My Palin name is horrific and splatterpunk:
Shove Maggot Palin
You would be the blacksheep of the Palin family.
Wash ,'The Message'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
My Palin name is horrific and splatterpunk:
Shove Maggot Palin
You would be the blacksheep of the Palin family.
Grammar question that I'm kind of ashamed to ask, but I'm tired: "I'm x-ing, aren't I?" or "I'm x-ing, don't I?", or something else I didn't think about?
Aren't I. If you mean, like, "I'm walking, aren't I?" It would be, "I walk, don't I?" not that you would say it with that verb, but do you see what I'm saying?
Aren't I. If you mean, like, "I'm walking, aren't I?" It would be, "I walk, don't I?" not that you would say it with that verb, but do you see what I'm saying?
Yes, thank you! Now I understand why I couldn't see it - I couldn't figure out if I want to write x-ing or just x (the verb).
"I'm x-ing, aren't I?" or "I'm x-ing, don't I?"
The first. "I am x-ing, aren't I?" Both "am" and "are" are forms of "to be".
The second version would be "I do X, don't I?", where the first "do" is kind of redundant in English.
My real name gets me WMD Cessna Palin. This rocks.
My board name is Plop Hero Palin
I can't believe I couldn't remember that rule. It's one of the basic things we learn here, in the second year of studying English in elementary schools (5th grade) - in Hebrew, there's only past, present and future. There's no progressive tense, or perfect tense or all of the "have had" things.
Skein Chug Palin
And with my board name I got Knife Pile Palin.
It's funny, because I was never really taught English grammar, so I'll be damned if I know what form is what, officially...
Has anyone else taken any Japanese? I'm finding the grammar really interesting -- you seem to use the same word for "I eat" and "you eat" and "you are going to eat" and "I am going to eat"; and the same words for "What are you going to eat" and "What would you like to eat", which seems like it'd make learning it very simple -- but then it turns out it makes up for simple verbs by using complicated nouns.
"I eat" and "you eat" is the same verb in Hebrew as well (though the "you" changes according to the gender, but it's still the same to the different "you"s).