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Re: word usage (was Re: aw_world_object_password SDK call?) (General Discussion)
Re: word usage (was Re: aw_world_object_password SDK call?) // General Discussion
Aug 12, 2002, 8:07pm
classic every time youre proved wrong what do you do? FILTER LIKE A 2 YEAR
OLD YEAH!
[View Quote]"kit" <dominicl at clear.net.nz> wrote in message
news:3D577F9E.188660AB at clear.net.nz...
> That was a stylish exit I must say!! (laughs uproariously)
> And your form is consistent with past posts too. Lol. Still slinging
epithets.
>
> eep wrote:
>
grammatical anarchy decline with each thread to your final resort of
name-calling. After watching you struggle to support your arguments with
something more than
material to uphold your claims. (i.e.: worser). I made the mistake of
concluding that with your obvious superior intellect well armed, that you
could make an
or your misdirected education that is your demise. Rather, your name-calling
discloses a thorough lack of imagination on your part.
satisfying as the experience of making fun of someone or mud-slinging, but
its slightly more socially acceptable. So, if you'd like a bit more of your
own
just going to be a snotty snob about it? Get over yourself already and lose
the attitude, twit.
post. I was simply stating the obvious which is backed up by Oxford and
Fowler (current by the way) which supports your original premise ya ning
nong. That is
survival. Learn to read for context Eep.
of the 16th and 17th centuries, and don't expect some 12-year-old interview
to support your argument. Take a basic English grammar class and get a clue.
differences. "Worst" is more extreme than "worse"; and there is no "worser"
or "worsest"
in the late 15c.: e.g. Chang'd to a worser shape thou canst not
be-Shakespeare,
Ford, 1633; For I, e'en I, the bondsman of a worser man was made-W. Morris,
1887;
people oh Lord Are sinful and sad Prenatally biassed Grow worser born
bad-Stevie
of the word is still about right: 'The word was common in the 16th and 17th
c. as a
is partly a literary survival (especially in phrases like the worser part,
sort,
by the following examples: Your poor dear wife as you uses worser nor a
dog-Dickens,
know, worse to worser-Interview (US), 1990.
>
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