I did that on purpose.jazz lady said:No, YOU'RE wrong.![]()
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I think you missed one.julz20684 said:Fixed for the intellect you claim to have. Your welcome.
You no it.otter said:Your right![]()
jazz lady said:Actually, it's "you're welcome." And yes, you're welcome.![]()
greyhound said:I didn't reed this hole thang...but wear is Speedy? She would love this!
greyhound said:I didn't reed this hole thang...but wear is Speedy? She would love this!
Speedy70 said:BTW, I've posted in this thread several times already. Just like everyone else, you didn't notice.![]()
Speedy70 said:too lazy.![]()
jazz lady said:THIS one scares me more than you.![]()
Some people spell congratulations as congradulations. :shrug:sockgirl77 said:It bothers me when someone types Congrads instead of Congrats.
waqqy said:Wow!!!
32 pages long.
Is everyone smarter than they were before the whole thing started.
Speedy70 said:I have a friend that calls it a medium.I also know someone that referes to manila envelopes as vanilla envelopes.
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How about are and our? How could you possibly confuse the two unless you are almost completely illiterate?SamSpade said:Yeah, I've got a bunch of those.
Like "jive" and "jibe". "Jive" is lies, BS. "Jibe" means to be in agreement with, as in, doesn't jibe with the facts.
"Gamut" and "gambit". A gambit is a gamble. A gamut is a range, as in it runs the gamut from A to Z.
Those are the first two that come to mind.
Actually one that amuses me is the English use of "quite" as in, the food was quite good. To the English, this means slightly less than good and is not synonymous with the American use of "rather". I just think it's funny when I see a movie or TV show and a Brit politely saying "quite good" when in reality he's saying "it sucked".