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Posted (edited)

It was a college roomates car you numb skull

since when does the word "we" mean "my parents and i" ????

Edited by KSL2786
Posted (edited)

When you use words like 'we' and 'our,' you are implying ownership. Learn English.

EDIT: Sensor button was nonexistent.

Edited by ERDoc
Posted (edited)

so your saying you dont realize that all situations are subjective?

If you lived with a roomate and someone called you and asek where you lived.. would it be wrong for you to say "our house is..."

or "we live near...""

Edited by KSL2786
Posted

Yeah. Look at number two.

2.
Used to refer to people in general, including the speaker or writer:

Thanks for helping prove my own point for me

Not that bright for an ERdoc.

Posted (edited)

Yeah. Look at number two.

2.
Used to refer to people in general, including the speaker or writer:

Thanks for helping prove my own point for me

WTF? People in general, including the speaker or writer, not excluding the speaker or writer. Again, this thread has outlived it's usefulness. Goodnight.

EDIT: way to ignore the most common usage.

Edited by ERDoc
Posted (edited)

Yeah but you ASSUMED that when I said "we" I meant my parents and I. When really, it could have meant me and any number of people.

Edited by KSL2786
Posted (edited)

A 50 lb dog can be a force to be reckoned with. I have hunted with 50 lb dogs that fight, catch and hold 200 - 250 lb wild hogs. Dogs have more fighting heart than possibly any other domestic animal. If a dog wants to hurt someone, it is certainly capable of doing it.

I would never belittle a dog for weighing 50 lbs.

Edited by DFIB
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