As a former vet tech who got bit by a lightly sedated cat (ironically right before his dental) and almost had to have her wedding ring cut off, I'm hoping the anesthesia is free. All they're probably doing is brushing their teeth.
I think the most interesting thing is that there are separate quotes around "anesthesia" and "free." This sign basically says "We won't tell you what we really do or how much it costs."
That's an M-dash, not a hyphen. For all you folks who use a hyphen (-) for an M-dash (&mdash) as at left: "10 Comments - Show Original Post," this is what can happen. By the way, the symbol was inserted using an ampersand joined to the official name, "mdash."
12 comments:
Ambiguity rules. Canine care: do we mean care of teeth called canines, plus other teeth, or care of canine dogs, plus feline cats?
maybe they hypnotize them instead of using anesthesia?
Cleened... haha that makes it that much better :-P
Oh, I'm sorry, cleening.. :-P
I do however think that the dog head in the D is kind of cute
As a former vet tech who got bit by a lightly sedated cat (ironically right before his dental) and almost had to have her wedding ring cut off, I'm hoping the anesthesia is free. All they're probably doing is brushing their teeth.
Oh, well now we know where the term "lucky dog" came from.
Seriously, dental work on a dog or cat w/ no anesthesia? Right.
Seriously, kik.
I can see why it's "free," since there seems to be a hanging $105 price tag that must apply to something.
I like how they changed the font for the D in dogs, as if changing it is going to make that D look more like a dog.
I think the most interesting thing is that there are separate quotes around "anesthesia" and "free." This sign basically says "We won't tell you what we really do or how much it costs."
Freaky...
They spelled anesthesia right but not cleaning...
That's an M-dash, not a hyphen. For all you folks who use a hyphen (-) for an M-dash (&mdash) as at left: "10 Comments - Show Original Post," this is what can happen. By the way, the symbol was inserted using an ampersand joined to the official name, "mdash."
Apparently not free and they use something that is not anaesthesia.
Um...yeah.
Post a Comment