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say no more!That's such a mute point.
Why does John have to pack his lips?I prefer "The Apocalypse of John."
The use of --- 's (apostrophe S) to indicate a plural.Just thought of another one, punctuation-related:
He dashed that one off quickly .....That should not be hyphenated.
I think it's actually the alpaca lipsWhy does John have to pack his lips?
By who? Forrest Gump?Have you never heard Dustin Hoffman's famous line from Meet the Fockers: "If its yellow, let it mellow. If its brown, flush it down."
It is considered "green" in not wasting water.
That's only a "pet peeve" for you? IMO that's criminal and such people should never be permitted to reproduce or own pets.People who don't believe in training/ disciplining small children and/or animals. Bad behavior isn't adorable because it comes from something small and possibly cute.
That's stupid whether it would "make more noise" or not.When a word ending in a silent "e" is emphasized by extending -- you guessed it -- the silent "e".
Example: "That puppy is so cuteeeeeeeeeeeee!"
Unfortunately, those silent "e"s aren't going to make more noise if there's more of them.
That literally translates to "laughing out loud out loud."The use of --- 's (apostrophe S) to indicate a plural.
That indicates OWNERSHIP.
Purposely misspelling words for emphasis are big on my list. This has exploded with the internet...like "great tuuuunnnne" for a song you like, or "lolol"That literally translates to "laughing out loud out loud."
Sorry - no. None of those examples are proper english.apostrophes are usually used to indicate the plural of letters, as in "p's and q's"
It is SOMETIMES considered acceptable to use apostrophe plurals in numbers and abbreviations e.g. "three 7's" , "CD's"
Sorry - no. None of those examples are proper english.
There should be no apostrophe in any of them.
Ps Qs
three 7s
CDs
Those are the proper usage.
The Brits allow an apostrophe for SINGLE letters, (not for CDs) and SINGLE numerals.Apostrophe (’) | Oxford Dictionaries
The Brits allow an apostrophe for SINGLE letters, (not for CDs) and SINGLE numerals.
That is NOT how it works in the US.
The Brits allow an apostrophe for SINGLE letters, (not for CDs) and SINGLE numerals.
That is NOT how it works in the US.