If you use the word 'hubby' to refer to your husband I'm assuming you're:
- white
- late 30s to 40s
- overweight
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If you use the word 'hubby' to refer to your husband I'm assuming you're:
Dark Souls PvP is for people who can't handle a real fighting game.
Spicy but I'll allow it
Excusing folks with dyscalculia, those of you who speak proudly and openly about how bad you are at math can die in a fire.
Functioning adults are expected to read. You should also be able to calculate reasonable numbers and percentages without needing the calculator on your phone to know what 20% is; Or what one half of 3/8 is.
If someone is speaking proudly of how bad they are at math they most likely didn't have dyscalculia. Most of us that do have it speak angrily or resignedly about how bad we are at math. What really gets me is when people proudly blame their "dyslexia" for why they are bad at math.
I hate when people say "rezourceful" instead of "resourceful." Also I don't care if it's spelled "pronunciation", I will spell it "pronounciation" and say it the same way. You don't "pronunce" words, you "pronounce" them.
I don't like that in UK English, they say people are "at hospital" and "he went to ground." No, he's at "a/the hospital" and he went to "the ground." Pace is not something you have, it's something you set. Collective singular nouns take a singular verb. Manchester City is, not Manchester City are.
They're called Lego pieces or just "Lego", not "Legos". It is the official way to say it, but more importantly I got used to it while growing up. I would always say "Lego ___", for instance Lego sets, Lego bricks, Lego pieces: "Pass me the Lego brick." The only time I would say "Lego" is as a group: "Bring the Lego upstairs." Everytime I hear "Legos" my eye twitches because it sounds so wrong. Not sure where I picked this up but I will die on this hill.
That's the official recommendation from LEGO as well. I found a piece of paper that mentions this in the box of one of my dad's old LEGO sets.
They don't want their brand to be turned into a generic word. It's for the same reason Google doesn't like it if you refer searching the internet as "googling" regardless of which search engine you use.
I always hated how most people don't pronounce the first R in "February". It just sounded kinda weird to me.
I propose we replace the word entirely to something easier to spell and pronounce, such as "Feby".
Yay. I like it.
Now you have me paying attention to how I pronounce it. And now either way feels weird. Thanks a lot.