I do not know what "Wol."Owl, of the Hundred Acre Woods (home also to Winnie the Pooh), was thought to be very intelligent. He was always ready to give advice. He was known as Owl in the books but understood himself to be a "Wol." I'm not sure why the correction was never made by Mr. A. A. Milne. Perhaps, he just never found the time.
All this is very similar to "The Tao of Pooh" of Benjamin Hoff.Sometimes, I wish I could simply race through a hands-free existence and that any sort of engineered solutions were unnecessary.
I understood! This style "Sdigt'"I do not know what "Wol."
It could be that Owl was not very good at spelling. Still, Milne could have been of help ...I do not know what "Wol."
Of course, I have, digitS", way back in my teen years, along with a few others you didn't come up with. Never did the Linnaeus tho. That would be a masculine name ending in Latin.@Smart Red should consider those, eh ? re: Linné, Linnaeus, Linnaei
A fellow we know, this was some time ago, was out chopping firewood. He had his Parrot on a low branch close by. A hawk took his parrot and continued across the lake, with the parrot calling: "Robert, Robert, robert!"