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Post by Bismarck Jr on Mar 2, 2017 17:17:34 GMT
01001001 01100110 00100000 01111001 01101111 01110101 00100000 01100011 01100001 01101110 00100000 01110010 01100101 01100001 01100100 00100000 01110100 01101000 01101001 01110011 00100000 01100111 01100101 01110100 00100000 01101100 01101001 01100110 01100101 I had a life once but I lost it. No idea where it is now.
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Post by Kal Wardin on Mar 2, 2017 17:18:52 GMT
01001001 01100110 00100000 01111001 01101111 01110101 00100000 01100011 01100001 01101110 00100000 01110010 01100101 01100001 01100100 00100000 01110100 01101000 01101001 01110011 00100000 01100111 01100101 01110100 00100000 01101100 01101001 01100110 01100101 if you can read this get "a" life. You missed the "a" Actually I double checked and a is not obligatory there
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Post by Napoleon Bonaparte on Mar 2, 2017 17:19:37 GMT
if you can read this get "a" life. You missed the "a" Actually I double checked and a is not obligatory there it's not about the "obligation" but about grammar.
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Post by Bismarck Jr on Mar 2, 2017 17:20:37 GMT
Actually I double checked and a is not obligatory there it's not about the "obligation" but about grammar. Its different in binary
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Post by Kal Wardin on Mar 2, 2017 17:21:31 GMT
Actually I double checked and a is not obligatory there it's not about the "obligation" but about grammar. Which one do you refer?
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Post by Kal Wardin on Mar 2, 2017 17:22:02 GMT
it's not about the "obligation" but about grammar. Its different in binary No there are just a lot of grammatics in English
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Post by Napoleon Bonaparte on Mar 2, 2017 17:22:48 GMT
it's not about the "obligation" but about grammar. Which one do you refer? I can't refer a thing, I am no IT expert.
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Post by Kal Wardin on Mar 2, 2017 17:23:49 GMT
No there are just a lot of grammatics in English To explain there is Cambridge, Oxford, Webster and literature just in England
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Post by Kal Wardin on Mar 2, 2017 17:27:50 GMT
No there are just a lot of grammatics in English To explain there is Cambridge, Oxford, Webster and literature just in England Ahh dumb autocorrect, literar
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Post by Bismarck Jr on Mar 2, 2017 17:34:19 GMT
No there are just a lot of grammatics in English Ah, my Binary is a bit iffy at the most. Since I grew up speaking English and German, it might be easier on me, but the letter a was needed in that sentence. But yeah, English grammar is weird, even for a Germanic languahe
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Post by Kal Wardin on Mar 2, 2017 18:16:13 GMT
No there are just a lot of grammatics in English Ah, my Binary is a bit iffy at the most. Since I grew up speaking English and German, it might be easier on me, but the letter a was needed in that sentence. But yeah, English grammar is weird, even for a Germanic languahe Well you are right according to Oxford, Webster and literar, but not by some others...
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Post by Bismarck Jr on Mar 2, 2017 18:38:21 GMT
Ah, my Binary is a bit iffy at the most. Since I grew up speaking English and German, it might be easier on me, but the letter a was needed in that sentence. But yeah, English grammar is weird, even for a Germanic languahe Well you are right according to Oxford, Webster and literar, but not by some others... Those tend to be very local dialects spoken by pirates, angry farmers and two chickens with a mild understanding of human language
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Post by Imperial RomeBall on Mar 2, 2017 19:50:07 GMT
Ah, my Binary is a bit iffy at the most. Since I grew up speaking English and German, it might be easier on me, but the letter a was needed in that sentence. But yeah, English grammar is weird, even for a Germanic languahe Well you are right according to Oxford, Webster and literar, but not by some others... If I understand correctly what you speak of...I would go with the majority. "get life" just sounds/looks weird. Funny, but weird. As a Canadian who only knows english, I've always understood it as "get a life"
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Post by Bismarck Jr on Mar 2, 2017 20:27:12 GMT
Well you are right according to Oxford, Webster and literar, but not by some others... If I understand correctly what you speak of...I would go with the majority. "get life" just sounds/looks weird. Funny, but weird. As a Canadian who only knows english, I've always understood it as "get a life" I tried talking tech to a texan once. He said "git life ya hear me?"
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Post by Kal Wardin on Mar 2, 2017 20:37:45 GMT
Well you are right according to Oxford, Webster and literar, but not by some others... Those tend to be very local dialects spoken by pirates, angry farmers and two chickens with a mild understanding of human language Actually no, official grammatics are the least used ones worldwide just by checking English speaking countries.
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