Talk:Gladrigal

We have been doing this show for four years, it has caught on, and everything has to start somewhere. I just figured people would build on the term “Gladrigal” over time as it continues to take on a life of its own.

The term “Gladrigal” is, literally, as your comment suggests, a term made up in school one day (by parents, but it did occur in a school), sort of like hundreds of thousands of words in the English language, and 25% of the words used by Shakespeare. So, I understand the comment, but the progress of the English language is one of creativity. And the posting wasn’t meant as a nonsense post by a schoolkid just goofing around. :-)

In candor, I rarely post to Wikipedia, but use it daily. So I will remove the deletion message, as per your permission to do so, as a manifestation of my objection to deletion, but “objection” seems too strong a word. I so love Wikepedia that if this post is somehow wrong under your rules, I respect that. I think “Gladrigal” is a word that may catch on as other high schools hear how much money we make with our show. I know several schools are considering copying our format. Madrigals, which are a Christmas variation on the theme, are very strong here. But only time will tell. So, no offense taken. I did as good a job as I knew how to do. Perhaps I could ask others in our community to log on to Wikipedia and improve the entry with their own insights over time? (unsigned contribution by User:AbstractArtStudio)
 * See your talk page.HeartofaDog (talk) 23:07, 30 September 2009 (UTC)
 * This subject is not independently notable so I've merged it to the school article.HeartofaDog (talk) 10:10, 3 October 2009 (UTC)