As long as you know the difference between your and you're, as well as its and it's, we cool.
14 0 Replyif you write "could of" i will follow you around the internet and cyberbully you
23 0 ReplyYouz too could of been helpful yesterday.
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And break vs brake. (break=bust something, brake=what stops your car.)
The number of car sub posters that get that wrong is too damn high.
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Nowadays everybody wanna talk like they got something to say But nothin comes out when they move their lips Just a buncha gibberish
10 0 Replymofoggers acting like they forgot about dre!
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Apparently
😂
10 0 ReplyQuite often seen with spaces or hyphens.
As an aside I saw 'check, mate' today.
6 0 ReplyIn Australia, this means putting your friend into check.
9 0 ReplyOr asking for the bill at a restaurant where you're friends with the waiter (though if I was going to be anal, afaik we spell it 'cheque' in the UK / Australia where people use 'mate')
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That seems fine to me. I've heard "check and mate" a bunch, so this isn't too much of a stretch for me.
1 0 ReplyThey clearly meant checkmate though.
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Another fun fact that is equally shocking: you can't spell Wednesday as "When's Day".
4 0 ReplyDid you know "nonetheless" and "nevertheless" are each one word? I remember when I found that out
2 0 Reply