Edward
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- Sep 18, 2012
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...or maybe just better at Latin?
etiam Latini,. An sit aliqua idea, quae Sparrowhawke dicit Scriptura? Nimis sum defessus ut ad veterum Forum, lol.
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...or maybe just better at Latin?
I aint ever make a 'stake in iiinglish
etiam Latini,. An sit aliqua idea, quae Sparrowhawke dicit Scriptura? Nimis sum defessus ut ad veterum Forum, lol.
From my understanding, aint is now a real word.
When I was a kid, some time in the latter part of the last century, we used to say "You aint supposed to say aint because aint aint in the dictionary". Turns out it is in the dictionary, although it says it's only used in some dialects. And here's something else interesting. When I wrote "aint" above, the spell checker in Firefox marked it as a spelling mistake, but if I change it to "ain't" there's no problem. I thought the apostrophe had been dropped, but maybe I'm wrong (it happens, albeit rarely).
The TOG
So "ain't" wrong? Guess I've been doing it wrong all those years then.
(But at least I can tell "there", "their" and "they're" apart, unlike many native speakers. :tongue)
Btw, why is it that extraversion is considered more desirable than introversion in western cultures?
Uh.. so it's right to write it with an apostrophe? Oh well, I'll just keep doing it the way I always did.I thought "ain't" was wrong, but it seems that it is the right way to spell it.
Yeah, as long as they are nouns it's easy: affect = emotion, effect = result of something.Do you know the difference between affect and effect. Those two confuse me.
Maybe they just behave in a way that gets them more attention.I think it's probably because extroverts can appear to be more friendly and sociable, whereas introverts sometimes seem anti-social. Neither is true, but it can sometimes seem like they are.
The TOG
Holy crap, I've been lied to all my years taking English!Here's something interesting about English people probably don't know. Everybod knows that the contraction for "is not" is "isn't" and that "aren't" is a contraction for "are not". But what's the contraction for "am not"... "amn't"??? That doesn't sound right. I have an unabridged dictionary at home, and decided to look it up. Turns out that there was once such a word as "amn't", but it was pronounced "ant", just like the insect. Over time the a lengthened and it becaim "ain't" and after even more use, the apostrophe was dropped, so today we have "aint". Contrary to popular belief, it is gramatically correct to say "I aint ", but "you aint", "he aint", "she aint", "it aint", "we aint" and "they aint" are all incorrect.
The TOG
Claudya:...Uh.. so it's right to write it with an apostrophe? Oh well, I'll just keep doing it the way I always did.
That's wild. The dictionary says yes though it doesn't make sense to me. Apostrophes are used where there are missing letters, so if ain't is a contraction of am not then I would think there would be more apostrophes.