This broke my brain... please explain?Ignignoct said:I COULD CARE LESS!
I COULD CARE!
I COULD!
COULD!
...
That renders a 2 second mandatory glare when people say it around me.
''like totally!'' D=MaxTheReaper said:Like, I know, right? It's like, so like...I dunno, you know?Monkfish Acc. said:Like, really?
Like yeah!
...Oh god someone please shoot me.
I agree to a point but often I say this to make sure someone is on the same page as me and if they don't know what I'm saying then I clarify or expand on my idea that that they do know what I am sayingTenmar said:Since the topic is under construction I will put a phrase that always bother me.
"Ya know what I mean." or "Ya know what I'm saying" or just "ya know."
These type of phrases are just said by people who do not know how to properly express themselves and rely on the listener's intelligence to make sense of the matter. It also makes the person seem more intelligent but in reality they are the idiot and does not fully understand the topic they are talking about.
MaxTheReaper said:See, nobody says "mate" over here. Instead, they say "dawg."sorry user name taken. said:''like totally!'' D=MaxTheReaper said:Like, I know, right? It's like, so like...I dunno, you know?Monkfish Acc. said:Like, really?
Like yeah!
...Oh god someone please shoot me.
''O.M.G'' ''EPIC!!''
''Innit mate'' ''yeah i know mate'' ''mate''
''you awight mate?'' ''ello ducky!!''
AGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
I am not your pet. Stop calling me one, you stupid dicks.
I agree with the rest, though.
That makes sense, I guess. I was really wondering why he took one word of the phrase and only left COULD!MaxTheReaper said:The proper statement is, "I couldn't care less."Flap Jack452 said:This broke my brain... please explain?Ignignoct said:I COULD CARE LESS!
I COULD CARE!
I COULD!
COULD!
...
That renders a 2 second mandatory glare when people say it around me.
By saying "I could care less," what you're actually saying is, "I care, because I am capable of caring even less," instead of, "I do not care."
That's not what the Latin prefix "de-" means. In Latin, de is "down from" or "away from", it's a preposition similar to ex (from/out from) or ad (to/toward/at), so devoid means "down from void" i.e. it's full of nothing, it doesn't exist.avidabey said:I mean think about it: de-, to make not, void, empty.
*cowers* Sorry master, it's fixed, it's fixed! Please don't punish me!MaxTheReaper said:Way to break the formatting! Gosh!
*whimper*MaxTheReaper said:Next time I get the baseball bat!Flap Jack452 said:*cowers* Sorry master, it's fixed, it's fixed! Please don't punish me!MaxTheReaper said:Way to break the formatting! Gosh!
You have been warned.