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People who can't use their, there, and they're.
People who can't use your and you're.
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Paper cuts, and by extension, cardboard cuts. I particularly hate these cuts when they have the audacity to occur along the crease of your fingers.
Wet socks.
When you suddenly stop trusting your own memory while spelling a word you use regularly. Example? Avoid. I spent half a minute the other day convincing myself that it wasn't spelt A-V-O-I-D.
I usually call it a mental blank, and you know what's ironic? I just had one trying to remember what I call it. :/Phobie said:1) Writers block. I hate that. I also hate that thing when you forget a word that you should know, and it's on the tip of your tongue but you just can't think of it. It's happened to me twice today.
"Ain't" is a real word. It's in the dictionary. What's wrong with it?Also, people who use 'ain't' pisses me off.
As a substitute for am not, is not, and are not in declarative sentences, ain't is more common in uneducated speech than in educated, but it occurs with some frequency in the informal speech of the educated, especially in the southern and south-central states. This is especially true of the interrogative use of ain't I? as a substitute for the formal and—to some—stilted am I not? or for aren't I?, considered by some to be ungrammatical, or for the awkward—and rare in American speech—amn't I? Some speakers avoid any of the preceding forms by substituting Isn't that so (true, the case)? Ain't occurs in humorous or set phrases: Ain't it the truth! She ain't what she used to be. It ain't funny. The word is also used for emphasis: That just ain't so! It does not appear in formal writing except for deliberate effect in such phrases or to represent speech. As a substitute for have not or has not and—occasionally in Southern speech—do not, does not, and did not, it is nonstandard except in similar humorous uses: You ain't heard nothin' yet! Dictionary.com
Sentence. That always gets me. Sentance....sentence....sent...an..en.....ce.
Oh, something similar happened to me before. lol. I think I may have said, "What the hell do you think I'm doing?"Phobie said:So I was behind a bunch of people all waiting to get on the same train, and the woman behind me started to push by me and was shouting "PLEASE COULD YOU MOVE, I'M TRYING TO GET ONTO THE TRAIN". We all were. I wanted her to fall over and bump her head.
I feel the same way. I can't say I hate dogs, but I have been bitten several times as a child, and I don't care for them. Especially huge fierce dogs that bark at me and try to get lose so they can scare the shit out of me and/or attack me.Phobie said:2) People with huge **** off dogs like pit bulls. Why? They're bred for weapons where I live, and they're vicious. If I see somebody with a staffy with a spiky collar I will go out of my way to cross the street in case it attacks me (unlikely I know, but I can't help being a bit worried about it!)
:naughty:Stigmata showed me his
Dogs dont like it when you're afraid of them.
Smudges on my glasses. </3
lol, completely incorrect. Who said that?but if they were to create a new thread on the same subject, they'd be berated for not searching to find the old thread - you know, the one they'd be berated for posting in?
I think one could argue it is you who needs to do the lightening upLighten the **** up. Jesus.
It's a widely accepted rule (whether written or unwritten) that if a thread on the subject you wish to discuss already exists, (even if it is two months old) you should discuss it in that topic instead of creating a new one. This is the case because it makes perfect sense - it prevents the creation of several seperate topics on the exact same thing, each new one created as the previous one saw a lull in activity. It prevents clutter and confusion.lol, completely incorrect. Who said that?but if they were to create a new thread on the same subject, they'd be berated for not searching to find the old thread - you know, the one they'd be berated for posting in?
People who rape the english language, I hate chat lingo with a passion. :|
Do I need to say it twice? FFS, yes. It would make no sense for us to have that kind of catch 22 here.It's a widely accepted rule (whether written or unwritten) that if a thread on the subject you wish to discuss already exists, (even if it is two months old) you should discuss it in that topic instead of creating a new one. This is the case because it makes perfect sense - it prevents the creation of several seperate topics on the exact same thing, each new one created as the previous one saw a lull in activity. It prevents clutter and confusion.
Are you seriously suggesting that, to avoid the apparently heinous crime of "resurrecting" a month-old thread, I should have created a new one on the exact same subject?
People who launch into a rant and then tell people to lighten up.
MattyDienhoff
Apparently, Vegeta is the only one who even attempted to reply to my argument, instead of jumping on the "add post author to list of pet peeves" bandwagon.People who bump old threads.
Apparently, Vegeta is the only one who even attempted to reply to my argument, instead of jumping on the "add post author to list of pet peeves" bandwagon.
What strikes me is, what is and is not acceptable on this forum appears to be governed more by the whim of it's influential members rather than any actual rules. On this forum, by general consent, posting in an "old" topic is forbidden, but cluttering up the forum by creating another topic on the exact same thing is perfectly acceptable. Am I the only one who sees how absurd this is?
Since I've gone off-topic for far too long already, here's a new pet peeve: Forums where half of the 'rules' are unwritten - except in the minds of the "old hands" who ostracize any newcomer who breaks them.
I've been on this forum for a while and generally don't like it when what I've come to learn as acceptable is crossed, like you say. But a lot of things are sort of just common sense, and there's no harm done if you didn't know that bumping threads wasn't accepted here; so stop trying to defend yourself. People will get annoyed about it but that doesn't make it your fault, it can't be helped. Just move on. I'm glad I could help you though.Since I've gone off-topic for far too long already, here's a new pet peeve: Forums where half of the 'rules' are unwritten - except in the minds of the "old hands" who ostracize any newcomer who breaks them.