- Jan 20, 2020
- 2,886
- 4,280
yeah. You're right"Wait, you didn't doubt me, did you?" and "Wait, did you doubt me?"
yeah. You're right"Wait, you didn't doubt me, did you?" and "Wait, did you doubt me?"
AMULEEEEET?save file?
Yes you can make save files when you play the game.save file?
And that's just one of my very advanced features.Yes you can make save files when you play the game.![]()
I am aware that these aren't necessarily correct. It's called colloquial writing, when you focus on characters' way of speaking rather than what is grammatically correct, it makes dialogue flow better and sound more naturalI'd suggest making that say "We've come to live here"
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common knowledge rather than common sense. Common sense would be more like not putting your hand in a fire.
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the queue or a queue
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"Its crew is gone" not "It is crew is gone" (It's is short for it is or it has or it was)
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actually in this case "it's" is the possessive form of "it". "The crew belonging to it is gone"I'd suggest making that say "We've come to live here"
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common knowledge rather than common sense. Common sense would be more like not putting your hand in a fire.
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the queue or a queue
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"Its crew is gone" not "It is crew is gone" (It's is short for it is or it has or it was)
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Uh, the meaning of "it's" doesn't change with context. "it's" will always be "it is" while "its" will always be the possessive form of it...actually in this case "it's" is the possessive form of "it". "The crew belonging to it is gone"
"it is crew..." or "it has crew..." or "it was crew...." wouldn't make sense.
I "miss-appostrophed" in the heat of the momentUh, the meaning of "it's" doesn't change with context. "it's" will always be "it is" while "its" will always be the possessive form of it...
Thanks Professor.The most English thing is ditching grammatical cases, except for keeping around a residue of the genitive, reducing it to a mere possessive suffix written in an identical way as a contracted "is" even on words that historically had a different genitive than -s, except in pronouns where the historical genitive form is retained (my, mine, etc.) looking nothing like the possessive suffix except in a few coincidental cases where they do indeed end with -s, making them easily confused with other forms of the same pronoun contracted with "is".
it just need to be its without the apostrophe. I just have the bad habit of being overly descriptive. Not saying "this should be it is crew"I "miss-appostrophed" in the heat of the moment
You would still want the possessive form in this case, it would make more sense than "it is crew"
Eh. If you say so. *shrug*. I'd still say the first one even colloquially someone would say "we've". And the second, she would be saying everyone knows about the side effects, rather than something instinctual?I am aware that these aren't necessarily correct. It's called colloquial writing, when you focus on characters' way of speaking rather than what is grammatically correct, it makes dialogue flow better and sound more natural
Which is exactly what Krynh was saying...I "miss-appostrophed" in the heat of the moment
You would still want the possessive form in this case, it would make more sense than "it is crew"
Uhm, I suppose some time after 1.0 eventually comes out in the future? Unless Mr. Lemon decides to jump from 0.7 to 1.0, we are probably still a few releases away.Is there an ETA for 1.0 to get here?
Probably after .8 and .9 too, as odd as that is... :>)Uhm, I suppose some time after 1.0 eventually comes out in the future?