I was in line behind a young man who wasn’t wearing a shirt. He had tattoos on both arms, and a large (maybe 7”x12”) tat in the middle of his back. It was lovely—a stylized cross with a crown of thorns and the words, “King of Kings.”
It would have truly been lovely if his tattoo artist or the person who designed the tattoo had a basic knowledge of the possessive apostrophe. You see, this unfortunate fellow will go through the rest of his life with a massive punctuation error written on his back because the phrase was written like this: King of King’s.
Ugh. The way it’s written implies possession, not King of all kings.
This experience, plus the several images online with Tat-fail examples, point out a possible new market for writers and editors: tattoo parlors. Obviously they have a need. Why don’t you give them a call?
BTW, the error in the photo is the lack of an "e" in the word awesome. Also, if you're going to get a tattoo, please be sure to do a spelling, grammar, and punctuation check before you put anything in stone, or rather in flesh.
3 comments:
LOL. I think I'll apply as I am looking for work. This is too funny.
That is so funny and yet so sad. I've seen mistakes on Tattoos and I feel so bad.
CD
My hair lady has a huge tat down her upper arm of a pirate girl with a peg leg. Now she regrets the woody appendage and is going to some expense to have it replaced with a real girl's leg. I hate tatoos.
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