May I make an interjection? Have any of you read the sequel to The Shining? The title is Doctor Sleep:
[FONT=Helvetica, Arial]Doctor Sleep [/FONT][FONT=Helvetica, Arial]The Long-Awaited Sequel to [/FONT][FONT=Helvetica, Arial]
The Shining [/FONT]
[FONT=Helvetica, Arial]
Dan Torrance -- all grown up, yet still haunted by his childhood stay at the Overlook Hotel -- now uses his telekinetic "Shining" powers to aid the ill and dying. But when Dan befriends a twelve year old girl with abilities even stronger than his own, the duo become targets of the True Knot, a cult of RV-driving, polyester-clad immortals who survive by torturing "Shining" children to death. The long wait for Dan's story fulfills its promise, a suspenseful, supernatural odyssey bearing the heartfelt human drama of Stephen King's finest work. [/FONT]
School House Rock--Interjections
When Reginald was home with flu, (uh huh)
The doctor knew just what to do:
He cured the infection,
With one small injection,
While Reginald uttered some interjections:
Ouch! That hurts!
Yow! That's not fair, giving a guy a shot down there!>
Interjections
Show excitement,
Or emotion.
They're generally set apart from a sentence
By an exclamation point,
Or by a comma when the feeling's not as strong. Mmmm...
Though Geraldine played hard to get, (uh huh)
Geraldo knew he'd woo her yet.
He showed his affection,
Despite her objections,
And Geraldine hollered some interjections:
Oh! I've never been so insulted in all my life!
Hey! You're kinda cute!>
Interjections
Show excitement,
Or emotion.
They're generally set apart from a sentence
By an exclamation point,
Or by a comma when the feeling's not as strong.
So when you're happy
Or sad
Or frightened
Or mad
Or excited
Or glad
An interjection starts a sentence right!
The game was tied at seven all, (uh huh)
When Franklin found he had the ball.
He made a connection,
In the other direction,
And the crowd starting shouting out interjections:
Interjections
Show excitement,
Or emotion.
They're generally set apart from a sentence
By an exclamation point,
Or by a comma when the feeling's not as strong.
So when you're happy
Or sad
Or frightened
Or mad
Or excited
Or glad
An interjection starts a sentence right!
Interjections
Show excitement,
Or emotion.
They're generally set apart from a sentence
By an exclamation point
or by a comma when the feeling's not as strong.
Interjections!
Show excitement!
Or emotion!
Hallelujah!
Hallelujah!
Hallelujah... yeah!!