Unfortunately, "kicks" is not gramatically incorrect as it is a noun not a verb.
"To kick" is a verb. If you can add "the" or "a" before a word, it is a noun.
Dovey, of the "never fit in at school" class.
by John Doe 81 Replies latest jw friends
Unfortunately, "kicks" is not gramatically incorrect as it is a noun not a verb.
"To kick" is a verb. If you can add "the" or "a" before a word, it is a noun.
Dovey, of the "never fit in at school" class.
Unfortunately, "kicks" is not gramatically incorrect as it is a noun not a verb
Nope, can't agree with you. I know that kicks can be a noun, but it does not have to be one. I.e.
John Doe kicks your ball.
I just don't like it used in place of shoes.
It helps to have teenagers around, you learn alot.
If you're over the hill, then I must have one foot in my grave.
Kicks..Thats been around awhile..........Your not over the hill..Just out of touch.................OUTLAW
I recall Catherine Zeta Jones in the movie "The Haunting" talking about her expensive shoes, and she says "Cost $400, but it's worth it for these savage kicks!!!" or something like that. It didn't occur to me she was using a pop phrase. Funny, when she said it I found it to be sexy, even though I hate the phrase and the movie was terrible. ;-)
JD:
My g'pa called shoes "kicks" when I was a little guy. And he's now under a hill and I'm over it (more so than youse).
All right?
CoCo
Co Co, why the big font?
I wonder if the kicks thing is regional.
JD:
Font: Can't see.
Regional: Will research.
Thanks!
CoCo
well, I felt over the hill when I was discussing John F. Kennedy with a friend and her teenage son said, "who was he? Oh yeah, he was a president or something."
I'm sure C. Zeta Jones could read the ingredients of yogurt and you'd find it sexy.