I was thinking just that. The Nuclear Energy Commeerative celebrating 40 years since Two Mile Island.
They are talking about the Glow in the Dark Dinosaur coins.... http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/116836-Canada-Gets-Glow-in-the-Dark-Dinosaur-Coins Ruben
the author obviously doesn't know that "scratch and sniff" is a Benin thing http://www.blackmountaincoins.com/coins/Get-High-on-Numismatics/subpage247.html
With all due respect, I was making light of your spelling "Canadian" and so add "Commemorative" to the list. I must say you have many other spelling mistakes and for some reason no one dares to tell you, so I will. I hope you find this helpful.
We really do need a spell checker if only for inadvertent typos. I know my posts sometime look like a drunk monkey wrote them, and it probably would surprise many here to know I won many spelling bees when I was younger. My issue is hands of a guy 6'3" trying to type on a dang keyboard that must have been designed for a 5 foot tall chick. This is why I give passes on obvious typos as well. Its easy to double strike a key when trying to type, and no spell checker on here makes it easy to not see it necessarily. Btw, I am with Rigo. I would be interested in hearing people's thoughts on the glow in the dark coins. Chris
Doesn't your web browser come with a spell checker? And as for that sentence in the article saying that the US Mint "has worked with a technology partner to develop a sophisticated new aromatically enhanced coin that is much cooler than a glow-in-the-dark dinosaur quarter" ... hmm, chocolate coins have been around for a while. Christian
Do to constraints in other reporting requirements at work, I use an older browser. So no, no spell checker.
Yes, I know, but do to specific types of reports here at work I am not allowed to use it, and am stuck with a pretty old version of IE. This is due to many reports we have being unable to be called up on modern browsers. Its a limitation on my end, but still a limitation. Its frustrating, too, since I am usually very strict in my grammar and find typos in any kind of professional correspondence highly annoying.