full baths
🏠 Over 2600 sq ft of beautifully finished space
🍳 Open concept kitchen with stainless steel appliances & quartz counters
🕺 Luxury vinyl plank flooring
🎱 Spacious walkout basement with a rec room, bedroom, and bath
🌲 Backs to undisturbed nature for that cozy in-the-woods feel
Outdoor bliss:
🌳 Large deck with a covered porch for entertaining
🏡 Spacious fenced backyard with room to play
🚲 Extra custom-built storage under the deck
Plus:
🚗 Two-car garage
🔧 $50k+ in thoughtful upgrades since 2022
💼 **Assumable VA loan at 4.75%**
This is not just a house; it’s a lifestyle upgrade! Book your tour today and make it yours! 🗝️🏠 #LakeLinganoreLiving #NewMarketHome 🌲🏡✨
People may not burn their favorite music onto Compact Discs anymore, but one thing’s for sure: discs will always be a thing. But how is it supposed to be spelled? Is it “disc” or “disk”? A “disc” can be any round, flat object. But…so can a “disk”. So, how exactly are you supposed to know when to use disc over disk?
There’s no real convenient origin story as to the distinction between the two forms: both come from the Latin “discus” (which, in Greek, is spelled “diskos”). The oldest known English language references date back to the mid-1600s, with the word being spelled with a k, which most lexicologists attribute to the already-set precedents of other similar words that end with -isk (“frisk”, “whisk”, etc.). But by the 1700s, some folks started using disc instead thanks to the influence of the word’s Latin predecessor. For the next few centuries, the only thing that might’ve determined with any sort of consistency how you wrote it, disc or disk, was where you lived: Americans favored the version with a “k”, while the UK preferred to end theirs with a “c”. But even that rule-of-thumb wasn’t set-in-stone.
Nowadays, it’s still a toss-up between disc & disk, no matter what you’re talking about. For instance, the Mayo Clinic refers to ruptured vertebrae as herniated disks (using the k form of the word), while the American Association of Neurological Surgeons calls them herniated discs. In certain cases, though, one spelling can be so common that the other is usually considered incorrect. A perfect example is the music industry’s use of the compact disc, with the c form of the word having been the norm since round records came to prominence in the late 1800s (not to mention the disc jockeys who spin those discs). Also, the correct way to describe a Frisbee is as a flying disc. But then, there’s the floppy disk, the magnetic computer component created by software engineers, for which the k form not only took hold for the square disks, themselves, but also the disk drives into which they’re inserted.
There’s no clear logic explaining those usages, they were all pretty much just spelling trends that caught on. So, it isn’t always easy to know which items might be discs & which might be disks. But Merriam-Webster does offer a helpful tip to help you out: compact discs (and flying ones) are round, just like the letter c. Floppy disks are all about lines & edges, just like the letter k.
Got a Mundane Mystery you’d like solved? Send me an email: [email protected]!
BROUGHT TO YOU BY: BPG USA
It may be just a date on the calendar to a lot of folks, but have you ever stopped to wonder: why is January 1 when we mark the beginning of a new year?
As with most things, it all goes back to the Romans. The Romans had a deity named Janus, god of doors & gates, and he had 2 faces: one looking forward, one looking back. Julius Caesar thought that January, which was named for Janus, should be the “doorway” to a new year. So, when Caesar created the Julian calendar, January 1 became the first day of the year.
Once Rome had fallen & Christianity began to spread across Europe, celebrating the new year was considered a pagan thing to do. So, the first day of the year got moved to more Christian-friendly dates. Yes, “dates”. Because some countries started their year on March 25, the date commemorating when Mary found out she was pregnant with Jesus, while others used Christmas Day (Dec. 25), and still others used Easter Sunday. Well, by the Middle Ages, the Julian year had become so misaligned with the solar year (thanks to an error in the Julian calendar), that the difference had grown to a whopping 10 days by 1582. That snafu meant that the Spring Equinox (and Easter) had to keep getting moved up. So, Pope Gregory XIII, who’d had enough of constantly resetting the holiday, came up with a new calendar that featured one “leap” day every four years, as a mechanism to keep things in line. And, in the process, he returned January 1 to its place as the first day of the year.
Most Catholic countries were quick to adopt the Gregorian calendar, but others…not so much. Protestants thought they were being tricked into worshiping on incorrect days. Eastern Rite churches were more focused on maintaining their traditions, so they kept the Julian calendar for several centuries more. Russia didn’t make the change to the Gregorian calendar until after the 1917 revolution. And even today, the Eastern Orthodox Church still follows the traditional and/or revised Julian calendar to set its liturgical year.
But eventually, the Protestant nations did make the switch to the Gregorian calendar. And here we are, well over 400 years later, and things still seem to be in order. (I guess you could say Pope Gregory XIII didn’t “drop the ball”!)
Got a Mundane Mystery you’d like solved? Send me an email: [email protected]!
BROUGHT TO YOU BY: BPG USA