
Contractions are awkward for me. I certainly could use them if I want to, I just prefer not to. It is a pointless habit that I should be more comfortable with breaking sometimes.
Another habit that I should indulge in less is the use of six different cultivars of the same species for my ‘Six on Saturday’ posts. I have done it for camellias, rhododendrons, roses, flowering cherries, bearded iris, African daisies and a few other species, including various annuals. I refrained from featuring six azaleas simultaneously for yesterday morning, although I did feature three bearded iris, which comprised half of the ‘Six on Saturday’. I should remember to limit azaleas to three pictures, or preferably two or one, if I feature them on ‘Six on Saturday’ later, as they continue to bloom.
These two pictures of azaleas were omitted from my ‘Six on Saturday’ post yesterday because, as the theme implies, such posts are limited to six pictures. Perhaps I should have used one or both of these pictures instead of one or two pictures of bearded iris. It is too late now.
The first azalea above is variegated. Its leaves resemble those of variegated andromeda. I do not remember what cultivar it is, although the label remains attached to at least one specimen. At least three specimens inhabit the same landscape together. They are blooming better this spring than they have in the past, perhaps because, annually, they are bigger and more established than they were for their previous season.
Relative to the many azaleas here, the second azalea below is nothing special. I like this particular picture because it happens to show a bee visiting the bloom. My pictures tend to be more technical than artistic. Perhaps I should try to include a bit of wildlife sometimes.

It does seem odd for a person who grew up speaking English to not use contractions. They are so hard to learn and manage for some people whose languages are structured so differently from English.
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Hey, your comment landed . . . without the comment that it was replying to. What the heck? Anyway, kids I grew up with who learned American English as a second or third language are more proficient and more comfortable with contractions than I am. They find it amusing that I do not use them, but have no problem using them in French and perhaps Spanish. I think that I can use them in other languages because I did not know that they were contractions when I learned them, even though they have apostrophes.
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You never did say why you don’t use them. But you grew up speaking English as your first language?
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Yes, I did not learn more than a few words of Italian, and did not study French and Spanish until high school.
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So your family background is Italian but you didn’t speak it as a child?
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My ancestors have been here for so long that ‘the Old Country’ refers to Sunnyvale. The closest that I have ever been to Italy is North Fourteenth Street in San Jose.
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Ha, OK. I don’t know San Jose but maybe that’s Little Italy.
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It is the bigger of a few Little Italies.
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