Just exactly how much are you lot offering?EvilBastard wrote:Believe me, if they'd take the wages that we're offering I'd sooner hire bees than some of the botched genetic experiments that walk through the door.

Just exactly how much are you lot offering?EvilBastard wrote:Believe me, if they'd take the wages that we're offering I'd sooner hire bees than some of the botched genetic experiments that walk through the door.
Not e-fcuking-nough to put up with the idiots I'm surrounded by.SINsister wrote:Just exactly how much are you lot offering?
Oh, you think you can just walk in and get senior management salary, do you?James Blast wrote:fries and a shake?
nopeJames Blast wrote:well, at my age...
I might even be a regular guy
There is a rule re: noun plurals ending in y. If the letter before is a consonant then add-ies; if it's a vowel then it's just -s. The only word I've found as an exception to this rule is money/monies - otherwise it really works!taliabee wrote:there is a rule re plurals of nouns ending in y. if the letter before it is a consonant, then it's -ies, if it's a vowel, then its just -s. only word i've found exception to this is money/monies - otherwise it really works!
*i'll get my (pedant's) coat!*![]()
t xx
just as ye sow, ye shall...an older dafter memember wrote:Why do we live vicariously secondhand through heroes? And ultimately we'll live thirdhand lives through virtual entities. Why?
What's wrong with LIFE?
Funny how life goes. Recently i decided to get rid of my stupid DVD collexion, and just today i read Morrison's the Lord and the New Creatures, which puts in poignant words exactly the phenomena which i became intitutivelly cognizant of a bit earlier.
Time to regain our birthright at firsthand lives and firsthand connexion to our Fair Sister, people!
Why are we so afraid of life that we want to substitute living for peeping? To give up our essence on the promise of a few hours more of comfort.
No more.
You shouldn't be on the internet talking to people you hardly know on the forums, you shouldn't be reading this freaking message. You should be out there, living. Dancing naked.
God, i love life. And i love everything.
And you people, fill me with sadness. But only for a moment, for when the dance moves me away from you, so will you be a distant voice from the past.
EvilBastard wrote:Not e-fcuking-nough to put up with the idiots I'm surrounded by.SINsister wrote:Just exactly how much are you lot offering?
I do believe you did that on purpose.paint it black wrote:There is a rule re: noun plurals ending in y. If the letter before is a consonant then add-ies; if it's a vowel then it's just -s. The only word I've found as an exception to this rule is money/monies - otherwise it really works!taliabee wrote:there is a rule re plurals of nouns ending in y. if the letter before it is a consonant, then it's -ies, if it's a vowel, then its just -s. only word i've found exception to this is money/monies - otherwise it really works!
*i'll get my (pedant's) coat!*![]()
t xx
*I'll get my (pedant) coat!* Smile
t xx
Suggest you get it, 'the coat', refitted
your wellcome
i dont do caps and ' anymore cos no-one else seems to! i do know what is right but i just dont do it - that's me all overpaint it black wrote:There is a rule re: noun plurals ending in y. If the letter before is a consonant then add-ies; if it's a vowel then it's just -s. The only word I've found as an exception to this rule is money/monies - otherwise it really works!taliabee wrote:there is a rule re plurals of nouns ending in y. if the letter before it is a consonant, then it's -ies, if it's a vowel, then its just -s. only word i've found exception to this is money/monies - otherwise it really works!
*i'll get my (pedant's) coat!*![]()
t xx
*I'll get my (pedant) coat!* Smile
t xx
Suggest you get it, 'the coat', refitted
your wellcome
Hear, hear!EvilBastard wrote:But given that the majority of the emos, twockers, hoodies and chavs leaving school these days couldn't decline a word if their lives depended on it, we're stuck with bad spelling and widespread abuse of apostrophes.
FFSEvilBastard wrote:if I hear one more person using "a propos" as a synonym for "appropriate" there will be rivers of blood.
Yes, that's why it's so complicated. It wasn't designed or planned, it just happened and evolved. But evolution takes place naturally, not by agreement.EvilBastard wrote:It's a living language
You should try Gaelic then! Every bit as capricious as English.EvilBastard wrote: At least other languages have hard and fast rules
There was no standardised spelling back then. That's why Shakespeare couldn't spell his own name.nodubmanshouts wrote: The Great Vowel shift completely changed the pronunciation of the language, making the written version ridiculously different from that which is spoken today. To be honest, it probably didn't make that much sense before the shift anyway, though.
Only in China. And even there they have many vastly differing dialects. I think Mandarin is meant to be the language spoken by the most people, but they're all in one country (and London/Leeds/Hamburg). In fact, in global terms, English is probably still the most widespread language, being the first language in Britain, the US and Australasia as well as the accepted language for international air travel and the most common second choice language for people who don't speak the same first language (mainly because us Brits go abroad and expect everyone else to speak English seeing as we subjugated them all those years ago). However, Spanish and Portuguese would also have a claim as they're probably spoken in more countries than any others.nodubmanshouts wrote:isn't Chinese the most widely spoken language in the world?
If you're going to correct someone's grammar then at least get it right!paint it black wrote:There is a rule re: noun plurals ending in y. If the letter before is a consonant then add-ies; if it's a vowel then it's just -s. The only word I've found as an exception to this rule is money/monies - otherwise it really works!taliabee wrote:there is a rule re plurals of nouns ending in y. if the letter before it is a consonant, then it's -ies, if it's a vowel, then its just -s. only word i've found exception to this is money/monies - otherwise it really works!
*i'll get my (pedant's) coat!*![]()
t xx
*I'll get my (pedant) coat!* Smile
t xx
Suggest you get it, 'the coat', refitted
your wellcome
Not exactly...you speak much faster than readpsichonaut wrote: 'cause we read exsactly as we write
yay, another classicist! i love latin with a passion - didnt mind greek but, oh, latin is just the best!itnAklipse wrote:Haha, regarding rigid languages, though the classicist in me admires latin and sometimes wishes that were the norm, the freedom man in me prefers english and its problems in practice.
My favourite language remains russian, though (but i know nxt two nuthing 'bout its grammer). i studied german for 3 years and do understand most of it, but i never grew to like it because of it's rigidity. i never at least learned to use german in a free-flowing creative interesting inspiring manner, even though it probably is possible to native speakers and people like Andy. Nor was i able to read Nietzsche or Goethe in german
EDIT: What i like most about english is it's versatility, i can say it's much more versatile and 'fun' to use than finnish, the only other language i know fluently and a language i dislike quite a bit. i've no idea if other languages are versatile if you know them fluently, but from what i know of them, it doesn't appear to be so, with the particular exception of russian.
thank you, yes, i was aware of 'in re' however i would dispute the need for a colon... the colon thing is perfectly acceptable, at least as far as contract law, so for me at least it will remainstufarq wrote:
* This is the Latin word "re", meaning "[in] the matter of" and should not have a colon.
The sad thing about german classics is: To native german speakers, they sound as much like Emo-Kitsch as does cheap contemporary pop sh*te.itnAklipse wrote:i studied german for 3 years and do understand most of it, but i never grew to like it because of it's rigidity. i never at least learned to use german in a free-flowing creative interesting inspiring manner, even though it probably is possible to native speakers and people like Andy. Nor was i able to read Nietzsche or Goethe in german
Coptic's great, too, and trendy to boot!taliabee wrote:yay, another classicist! i love latin with a passion - didnt mind greek but, oh, latin is just the best!![]()
t xx
plus, of course, in business use, re: means regarding.paint it black wrote:thank you, yes, i was aware of 'in re' however i would dispute the need for a colon... the colon thing is perfectly acceptable, at least as far as contract law, so for me at least it will remainstufarq wrote:
* This is the Latin word "re", meaning "[in] the matter of" and should not have a colon.![]()
as for the rest, there some body else's mistakes, not my job to proof-read
Muphry's Law that ismarkfiend wrote:Isn't there a law of the Internet that a pedantic correction of another poster's spelling or grammar will itself contain at least one error?