(Ilk) :clap:
Wow! I had to pull the dictionary out on that one! lol Either Lee would like everyone to
THINK he is smart, or perhaps unlike CA he really did finish school! Either way, he
doesn't impress me much
I did too. I hadn't heard that word used. Seems this family has a need to look intelligent but have no sense when it comes to Caylee and the probability of her demise. They have no common sense and look ignorant.
In that email LE speaks of TM, to be disclosed at a later date. I think CA already let that fly with her "drunk" assertions about TM to that woman bloger she threatened to kick her arse..
Now the Bounty Hunter, you gotta love him, :blowkiss: he uses his own time/money to search for Caylee. He is not swayed by the A's at all. He knows they know the truth, denial or a cover up is my question with them. He tells it like it is and will do what ever he has to to keep Caylee's search ongoing. He wants this charade to end. Caylee needs the honor/respect of a proper burial.
8 dictionary results for: ilk
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) - Cite This Source - Share This
ilk1   /ɪlk/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [ilk] Show IPA Pronunciation
noun 1. family, class, or kind: he and all his ilk.
adjective 2. same.
Idiom3. of that ilk, a. (in Scotland) of the same family name or place: Ross of that ilk, i.e., Ross of Ross.
b. of the same class or kind.
Origin:
bef. 900; ME ilke, OE ilca (pronoun) the same, equiv. to demonstrative i (c. Goth is he, L is that) + a reduced form of līc like 1 ; cf. which, such
Word History: When one uses ilk, as in the phrase men of his ilk, one is using a word with an ancient pedigree even though the sense of ilk, "kind or sort," is actually quite recent, having been first recorded at the end of the 18th century. This sense grew out of an older use of ilk in the phrase of that ilk, meaning "of the same place, territorial designation, or name." This phrase was used chiefly in names of landed families, Guthrie of that ilk meaning "Guthrie of Guthrie." "Same" is the fundamental meaning of the word. The ancestors of ilk, Old English ilca and Middle English ilke, were common words, usually appearing with such words as the or that, but the word hardly survived the Middle Ages in those uses.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/ilk