Grava wrote:Too many undereducated 16 year olds in the U.S., I'm afraid.
I would really like to see you type in russian, italian or chinese...
...then I can call you "uneducated".
For sure, you are quite rude.
Grava wrote:Too many undereducated 16 year olds in the U.S., I'm afraid.
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mrmr wrote:Grava wrote:Too many undereducated 16 year olds in the U.S., I'm afraid.
I would really like to see you type in russian, italian or chinese...
...then I can call you "uneducated".
For sure, you are quite rude.
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Grava wrote:However, there's a difference between...
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mrmr wrote:Grava wrote:However, there's a difference between...
You bitch about incorrect English and then you type "there's"?
Seriously?
EDIT:
Can you see how easy it is being a grammar-nazi?
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mrmr wrote:Grava wrote:However, there's a difference between...
You bitch about incorrect English and then you type "there's"?
mrmr wrote:Grava wrote:However, there's a difference between...
You bitch about incorrect English and then you type "there's"?
Seriously?
EDIT:
Can you see how easy it is being a grammar-nazi?
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Beelzer wrote:mrmr wrote:Grava wrote:However, there's a difference between...
You bitch about incorrect English and then you type "there's"?
Seriously?
EDIT:
Can you see how easy it is being a grammar-nazi?
you failed so hard there.
Contractions are possible, but they are mostly used informally in speech.
There's a fly in my soup.
There're plenty of oranges left.
There'll be a lot of people in attendance.
There's is by far the most common contraction, and it is sometimes used inadvertently with plural subjects by native speakers.
There's ten people outside!
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