Between you & me 1 bottle will never make it.
"Halcion or triazolam, an insomnia drug" per Wikipedia.
"
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Between you & me 1 bottle will never make it.
"Halcion or triazolam, an insomnia drug" per Wikipedia.
"
Oh, these bells.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7oOlAAIxXIg
Just an FYI. Haldol [[tradename for haloperidol) is infrequently used now due to its side effects profile and the availability of newer and better tolerated atypical antipsychotics. The injectable form of haldol[[IM or IV) is still used often for aggitation. Halcion [[trade name for triazolam), a sleep aid, is presribed less frequently now due to the availability of better tolerated meds such as Ambien [[zolpidem).....SO, rest assured that the halcyon days we experienced at St. Jude were real...no haldol necessary.:D
LOL - you're right. I'm so used to hearing those two names in the news I've taken to mentally interchanging them!
Gee whiz--it's quite amazing how much "back n' forth" one little adjective in a thread can produce! Now, SJS students...do we all recall how to diagram "halcyon" in a sentence?
Yeah--dose bells!
Yes. If you mean halcyon as an adjective it would be drawn on a diagonal line under the noun as its modifier[[either as the subject or object).
i.e. In the sentence "Everyone experienced halcyon days at St. Jude."
"Everyone" is the subject, "experienced" is the past tense verb, and "days" is the object modified by the adjective halcyon.
It would look like: Everyone/experienced/days with "halcyon" under days along with the preposition "at St. Jude".
Thank you Sr. Mary John and Sr. Robert Marie for all your patience in showing 4th and 5th graders sentence structure.
Dey would be prowd of yur speling, gramer and sentance struckture.
An' I reads real good also.
Yous guys shud gets stars on yer fourheds.
Them guys wur tha smart wons!