Fortunate indeed are in the speak we the English, complexity compared favoured alternate speakings of the abroad simplicity!
(I can't even begin to understand cases and grammatical gender and such, thanks to never growing up with it.)
Fortunate indeed are in the speak we the English, complexity compared favoured alternate speakings of the abroad simplicity!
It is very similar to the French "complément d'objet direct",Muirium wrote: ↑[…] I still have no idea what accusative is […]
I suppose you mean native English speakersMuirium wrote: ↑Fun fact: whenever English speakers burst into a smidge of French, it's because they want to speak in italic. Seems to be linguistic sauce.
[cough…] Seems nobody is perfectdzhoou wrote: ↑Dunno why, but I never make its/it's mistakes, nor I can understand that many people's tendency to...
Perhaps Muirium could cut those linguistics posts and paste them into a new thread in the off-topic section.derzemel wrote: ↑This is linguistics talk is turning very interesting. Can we open a separate thread for it?
I'm not quite sure.Muirium wrote: ↑People learn by voice. They sound the same, so they type the same. Which is why […]
That's what I figured also.Muirium wrote: ↑People learn by voice. They sound the same, so they type the same. Which is why English's loco woof-moo transcription rules are so dastardly bastardly.
(This is off-topic-Thority. Every thread gets to linguistics after a while, then recovers again. This one's long enough it's probably done so a few times before.)
Ooh, nice! I've never seen a black DE 1800 with 1.5u mods, let alone one with MX clears before.HzFaq wrote: ↑http://www.ebay.de/itm/Cherry-G80-1814- ... 1589453780
Kind of cool, if not a little beat up.
photekq wrote: ↑Now if only I could get a NIB 1814..