Earlier today, redditor RenoGuy76 saw a crew installing a new sign on a building. He had to take a picture. Then he asked everyone if he should go tell them they were misspelling a word, or just leave it to be a permanent joke. Well, probably not permanent, as they’d be called to make another trip out to fix it. Some argued that the word is actually spelled correctly, especially since there’s no red line underneath it.
We don’t know whether RenoGuy76 or someone else pointed it out, or they figured it out on their own, but the letter order was corrected by the time the work crew left.
Comments (1)
I've never been in there because I just know I'd have to mention in and they'd either be cross because they already knew, or cross because they didn't know. So I just drive past it from time to time.
Even more so, it's not necessary all the time either. On a highway you have to shift to the highest gear, keep both hands on the wheel and both eyes on the road.
Where I'm from, driving stick is taught as a standard.
If drivers don't show to be sensible in the way that you simple "can't" do anything else with your hands but driving when driving, they shouldn't be in the first place. This goes for all ages.
Having said all of the above, I totally recommend a teenager's first car should be manual transmission. Having to switch gears manually really helps you get an intimate feeling for how things work inside the engine, when you can expect power and when you shouldn't, and generally how to take advantage of a car's engine.