Active Entries
- 1: Recommend me something to read
- 2: You may have noticed that it's Pride Month
- 3: Why Are Your Poems So Dark? by Linda Pastan
- 4: So, realistic contemporary fiction is written and set more or less in the present
- 5: Well, I just got jumped by a squirrel in my own bathroom
- 6: Just to refresh your memory of Catcher in the Rye
- 7: Geez, maybe today is not the day to hang out at /r/whatsthatbook....
- 8: Welp, they've cast the main trio for the Harry Potter tv show
- 9: I woke up today with "Video Killed the Radio Star" inexplicably running through my head
Style Credit
- Style: Dawn Flush for Compartmentalize by
Expand Cut Tags
No cut tags
no subject
Date: 2006-04-09 06:37 am (UTC)You can also say "the music drifted through the air," because sound (like light) is a wave that actually moves through the air. Or "the perfume wafted through the air."
So it's not because "people assume you're seeing it." It's because waffles don't fly. if you said "the waffles drifted through the air," the point I would understand was that you were on a spaceship—it's not relevant whether you saw them, heard them, or felt them. If you mean that you smelled them, then it's the smell that's drifting. If you mean you heard them (err, that doesn't work with waffles--how about Rice Krispies?) then it's the sound of the Rice Krispies that's drifting through the air. Now, if there were a hologram on a moving base, then you could have the image of whatever drifting through the air.
Maybe you were trying to make a different point, but I don't think the sunlight and waffles make the point you want to make. Because, as I said, sunlight goes through the trees, in a literal sense (well, in the most strictly literal sense it goes between the spaces in the branches/leaves/whatever). But waffles do not literally drift through the air. However, the smell does literally drift through the air.