I know what I did, and it was grammatically correct. I stand by it.
What you did was not grammatically correct. But as it was only your illustrative example, it's of no great concern.
As for your abuse, well, the least said the better.
I know what I did, and it was grammatically correct. I stand by it.
What you did was not grammatically correct. But as it was only your illustrative example, it's of no great concern.
As for your abuse, well, the least said the better.
Himmy, the styles are identical.
Have you sent your last 3 neurons on holiday???
Good thing I took a screenshot of your bullshyte for everyone to see how illiterate and retarrded you are.
Bye now, got things to do...
Unlike you.
You need a grammar book as well.
I used the grammatical symbol "..." It's called an ellipsis, and used to replace irrelevant words in someone's quote.
It's sometimes used as ". . .". So I didn't alter his quote, I replaced the irrelevant words with an ellipsis.
Embraced by writers from Percy Shelley to Virginia Woolf, it was in the novel that the ellipsis “proliferated most spectacularly”, according to Toner. She points to Ford Madox Ford and Joseph Conrad's use of ellipses more than 400 times in their 1901 novel The Inheritors.
A "passing resemblance" means a slight or superficial similarity in appearance, similar to the meaning of "a faint resemblance" or "somewhat similar". The term suggests that two things or people are alike enough for you to notice, but not strikingly or identically so.