Honest to goodness
This one annoys me.
W
by John Doe 80 Replies latest jw friends
Honest to goodness
This one annoys me.
W
Colder than a well diggers butt..
uh, thanks... always nice to know when you're an annoyance
using "continual" and "continuous" synonymously [elicits more concern over ambiguity than irritation]
CoCo
Dear Coco,
Are you sure I didn't sit behind you in Language Arts, Camden Academy, Wilcox County Alabama, Miss Zelma Hines presiding?
“Continuous” refers to actions which are uninterrupted: “My upstairs neighbor played his stereo continuously from 6:00 PM to 3:30 AM.” Continual actions, however, need not be uninterrupted, only repeated: “My father continually urges me to get a job.”
I log on to JWN in the am and post continuously, though my boss's baleful stare continually urges me to cease and desist.
Tee hee hee.
Sylvia
"If you don't start cutting the muster, you'll never catch up, and I know you don't relish being in a pickle."
[compound-complex sentence]
Anonycoco
Snowbird:
Please check your PMs ...
Thanks!
CoCo
Coco,
Sylvia
Colder than a well diggers butt..
My dad liked that one. I prefer, colder than a witch's titty in a brass bra.
Saying "supposively" rather than supposedly
Saying "for all intensive purposes" rather than for all intents and purposes
The phrase "from soups to nuts" I could do without
And when people use the words "too", "also", and "as well" all in the same sentence in their comments. For example, sister over-zealous just made a comment that going out in field service is the mark of a true christian..and then brother has-to-make-a-comment-every-paragraph says "and too, also, loving our neighbor marks us as true christains, as well"
GRRR!
over the past couple of years, i've noticed a word that has been become fashionable to abuse: "literally". people seem to use it as an intensifier or to add emphasis.