The Disappearing Saint

Scott HardieIs it my imagination, or was February 14 more commonly called "St. Valentine's Day" a few decades ago, and now it's more commonly just "Valentines Day"?

I'm hardly one to remember well. As a child in the eighties, my valentines tended to take the form of cheap tiny cards showing GI JOE offering some manly yet affectionate greeting while holding an AK-47 and standing inside of a big red heart. Those were kind of surreal.

If the change did happen, maybe it has to do with our Tweeting, texting, abbreviation-happy modern culture. We can't be bothered to spell the apostrophe, let alone the Saint.

Scott Hardie • January 11 2012, 10:17pm EST
Erik BatesI've never referred to it as "St. Valentine's Day" unless referring to the St. Valentine's Day Massacre.

Why do I associate it with the Saint when it deals with murder? No clue.

Erik Bates • January 12 2012, 10:03am EST
Steve WestHallmark has transformed the "holiday" into something it was not originally intended to celebrate. I don't honor Saint Valentine on that day so I purposely refer to the day as Valentine's day to honor my wife instead.

Steve West • January 12 2012, 10:26am EST
Scott HardieOn hallmark.com, it's spelled as Valentine's Day, with an apostrophe but no saint. I wonder if they have an internal style manual dictating this with such specificity.

Scott Hardie • January 12 2012, 8:28pm EST
 

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