unenthusiastic lovers
Eh, that’s THEIR problemunenthusiastic lovers
Death Race 2000 as well!Remaking movies that don't need to be remade, for example Rollerball (1975): brilliant sociopolitical drama about using sport for population control, vs Rollerball (2002): dreary, mindless crap with a cast of overpaid dropkicks.
YMMV. Hopefully not.
People who think that societal problems can be solved just by throwing more money at it.
Death Race 2000 as well!
or the Japanese horror The Ring / Ringu. Creepy Japanese, but "needed" to be redone by an American film Co.
Would is the past tense of will. Very hard to use correctly. Many people mistakenly use it when referring to present or future events, it which case the correct word is will. Many engineers seem to use would as a non-committal form of will...Someone who uses "would of/could of/should of" instead of "Would have/could have/should have". Speech to text isn't always your friend.........
I would (or is it will? ) add “brake” and “break” along with “sell” and “sale” - with “sail” thrown in as well. Along with “pique” and “peak” plus “bare” and “bear” and the rare but still annoying “kit” versus “kid” - as in gloves you made from parts rather than gloves made from soft goat leather worn by a dandy I guess?A small pet peeve. If this (or other language-specific tests) was actually used in place of other tests-for-access, the intelligence level of internet content would rise substantially.
I won't mention the use of apostrophe's to denote plural's... On second thought, yes, I will.
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That's a new one on me, I'm glad to say.Add people that use "borked" instead of "baulked".
Verily do I also agree, forsooth e'en yon vagabond affirmeth.That's a new one on me, I'm glad to say.
"Prolly". I first encountered it in the late 90s, from someone with a variety of other physical and social disabilities, and it took me half a week to figure out that he meant "probably". Only years later did I started to encounter other people, with otherwise intact physical, mental, and social skills, using it the same way. Say the Whole Damn Word!
"Prolly". I first encountered it in the late 90s, from someone with a variety of other physical and social disabilities, and it took me half a week to figure out that he meant "probably". Only years later did I started to encounter other people, with otherwise intact physical, mental, and social skills, using it the same way. Say the Whole Damn Word!
Yeah, I know. But I chose not to name names.Guilty as charged.
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